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  2. VGA text mode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VGA_text_mode

    Typically, glyphs are 8 dots wide and 8–16 dots high, however the height can be any value up to a maximum of 32. Each row of a glyph is coded in an 8-bit byte, with high bits to the left of the glyph and low bits to the right. Along with several hardware-dependent fonts stored in the adapter's ROM, the text mode offers 8 [6] loadable fonts ...

  3. Everson Mono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everson_Mono

    Everson Mono is a monospaced humanist sans serif Unicode font whose development by Michael Everson began in 1995. At first, Everson Mono was a collection of 8-bit fonts containing glyphs for tables in ISO/IEC 10646; at that time, it was not easy to edit cmaps to have true Unicode indices, and there were very few applications which could do anything with a font so encoded in any case.

  4. UTF-8 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8

    UTF-8 is a character encoding standard used for electronic communication. Defined by the Unicode Standard, the name is derived from Unicode Transformation Format – 8-bit. [1] Almost every webpage is stored in UTF-8.

  5. ISO/IEC 8859-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859-1

    It is the basis for some popular 8-bit character sets and the first two blocks of characters in Unicode. As of December 2024 [update] , 1.1% of all web sites use ISO/IEC 8859-1 . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is the most declared single-byte character encoding, but as Web browsers and the HTML5 standard [ 3 ] interpret them as the superset Windows-1252 ...

  6. Unicode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode

    UTF-8 uses one to four 8-bit units (bytes) per code point and, being compact for Latin scripts and ASCII-compatible, provides the de facto standard encoding for the interchange of Unicode text. It is used by FreeBSD and most recent Linux distributions as a direct replacement for legacy encodings in general text handling.

  7. ATASCII - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATASCII

    Atari 8-bit computers, via the ANTIC coprocessor, supported indirection of the character set graphics, allowing a program to redefine the graphical glyphs that appear for each ATASCII character. [2] This can be used as a new font for text, to support an additional character set, or for tile graphics in a video game or other application. Cycling ...

  8. Cork encoding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cork_encoding

    The Cork (also known as T1 or EC) encoding is a character encoding used for encoding glyphs in fonts. [1] It is named after the city of Cork in Ireland, where during a TeX Users Group (TUG) conference in 1990 a new encoding was introduced for LaTeX. [1] It contains 256 characters supporting most west- and east-European languages with the Latin ...

  9. ISO/IEC 8859 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859

    ISO/IEC 8859-16:2000 - 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets, Part 16: Latin alphabet No. 10 (draft dated November 15, 1999; superseded by ISO/IEC 8859-16:2001, published July 15, 2001) ECMA standards, which in intent correspond exactly to the ISO/IEC 8859 character set standards, can be found at: