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Related phrases: ascii file
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ascii character set
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Definitions of ASCII:
- acode that represents letters, numerals, punctuation marks and control signals as seven bit groups. It is used as a standard code by the transmission of data. The values range from hex value 00 to hex value 7F.
www.notepage.net/wireless-messaging-glossary.htm
- ASCII is a code that assigns a number to each key on the keyboard. ASCII text does not include special formatting features and therefore can be exchanged and read by most computer systems.
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Standard 8 bit code used in data communications. Many files interchanged from one software program to another and from IBM to Mac formats go through translation into ASCII.
www.tamu.edu/ode/glossary.html
- Character set and code described by the America National Standard Code for Information Interchange. Each ASCII character is encoded with seven bits. ASCII consists of both control and printable characters.
www.blazepoint.co.uk/faq_label_printers_glossary.html
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. This is the basic clear-text Latin characters. There are 128 standard ASCII codes, each of which can be represented by a 7 digit binary number: 0000000 through 1111111.
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- American Standard Code of Information Interchange. A 7-bit code standard for representation of characters, numbers, symbols and control characters, for use in data communication and data storage.
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- (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) This standard character encoding scheme is used extensively in data transmission.
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange - a standard set of codes used for representing alphanumeric information in a computer.
www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/clmt/MTbook/HTML/node98.html
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A standard code used to represent data using 8 bits (7 data bits and 1 parity bit) per character.
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange Standard code used in most computers to represent letters, numbers and other characters.
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A standard code for transmitting data, consisting of 128 letters, numerals, symbols, and special codes, each of which is represented by a unique binary number. An ASCII word typically is 8 bits of binary data.
www.wgcu.org/watch/hdtv_glossaryofterms.html
- Pronounced ask-ee, ASCII is a code for representing English characters as numbers, with each letter assigned a number from 0 to 127. For example, the ASCII code for uppercase M is 77. Most computers use ASCII codes to represent text, which makes it possible to transfer data from one computer to another.
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- (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) -- This is the de facto world-wide standard for the code numbers used by computers to represent all the upper and lower-case Latin letters, numbers, punctuation, etc. There are 128 standard ASCII codes each of which can be represented by a 7 digit binary number: 0000000 through 1111111.
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A seven bit code used for representing text, graphics, and keyboard control characters for computer use. For file transfer purposes, an ASCII file is a text file which should be readable on any type of computer.
valencia.cc.fl.us/lrcwest/lis2004/glossary.htm
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Usually refers to coding system that assigns numerical values to characters such as letter, numbers, punctuation, and other symbols. Basic ASCII allows only 7 bits per character (for a total of 128 characters). The first 32 characters are "unprintable" (line feed, form feed, etc.). Extended ASCII adds an additional 128 characters that vary between computers, programs and fonts. ...
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Defines the codes used to store characters in computers.
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- The American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A standard that maps commonly used characters such as the alphabet onto one byte long sequences of bits.
www.sli.unimelb.edu.au/gisweb/glossary.htm
- (pronounced "Ask-ee") An acronym for American Standard Code for Information Exchange, ASCII is an international standard in which numbers, letters, punctuation marks, symbols and control codes are assigned numbers from 0 to 127. Easily transferred over networks, ASCII is a plain, unadorned text without style or font specifications.
www.kern-tech.net/glossary.htm
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A code used to represent letters, numbers, and special characters such as $, !, and /.
www.usr.com/education/analogglossary.asp
- A set of 128 alphanumeric and special control characters. ASCII files are also known as plain text files.
www.eabnet.org.uk/knowitall/finally/glossary/a.htm
- ASCII is the most common format for text files in computers and on the "Internet". In an ASCII file, each alphabetic, numeric, or special character is represented with a 7-bit binary number (a string of seven 0s or 1s). 128 possible characters are defined. UNIX and DOS-based operating systems (except for Windows NT) use ASCII for text files. Windows NT uses a newer code, Unicode. IBMs System 390 servers use a proprietary 8-bit code called EBCDIC. ...
www.planetech.co.uk/glossary.htm
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. The protocol used by most small computers. It assigns a seven-bit code to 96 printable characters and 32 control characters.
www.gbc.t-online.hu/english/bszotare1.htm
- A coding scheme using 7 or 8 bits that assigns numeric values to up to 256 characters, including letters, numerals, punctuation marks, control characters, and other symbols. ASCII was developed in 1968 to standardize data transmission among disparate hardware and software systems and is built into all personal computers.
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- American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Pronounced AS-key. It's the most popular method used by small computers for converting letters, numbers, punctuation and control codes into digital form. Once defined, ASCII characters can be recognized and understood by other computers and by communication devices. ASCII represents characters, numbers, punctuation marks or signals in seven binary bits. A capital "C", for example, is 1000011, while a "3" is 0110011.
www.rockprint.com/dictionary.shtml
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange: (computer science) a code for information exchange between computers made by different companies; a string of 7 binary digits represents each character; used in most microcomputers
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
- ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange), generally pronounced (in IPA), is a character set and a character encoding based on the Roman alphabet as used in modern English and other Western European languages (see English alphabet). It is most commonly used by computers and other communication equipment to represent text and by control devices that work with text.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII
- ASCII is a publishing company based in Tokyo and was one of the key players in the creation of the MSX standard, home computer in Japan.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII_(company)
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