The current radix setting influences how the debugger interprets and displays integer data in the following contexts: o Integer data that you specify in address expressions or language expressions. o Integer data that is displayed by the EXAMINE and EVALUATE commands. The default radix for both data entry and display is decimal for most languages. The exceptions are BLISS and MACRO, which have a default radix of hexadecimal. The SET RADIX command enables you to specify a new radix for data entry or display (the input radix and output radix, respectively). If you do not specify a qualifier, the SET RADIX command changes both the input and output radix. If you specify /INPUT or /OUTPUT, the command changes the input or output radix, respectively. Using SET RADIX/OVERRIDE changes only the output radix but causes all data (not just data that has an integer type) to be displayed as integer data of the specified radix. Except when used with /OVERRIDE, the SET RADIX command does not affect the interpretation or display of noninteger values (such as real or enumeration type values). The EVALUATE, EXAMINE, and DEPOSIT commands have radix qualifiers (/BINARY, /HEXADECIMAL, and so on) which enable you to override, for the duration of that command, any radix previously established with SET RADIX or SET RADIX/OVERRIDE. You can also use the built-in symbols %BIN, %DEC, %HEX, and %OCT in address expressions and language expressions to specify that an integer literal should be interpreted in binary, decimal, hexadecimal, or octal radix. Related commands: DEPOSIT EVALUATE EXAMINE (SET,SHOW,CANCEL) MODE (SHOW,CANCEL) RADIX