Code rate

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Different code rates (Hamming code).

In telecommunication and information theory, the code rate (or information rate[1]) of a forward error correction code is the proportion of the data-stream that is useful (non-redundant). That is, if the code rate is k/n for every Template:Mvar bits of useful information, the coder generates a total of Template:Mvar bits of data, of which nk are redundant.

If Template:Mvar is the gross bit rate or data signalling rate (inclusive of redundant error coding), the net bit rate (the useful bit rate exclusive of error correction codes) is Rk/n.

For example: The code rate of a convolutional code will typically be Template:1/2, Template:2/3, Template:3/4, Template:Frac, Template:Frac, etc., corresponding to one redundant bit inserted after every single, second, third, etc., bit. The code rate of the octet oriented Reed Solomon block code denoted RS(204,188) is 188/204, meaning that Template:Math redundant octets (or bytes) are added to each block of 188 octets of useful information.

A few error correction codes do not have a fixed code rate—rateless erasure codes.

Note that bit/s is a more widespread unit of measurement for the information rate, implying that it is synonymous with net bit rate or useful bit rate exclusive of error-correction codes.

See also

References

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  1. Huffman, W. Cary, and Pless, Vera, Fundamentals of Error-Correcting Codes, Cambridge, 2003.