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.
\ is the character for 92 in ASCII.
ASCII = American Standard Code for Information InterchangeThat means that ASCII is a type of character encoding...Unless you want to write in 1's and 0's, then you must use ASCII. If you type a single character, it's most likely ASCII. To show you how ridiculous typing in binary is:011101110110100101101011011010010010000001100001011011100111001101110111011001010111001001110011 = wiki answers (lowercase)
The main difference is the OEM (Original equipment manufacture) isn't in a box, no documentation, no accessories like cables or screws, usually cheaper. My CPU and all my HD are OEM. Never had a problem with them.
I assume you're talking about portion of the OSI model that handles character-encoding such as ASCII. It is the Presentation Layer of the OSI model.
Ascii
An extended ASCII byte (like all bytes) contains 8 bits, or binary digits.
First of all ASCII is encoding system that tells how binary data from file could be represented as text. Is was and still is very widely used starting 1960s. Standard ASCII encoding is 7-bits encoding allowing 128 values, while Extended ASCII is 8-bits encoding which allows 256 values, that is 128 more characters in the table. First 128 Extended ASCII table characters is the same as ASCII table, next 128 is additional characters.
No.ASCII stands for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. It couldn't be called a standard if it varied from machine to machine.Note that this only applies to the core ASCII values. Some machines/programs/formats will use a subset or extended set of ASCII codes.
Not really, since there are several such sets. It really depends what characters you choose to include. In computers, there is the set of ASCII characters, several extended ASCII sets, the Unicode set, and several others.
Stored? It would not be stored as ASCII -- ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) is in common use in the US (EBCDIC - Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code is another type of ASCII and is used in many European countries.)My name is, for example, Bill TheCat - TheCat is my surname and is represented (not stored) in ASCII as "TheCat". Computers store data as 0s and 1s (in BINARY, which is not the same as EBCDIC) format.
it means that the character you were trying to wrrite was an extended ascii character which isn't supported in you computer
ASCII is a 7 bit code developed and standardized by the telegraph industry for use on teletypes as a replacement for their older Baudot 5 bit code. The computing industry when they adopted ASCII extended it in several different nonstandard ways to an 8 bit code because after 1964 (when the IBM System 360 was introduced) the standard computer memory unit had become the 8 bit byte.
EBCDIC is Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code. It was the character encoding scheme developed and used by IBM. EBCDIC is completely overshadowed by ASCII and ASCII's big brother, Unicode. EBCDIC is very difficult to use, as the alphabet is non-contiguous and the encoding makes no logical sense.
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.
extended life "red coolant' Tell the people at the parts store and they will get you the oem coolant (do not mix red and green)