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  2. SBCS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SBCS

    SBCS, or single-byte character set, is used to refer to character encodings that use exactly one byte for each graphic character.An SBCS can accommodate a maximum of 256 symbols, and is useful for scripts that do not have many symbols or accented letters such as the Latin, Greek and Cyrillic scripts used mainly for European languages.

  3. GBK (character encoding) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GBK_(character_encoding)

    A character is encoded as 1 or 2 bytes. A byte in the range 00–7F is a single byte that means the same thing as it does in ASCII. Strictly speaking, there are 95 characters and 33 control codes in this range. A byte with the high bit set indicates that it is the first of 2 bytes.

  4. Windows-1252 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows-1252

    It is the most-used single-byte character encoding in the world. Although almost all websites now use the multi-byte character encoding UTF-8 , as of December 2024 [update] 1.1% [ 4 ] of websites declared ISO 8859-1 which is treated as Windows-1252 by all modern browsers (as required by the HTML5 standard [ 5 ] ), plus 0.3% declared Windows ...

  5. UTF-EBCDIC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-EBCDIC

    UTF-EBCDIC is a character encoding capable of encoding all 1,112,064 valid character code points in Unicode using 1 to 5 bytes (in contrast to a maximum of 4 for UTF-8). [1] It is meant to be EBCDIC-friendly, so that legacy EBCDIC applications on mainframes may process the characters without much difficulty.

  6. Code page - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_page

    In computing, a code page is a character encoding and as such it is a specific association of a set of printable characters and control characters with unique numbers. Typically each number represents the binary value in a single byte. (In some contexts these terms are used more precisely; see Character encoding § Terminology.)

  7. ISO/IEC 8859 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859

    The ISO/IEC 8859 standard parts only define printable characters, although they explicitly set apart the byte ranges 0x00–1F and 0x7F–9F as "combinations that do not represent graphic characters" (i.e. which are reserved for use as control characters) in accordance with ISO/IEC 4873; they were designed to be used in conjunction with a ...

  8. Comparison of Unicode encodings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Unicode...

    The tables below list the number of bytes per code point for different Unicode ranges. Any additional comments needed are included in the table. The figures assume that overheads at the start and end of the block of text are negligible. N.B. The tables below list numbers of bytes per code point, not per user visible "character" (or "grapheme ...

  9. List of information system character sets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_information_system...

    SBCS (single-byte character set) DBCS (double-byte character set) TBCS (triple-byte character set) ITU T.61; DEC Radix-50; Cork encoding; Prosigns for Morse code; Telegraph code; TV Typewriter; SI 960 (7-bit Hebrew ISO/IEC 646) Figure space (typographic unit equal to the size of a single typographic figure) Six-bit character code; List of ...