ASCII because the other one like eating your system up
An extended ASCII byte (like all bytes) contains 8 bits, or binary digits.
If you look up the ASCII values for digits, you'll see that 0 = 48, 1 = 49... 9 = 57. So it's a simple matter of adding 48 to your digit to find out the ASCII value for it.
look up www.shake yourself.org.com
Websites such as asciitable.com and ascii-code.com provide ascii tables on their websites, along with toher information about ascii codes, their uses, and how to use them.
No.. as simple as an answer could be it used to be on Telnet if you know what that is .. it is like a terminal ( DOS like page ) with images like ASCII images that you would see now as ASCII Art just like a Teletext you get on your TV
\ is the character for 92 in ASCII.
128 ascii codes.
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 !
Extended ASCII is 8-bit encoding which is wider than standard ASCII and also includes all characters from standard ASCII encoding.ASCII is 7-bit, 128 possible values; Extended ASCII is 8-bit , 256 possible value;128 first characters of Extended ASCII is the same as ASCII, next 128 are additional. This why it is called Extended ASCII.What is ASCII?ASCII is mainly English language characters encoding, that is used for representation of text information.
An ASCII file is just a text file.
Remorse ASCII was created in 1994.