| |
www.AsciiTable.com |
To add this page to your favorites, press (CTRL-D)
|
|
|
| |

ASCII stands for American Standard Code
for Information Interchange.
Computers can only understand numbers, so an ASCII code is the
numerical
representation of a character such as 'a' or '@' or an action of some
sort. ASCII was developed a long time ago and now the non-printing
characters are
rarely used for their original purpose. Below is the ASCII character
table
and this includes descriptions of the first 32 non-printing characters.
ASCII was actually designed for use with teletypes and so the
descriptions
are somewhat obscure. If someone says they want your CV however in
ASCII format, all
this means is they want 'plain' text with no formatting such as tabs,
bold or
underscoring - the raw format that any computer can understand. This is
usually
so they can easily import the file into their own applications without
issues. Notepad.exe creates ASCII text, or in MS Word you can save a
file as 'text only' |
 |
| |
|
Extended ASCII Codes
As people gradually required computers to understand additional characters
and non-printing characters the ASCII set became restrictive. As with most
technology, it took a while to get a single standard for these extra characters
and hence there are few varying 'extended' sets. The most popular is presented below.
|

|
| |
|
|
|
How quick are you?
Press 'start', then press 'stop' when the border goes red
|
|
|
How good are you with a
mouse? Test yourself here - from the time you start ticking the boxes
you have 20 seconds to tick as many as you can. Click restart to clear
the boxes and try again. Good luck!
|
|
|
|