In the spirit of nitpicking, class A, B, and C referred to specific address blocks, not network sizes. A /24 in the class A range was still class A rather than class C.
I worked on network/firewall at a rather large bank from 2009-2019 and we used the class labels and "slash 24s" etc. interchangeably when talking. Not that you're incorrect, but that the slang was used and everyone knew what people meant by it.
unethical_ban|5 years ago
tptacek|5 years ago
swinglock|5 years ago
Then you'll never use "Class A/B/C" again. :) It's correct to just say /24 while Class C isn't, because it has a more specific but outdated meaning.