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It is all protocol dependent. You can say that after start symbol you will expect N symbols or you will read until you encounter the stop symbol.

Where symbol colud be any n-bit sequence (including bit and byte.)

Indeed, your example with bits exactly apply to a protocol which uses bytes instead of bits.

Say you send 00000000 stream A 11111111 00000000 stream B 11111111. In this case you may still confuse it with stream C = stream A 11111111 00000000 stream B.

Usually a start bit is used because a voltage level change can trigger an event (See edge triggering in flip flops.) On the other hand a start symbol with multiple bits will be used to synchronize clocks of two systems in addition to triggering an event. An example of it would be a PAL signal.

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It is all protocol dependent. You can say that after start symbol you will expect N symbols or you will read until you encounter the stop symbol.

Where symbol colud be any n-bit sequence (including bit and byte.)

Indeed, your example with bits exactly apply to a protocol which uses bytes instead of bits.

Say you send 00000000 stream A 11111111 00000000 stream B 11111111. In this case you may still confuse it with stream C = stream A 11111111 00000000 stream B.