1ASCII(7) Linux Programmer's Manual ASCII(7)
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6 ascii - ASCII character set encoded in octal, decimal, and hexadecimal
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9 ASCII is the American Standard Code for Information Interchange. It is
10 a 7-bit code. Many 8-bit codes (e.g., ISO 8859-1) contain ASCII as
11 their lower half. The international counterpart of ASCII is known as
12 ISO 646-IRV.
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14 The following table contains the 128 ASCII characters.
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16 C program '\X' escapes are noted.
17 │
18 Oct Dec Hex Char │ Oct Dec Hex Char
19 ────────────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────
20 000 0 00 NUL '\0' (null character) │ 100 64 40 @
21 001 1 01 SOH (start of heading) │ 101 65 41 A
22 002 2 02 STX (start of text) │ 102 66 42 B
23 003 3 03 ETX (end of text) │ 103 67 43 C
24 004 4 04 EOT (end of transmission) │ 104 68 44 D
25 005 5 05 ENQ (enquiry) │ 105 69 45 E
26 006 6 06 ACK (acknowledge) │ 106 70 46 F
27 007 7 07 BEL '\a' (bell) │ 107 71 47 G
28 010 8 08 BS '\b' (backspace) │ 110 72 48 H
29 011 9 09 HT '\t' (horizontal tab) │ 111 73 49 I
30 012 10 0A LF '\n' (new line) │ 112 74 4A J
31 013 11 0B VT '\v' (vertical tab) │ 113 75 4B K
32 014 12 0C FF '\f' (form feed) │ 114 76 4C L
33 015 13 0D CR '\r' (carriage ret) │ 115 77 4D M
34 016 14 0E SO (shift out) │ 116 78 4E N
35 017 15 0F SI (shift in) │ 117 79 4F O
36 020 16 10 DLE (data link escape) │ 120 80 50 P
37 021 17 11 DC1 (device control 1) │ 121 81 51 Q
38 022 18 12 DC2 (device control 2) │ 122 82 52 R
39 023 19 13 DC3 (device control 3) │ 123 83 53 S
40 024 20 14 DC4 (device control 4) │ 124 84 54 T
41 025 21 15 NAK (negative ack.) │ 125 85 55 U
42 026 22 16 SYN (synchronous idle) │ 126 86 56 V
43 027 23 17 ETB (end of trans. blk) │ 127 87 57 W
44 030 24 18 CAN (cancel) │ 130 88 58 X
45 031 25 19 EM (end of medium) │ 131 89 59 Y
46 032 26 1A SUB (substitute) │ 132 90 5A Z
47 033 27 1B ESC (escape) │ 133 91 5B [
48 034 28 1C FS (file separator) │ 134 92 5C \ '\\'
49 035 29 1D GS (group separator) │ 135 93 5D ]
50 036 30 1E RS (record separator) │ 136 94 5E ^
51 037 31 1F US (unit separator) │ 137 95 5F _
52 040 32 20 SPACE │ 140 96 60 `
53 041 33 21 ! │ 141 97 61 a
54 042 34 22 " │ 142 98 62 b
55 043 35 23 # │ 143 99 63 c
56 044 36 24 $ │ 144 100 64 d
57 045 37 25 % │ 145 101 65 e
58 046 38 26 & │ 146 102 66 f
59 047 39 27 ' │ 147 103 67 g
60 050 40 28 ( │ 150 104 68 h
61 051 41 29 ) │ 151 105 69 i
62 052 42 2A * │ 152 106 6A j
63 053 43 2B + │ 153 107 6B k
64 054 44 2C , │ 154 108 6C l
65 055 45 2D - │ 155 109 6D m
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67 056 46 2E . │ 156 110 6E n
68 057 47 2F / │ 157 111 6F o
69 060 48 30 0 │ 160 112 70 p
70 061 49 31 1 │ 161 113 71 q
71 062 50 32 2 │ 162 114 72 r
72 063 51 33 3 │ 163 115 73 s
73 064 52 34 4 │ 164 116 74 t
74 065 53 35 5 │ 165 117 75 u
75 066 54 36 6 │ 166 118 76 v
76 067 55 37 7 │ 167 119 77 w
77 070 56 38 8 │ 170 120 78 x
78 071 57 39 9 │ 171 121 79 y
79 072 58 3A : │ 172 122 7A z
80 073 59 3B ; │ 173 123 7B {
81 074 60 3C < │ 174 124 7C |
82 075 61 3D = │ 175 125 7D }
83 076 62 3E > │ 176 126 7E ~
84 077 63 3F ? │ 177 127 7F DEL
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86 Tables
87 For convenience, below are more compact tables in hex and decimal.
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89 2 3 4 5 6 7 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120
90 ------------- ---------------------------------
91 0: 0 @ P ` p 0: ( 2 < F P Z d n x
92 1: ! 1 A Q a q 1: ) 3 = G Q [ e o y
93 2: " 2 B R b r 2: * 4 > H R \ f p z
94 3: # 3 C S c s 3: ! + 5 ? I S ] g q {
95 4: $ 4 D T d t 4: " , 6 @ J T ^ h r |
96 5: % 5 E U e u 5: # - 7 A K U _ i s }
97 6: & 6 F V f v 6: $ . 8 B L V ` j t ~
98 7: ' 7 G W g w 7: % / 9 C M W a k u DEL
99 8: ( 8 H X h x 8: & 0 : D N X b l v
100 9: ) 9 I Y i y 9: ' 1 ; E O Y c m w
101 A: * : J Z j z
102 B: + ; K [ k {
103 C: , < L \ l |
104 D: - = M ] m }
105 E: . > N ^ n ~
106 F: / ? O _ o DEL
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109 History
110 An ascii manual page appeared in Version 7 of AT&T UNIX.
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112 On older terminals, the underscore code is displayed as a left arrow,
113 called backarrow, the caret is displayed as an up-arrow and the verti‐
114 cal bar has a hole in the middle.
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116 Uppercase and lowercase characters differ by just one bit and the ASCII
117 character 2 differs from the double quote by just one bit, too. That
118 made it much easier to encode characters mechanically or with a non-mi‐
119 crocontroller-based electronic keyboard and that pairing was found on
120 old teletypes.
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122 The ASCII standard was published by the United States of America Stan‐
123 dards Institute (USASI) in 1968.
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126 charsets(7), iso_8859-1(7), iso_8859-2(7), iso_8859-3(7),
127 iso_8859-4(7), iso_8859-5(7), iso_8859-6(7), iso_8859-7(7),
128 iso_8859-8(7), iso_8859-9(7), iso_8859-10(7), iso_8859-11(7),
129 iso_8859-13(7), iso_8859-14(7), iso_8859-15(7), iso_8859-16(7),
130 utf-8(7)
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133 This page is part of release 5.13 of the Linux man-pages project. A
134 description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
135 latest version of this page, can be found at
136 https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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140Linux 2020-06-09 ASCII(7)