extended ASCII - meaning and definition. What is extended ASCII
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What (who) is extended ASCII - definition


Extended ASCII         
NICK-NAME FOR 8-BIT ASCII-DERIVED CHARACTER SETS
Extended ascii; Upper ASCII; High ASCII; Extended characters; ASCII Extended; ASCII extended; Extended character; 8-bit ASCII; Eight-bit ASCII; ASCII extension; EASCII; Ascii 8; Extended-ASCII
Extended ASCII means an eight-bit character encoding that includes (most of) the seven-bit ASCII characters, plus additional characters. Using the term "extended ASCII" is sometimes criticized, because it can be mistakenly interpreted to mean that the ASCII standard has been updated to include more characters, or that the term unambiguously identifies a single encoding, neither of which is the case.
Stanford Extended ASCII         
DERIVATION OF THE 7-BIT ASCII CHARACTER SET DEVELOPED IN THE 1970S
SEASCII; Stanford extended ASCII; Stanford extended-ASCII
Stanford Extended ASCII (SEASCII) is a derivation of the 7-bit ASCII character set developed at the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (SAIL/SU-AI) in the early 1970s. Not all symbols match ASCII.
US-ASCII         
  • ASCII (1963). [[Control Pictures]] of equivalent controls are shown where they exist, or a grey dot otherwise.
  • Early symbols assigned to the 32 control characters, space and delete characters. (MIL-STD-188-100, 1972)
AMERICAN CHARACTER ENCODING STANDARD
Ascii; ASCII code; ASCIIbetical; US-ASCII; ASCII Character Set; ASCII character set; ASCII File; Us-ascii; CP367; 7-bit ASCII; ASCII value; ASCII text; ASCII text file; ASCII table; ASCII protocol; ASCII file; ASCII chart; ASCII characters; ANSI X3.4-1968; American standard code for information interchange; Ascii table; List of ascii characters; Ascii code; ASCII letters; Printable characters; American Standard Code for Information Interchange; USASCII; American Standard Code for Information Exchange; Bemer–Ross Code; ASCII Control Characters; American Standard Code For Information Interchange; ACSII; Ascii invisible characters; ASCIIbetical order; ANSI X3.4-1986; American standard code; ASCII printable characters; ASCII printable character; Ascii chart; Code page 367; ASCII-1963; ASCII-1967; ASA X3.4-1963; USASI X3.4-1967; USASI X3.4-1968; ANSI X3.4-1967; ANSI X3.4-1977; ASCII-1968; ASCII-1977; ASCII-1986; Codepage 367; Iso-ir-6; IBM367; Cp367; CsASCII; Code page 20127; ASC2; ASC 2; ASC-2; ASCII-1965; ASCII order; ASCII character; ASCII char; ASCII chr; Seven-bit ASCII; Binary ASCII; Codepage 20127; ASCII letter; ASA X3.4; USASI X3.4; ANSI X3.4; X3.4; USAS X3.4-1967; ANSI X3.4-1986 (R1997); ANSI X3.4-1986 (R1992); ANSI INCITS 4-1986 (R2007); ANSI INCITS 4-1986 (R2012); ANSI INCITS 4-1986 (R2002); ANSI INCITS 4; ANSI INCITS 4-1986; ANSCII; USASCII 63; ASCII 1963; USASCII 1963; USASCII 65; ASCII 1965; USASCII 1965; USASCII 67; ASCII 1967; USASCII 1967; USASCII 68; ASCII 1968; USASCII 1968; USASCII 77; ASCII 1977; USASCII 1977; ASCII 1986; USASCII 1986; USASCII 86; ASA X3.4-1965; USAS X3.4-1968; CP20127; Cp20127; USAS X3.4; USA Standard X3.4-1968; USA Standard X3.4-1967; USA Standard X3.4; United States of America Standard Code for Information Interchange; American National Standard Code for Information Interchange; American national standard code for information interchange; United States of America standard code for information interchange; American National Standard X3.4-1986; American National Standard X3.4-1977; American National Standard X3.4-1968; American National Standard X3.4; Standard X3.4; ASA standard X3.4; ASA Standard X3.4; ASA standard X3.4-1963; ASA Standard X3.4-1963; Standard X3.4-1963; ASA standard X3.4-1965; ASA Standard X3.4-1965; Standard X3.4-1965; ASCII (character encoding); ASCII character encoding; Code Page 20127; Code Page 367; CP00367; Us (character set); Ascii7; Ibm-367; 128 USASCII; CSASCII; ASCII stick; Stick (ASCII); Oracle US7ASCII; US7ASCII; ASCII-only text; Asciibetical; INCITS 4-1986 (R2012); INCITS 4-1986(R2012); INCITS 4-1986 (R2017); INCITS 4-1986(R2017); ANSI INCITS 4-1986 (R2017); ANSI INCITS 4-1986(R2017); ANSI INCITS 4-1986(R2012); Bemer-Ross Code
<character> The 7-bit version of ASCII, which preceded (and is the basis for) 8-bit versions such as Latin-1, MacASCII and later, even larger coded character sets such as Unicode. US-ASCII is defined in Standard ANSI X3.4-1986, "US-ASCII. Coded Character Set - 7-Bit American Standard Code for Information Interchange". (1998-10-18)