011000110110000101110100 is cat in Binary. That is 23 Bits, or just under 3 Bytes.
15,383 Bytes
32 is the ASCII Code for a space.
The ASCII code for capital E is 069 and the ASCII code for regular e is 101.hope this help.
ASCII refers to the characterset. So the ASCII code of 'd' is 'd' If you meant binary code it is: 01100100
The ASCII code of letter B is 66
128 ascii codes.
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.
ASCII is an abbreviation for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. The ASCII code, which is used worldwide, is used to create computer coding languages so computers can interact with people.
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/.
ASCII is American Standard Code for Information Interchange, it's not a language, it's a code.
ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange)
You can store any of the 127 characters in the ASCII table using just 7 bits. The letter A has character code 65 (0x41) in all ASCII code pages. The code simply maps to the character's glyph in the current code page so you're not actually storing the letter, you are only storing its code. On most systems, the smallest unit of storage is a byte which is typically 8 bits long. The 8th bit is used to determine whether the character is in the standard ASCII character set (0 to 127) or the extended ASCII character set (128 to 255). Only the standard character set is guaranteed to be the same on all systems (the glyphs may vary in style but always represent the same character). The extended character set varies depending on which code page is current. If using UNICODE wide-characters, the character code will consume 2 or 4 bytes. On Windows, it is always 2 bytes. But if using multi-byte character encoding or standard ASCII, it is always 1 byte,