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You can always enter numbers in octal, decimal, or hexadecimal in gdb by the usual conventions: octal numbers begin with ‘0’, decimal numbers end with ‘.’, and hexadecimal numbers begin with ‘0x’. Numbers that neither begin with ‘0’ or ‘0x’, nor end with a ‘.’ are, by default, entered in base 10; likewise, the default display for numbers—when no particular format is specified—is base 10. You can change the default base for both input and output with the commands described below.
set input-radix
baseset input-radix 012 set input-radix 10. set input-radix 0xa
sets the input base to decimal. On the other hand, ‘set input-radix 10’ leaves the input radix unchanged, no matter what it was, since ‘10’, being without any leading or trailing signs of its base, is interpreted in the current radix. Thus, if the current radix is 16, ‘10’ is interpreted in hex, i.e. as 16 decimal, which doesn't change the radix.
set output-radix
baseshow input-radix
show output-radix
set radix
[base]show radix
set radix
sets the radix of input and output to
the same base; without an argument, it resets the radix back to its
default value of 10.