Unicode: Difference between revisions
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In unicode, the 8th bit is used to change switch out sets of 128 characters.<br> | In unicode, the 8th bit is used to change switch out sets of 128 characters.<br> | ||
When the first bit is 0, the character set is ascii - which conveniently means all ASCII is valid unicode. | When the first bit is 0, the character set is ascii - which conveniently means all ASCII is valid unicode. | ||
= Documentation = | |||
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| wikipedia || https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode | |||
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Revision as of 01:19, 1 August 2021
Unicode is a standard for text encoding.
It extends ASCII, which espresses english in the first 7-bits of an 8-bit integer.
In unicode, the 8th bit is used to change switch out sets of 128 characters.
When the first bit is 0, the character set is ascii - which conveniently means all ASCII is valid unicode.
Documentation
wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode