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If you are referring to the ASCII code: The ASCII Code for a dot (.) is 46. The hexadecimal equivalent of this is 2E. You can find this, and all ASCII characters here: http://www.asciitable.com/.
American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII )
That's because the inventor of ASCII code thought they are important characters.
ASCII stands for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. It provides a means to facilitate communication on computers. It has 128 characters.
32 is the ASCII Code for a space.
ASCII refers to the characterset. So the ASCII code of 'd' is 'd' If you meant binary code it is: 01100100
The ASCII code for capital E is 069 and the ASCII code for regular e is 101.hope this help.
The ASCII code of letter B is 66
The ASCII code 128 unique character ( 2 power 7 ). This was enough to represent all the (American and Britain English) characters in the keyboard. Here characters includes Alphabets, numbers, speical characters, symbols and Shift,ctrl,alt, tab (Non-Printable characters). Days rolled on. Other than American and British English, some other foreign languages occupied the space in the computer world. For ex, Korean, Japanesh. These languages extensively used more characters and symbols. Inorder to accompany all those letters/characters, the American Standard Institute enchanced the above ASCII code with one more bit. ie 2 power 8. So its now support 256 Unique characters. This is sufficient to represent all the characters in the all the countries languages. So this broadened ASCII is called Extended-Ascii. Regards, Rajan. P. Anna University.
Ascii codes is uses 7 bit binary code to reprsent each character
You have to look up that character's ASCII code number. The double dots are called an umlaut if memory serves. Then you use that ASCII code number to enter the character. Exactly HOW you do that I'm a bit fuzzy on. Google "special ASCII characters" and se what that brings up !
128 ascii codes.