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- The purpose of extended ASCII is to:
- Extend the basic ASCII character set by using 8 bits instead of 7 bits, allowing representation of 256 different characters12.
- Include special characters, symbols, and foreign language characters that were not part of the original ASCII set34.
- Accommodate different languages and character requirements through various extended ASCII character sets like ISO-8859-1 and Windows-12525.
Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.ASCII code allows computers to understand how to represent text. In ASCII, each character (letter, number, symbol or control character) is represented by a binary value. Extended ASCII is a version that supports representation of 256 different characters.www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/zscvxfr/revision/4A set of codes that extends the basic ASCII set. The basic ASCII set uses 7 bits for each character, giving it a total of 128 unique symbols. The extended ASCII character set uses 8 bits, which gives it an additional 128 characters. The extra characters represent characters from foreign languages and special symbols for drawing pictures.www.webopedia.com/definitions/extended-ascii/Extended ASCII, as the eight-bit code is known, was introduced by IBM in 1981 for use in its first PC, and it soon became the industry standard for personal computers. In extended ASCII, 32 code combinations are used for machine and control commands, such as “start of text,” “carriage return,” and “form feed.”www.britannica.com/topic/ASCIIExtended ASCII was introduced to provide a way to represent special characters, symbols, and foreign language characters that were not included in the original ASCII character set. The extended ASCII character set varied depending on the specific encoding.www.ascii-code.com/timelineThere are several extended ASCII character sets, such as ISO-8859-1 (also known as Latin-1), Windows-1252 (also known as CP1252), and others. These character sets were created to accommodate different languages and special characters that the original ASCII does not support.www.ascii-code.com/glossary/extended-ascii - People also ask
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Extended ASCII - Wikipedia
All modern operating systems use Unicode which supports thousands of characters. However, extended ASCII remains important in the history of computing, and supporting multiple extended ASCII character sets required software to be written in ways that made it much easier to support the UTF-8 … See more
Extended ASCII is a repertoire of character encodings that include (most of) the original 96 ASCII character set, plus up to 128 additional characters. There is no formal definition of "extended ASCII", and even use of the … See more
ASCII was designed in the 1960s for teleprinters and telegraphy, and some computing. Early teleprinters were electromechanical, … See more
Various proprietary modifications and extensions of ASCII appeared on non-EBCDIC mainframe computers and minicomputers, especially in universities.
Hewlett-Packard started … See moreIn 1987, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) published a set of standards for eight-bit ASCII extensions, ISO 8859. The most popular of these was ISO 8859-1 (also called "ISO Latin 1") which contains characters sufficient for the most common … See more
Microsoft intended to use ISO 8859 standards in Windows, but soon replaced the unused C1 control characters with additional … See more
The meaning of each extended code point can be different in every encoding. In order to correctly interpret and display text data (sequences of characters) that includes extended codes, hardware and software that reads or receives the text must use the specific … See more
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