What someone wanted to say, that they want you resume text file to be encoded in ASCII encoding system. There are a lot of other encoding systems, like UTF-8, UTF-16, ISO-XXXX (Where XXXX stands for number), etc. It could be that their are using software that does not support encoding which was used in your resume file and they see hieroglyphs instead of text.
A special e-version resume reduces the risk of a scanner misreading data by eliminating all the formatting in the resume.
A special e-version resume reduces the risk of a scanner misreading data by eliminating all the formatting in the resume.
A special e-version resume reduces the risk of a scanner misreading data by eliminating all the formatting in the resume.
In ASCII encoding, if that's what you mean by "bits": 110110011011111110110110010100100000111100111011111110101 That's "love you", in ASCII.
Update BS NS in your resume mean
Work began on it in 1960. The first version came out in 1963. There have been newer versions since then.
You wouldn't use the printed version but you would upload the file of your resume to the job site
It depends what type of resume you mean.
kurier
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.
\ is the character for 92 in ASCII.
128 ascii codes.