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Summary Of: ASCII

Work on ASCII formally began October 6... the proposed Bell code and ASCII were both ordered for more convenient sorting... ASCII includes definitions for 128 characters... US ASCII 1967 Code Chart was structured with two columns of control characters... US ASCII 1967 Code Chart was structured with two columns of control characters... US ASCII 1967 Code Chart was structured with two columns of control characters... 2 subcommittee designed ASCII based on earlier... ASCII specifies a correspondence between digital bit patterns and... and so ASCII required at least a seven... and chose to structure ASCII so it could easily be reduced to a usable 64... ASCII was published as ASA X3... group voted its approval for the change to ASCII at its May... ASCII was subsequently updated as USASI X3... The X3 committee also addressed how ASCII should be transmitted... ASCII itself first entered commercial use in 1963 as a seven... so that the code that was to become ASCII was first called the Bemer... Almost every country needed an adapted version of ASCII since ASCII only suited the needs of the USA and a few other countries... true ASCII is strictly defined only by ANSI standard... ASCII has been incorporated into the... so the ASCII characters have the same numeric codes in both sets... ASCII reserves the first 32 codes... ASCII does not define any mechanism for describing the structure or appearance of text within a... The original ASCII standard used only short descriptive phrases for each control character... insensitive aliases for ASCII as suitable for use on the Internet... standards bodies and corporations developed many variations of ASCII in order to facilitate the expression of non... ASCII was intended to be just one of several national variants of an international character code... Because the bracket and brace characters of ASCII were assigned to... bit ASCII remain the most common character encodings in use today... IEC 8859 and ASCII rapidly in many environments... While ASCII is limited to 128 characters... the 128 ASCII and 256 ISO... ASCII can be considered a 7... compatible with ASCII for code points below 128... meaning every properly encoded ASCII file is also a valid UTF... The other encoding forms resemble ASCII in how they represent the first 128 characters of Unicode...

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ASCII (disambiguation) | There are 94 printable ASCII characters, numbered 33 to 126 (decimal) in the original code. | /ˈæski/ | character encoding | English alphabet | text | computers | communications | character encodings | telegraphic codes | bit | Robert Bemer | control characters | space | personal computers | workstations | US ASCII 1967 Code Chart was structured with two columns of control characters, a column with special characters, a column with numbers, and four columns of letters | | American National Standards Institute | teleprinter | character encodings | character | graphemes | control characters | digital | alphabetic | numerical digits | control characters | Comité Consultatif International Téléphonique et Télégraphique | Fieldata | EBCDIC | shift key | Baudot code | bits | binary coded decimal | parity bit | octets | "space" character | sorting algorithms | upper case | Lower case | binary-coded decimal | Hamming distance | CCITT | International Organization for Standardization | case-insensitive | curly bracket | 9-track | punched card | American Telephone & Telegraph | TWX | Baudot code | Telex | Bob Bemer | Hugh McGregor Ross | March 11 | 1968 | Lyndon B. Johnson | July 1 | 1969 | ISO/IEC 646 | English alphabet | United Kingdom | pound sterling | ISCII | VISCII | YUSCII | Unicode | UTF-8 | backward compatible | 3568 ASCII | Control character | control characters | printers | markup languages | ASR-33 Teletype | paper tape | paper tape | ANSI escape code | TECO | vi | newline | operating systems | DEC | teletypes | CP/M | MS-DOS | Microsoft Windows | Internet | E-mail | World Wide Web | strings | null character | ASCIZ | C strings | ^@ | Null character | ^C | End of Text | ^D | End of Transmission | Enquiry | Acknowledgment | ^G | Bell | ^H | Backspace | ^I | Horizontal Tab | ^J | Line feed | Form feed | ^M | Carriage return | Shift Out | Shift In | XON | XOFF | Negative Acknowledgement | ^V | ^X | Cancel | ^Y | ^Z | Substitute | Escape | Unicode | caret notation | C programming language | Java | Perl | "space" character | grave accent | Oct | Dec | Hex | | ! | " | # | $ | % | & | ' | ( | ) | * | + | , | - | . | / | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | : | ; | < | = | > | ? | Oct | Dec | Hex | @ | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | [ | \ | ] | ^ | _ | Oct | Dec | Hex | ` | a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k | l | m | n | o | p | q | r | s | t | u | v | w | x | y | z | { | | | } | ~ | MIME | MIME | HTML | XML | ASCII extensions | PETSCII | Commodore International | ZX Spectrum | Atari | Galaksija | ISO/IEC 646 | trigraphs | IBM | code pages | code page 437 | smiley | DOS | IBM PCs | Digital Equipment Corporation | Multinational Character Set | VT220 | terminal | ISO/IEC 8859 | Mac OS Roman | ISO-8859-1 (Latin 1) | Windows-1252 | Unicode | Universal Character Set | natural numbers | UTF-8 | UTF-16 | UTF-32 | Collation | slang | CNN | ISBN 0-8493-7159-7 | Bob Bemer | IBM | Lyndon B. Johnson | PC Magazine | Tom Jennings | Unicode | v | Character encodings | Morse code | Baudot code | Fieldata | EBCDIC | Code page | Unicode | ATASCII | Galaksija | ISO/IEC 646 | PETSCII | YUSCII | ZX Spectrum character set | Extended ASCII | ISCII | ISO/IEC 8859 | ISO/IEC 8859-1 | Mac OS Roman | UTF-8 | VISCII | Windows code pages | ASCII art | ASCII Ribbon Campaign | Bob Bemer | Braille ASCII | Control characters | Unicode | Universal Character Set | UTF-8 | UTF-16 | UTF-32 | Han unification | GB 18030 | UTF-7 | UTF-EBCDIC | UTF-9 and UTF-18 | TRON | Categories | ASCII | Acronyms |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "ASCII".