Anywhere from two to 1/4, depending on what encoding system you're using.
1 byte is 8 bits.
A byte is a sequence of 8 zeroes or ones in a binary system, which is known as a bit. One byte can store one alphanumeric character.
If you're referring to kilobyte, then it contains 1024 bytes and if the characters are the standard ASCII character set where 1 character is 1 byte, then a kilobyte would have 1024 characters.
The letter S uses 1 byte of memory, as do all the other ASCII characters.
The number of bytes used by a character varies from language to language. Java uses a 16-bit (two-byte) character so that it can represent many non-Latin characters in the Unicode character set.
1024
There are two nibbles in a byte.
An octet is 8 bits, which forms a byte.
2 nibbles are in one byte
False
There are 8 bits in 1 byte.
256 different characters is not enough Unicode enables the reliable store most of the world's characters in a (2 byte) fixed width mode with 65,564 characters.