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The United States of America Standard Code for Information Interchange (USACII, later renamed American Standard Code for Information Interchange, or simply "ASCII") describes a communications system where 7-bit words represent printable symbols and control codes. The 1963 USACII standard went through numerous revisions between 1963 and 1968, when it was formally adopted in 1968 by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). The ANSI X.3.4-1968 ASCII character code assignments are shown in the following table.
http://nemesis.lonestar.org/reference/telecom/codes/ascii.html
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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ASCII Character Codes Table & Cheat Sheet and quick reference guide
http://www.petefreitag.com/cheatsheets/ascii-codes/
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ASCII cheat sheet and quick reference guide for print out.
http://www.edocr.com/doc/59/ascii-cheat-sheet
(Clicks: 58;
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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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'
http://www.loggee.com/2008/01/ascii-cheat-sheet.html
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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An ASCII Chart is a list of all displayable characters. ASCII Reference Chart and cheat sheet
http://life.csu.edu.au/~lbenton/ascii-chart.html
(Clicks: 72;
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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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'
http://www.asciitable.com/
(Clicks: 58;
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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Here is an ASCII to EBCDIC Conversion Chart. ASCII - American National Standard Code for Information Interchange .. EBCDIC - Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code
http://www.egrannie.com/cheatsheets/asciiebcdic.html
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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Characters and ASCII Equivalents .. Here are some of the more commonly used characters and their ASCII equivalents.
http://www.webopedia.com/quick_ref/asciicode.asp
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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The following table lists the 128 ASCII characters and their equivalent HTML entity codes.
http://www.w3schools.com/TAGS/ref_ascii.asp
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HTML and XHTML uses standard 7-BIT ASCII when transmitting data over the Web. 7-BIT ASCII represents 128 different character values (0-127).
http://www.webcheatsheet.com/HTML/ref_ascii.php
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Again, nothing to do with ASCII really, but has been requested by a number of you out there. To get special characters to show on an HTML web page, special codes can be used (ascii code or word) and are interpretted by the web browser.
http://www.lookuptables.com/
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This programmer's cheat sheet has an ASCII character code reference guide.
http://ostermiller.org/calc/cheat.html
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The Extended ASCII Chart and quick reference guide.
http://www.tvdsb.on.ca/banting/ICS3M/unit3/asciichart.html
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Listing added: Nov 16, 2008)
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