TBLEN10002: The ASCII Table
ASCII stand for the "amarican code for information interchange". It's presented in a table with Dec and Hex codes.
ASCII Table
Dec Hex Abbr 1 2 Description 0 00 NUL ^@ \0 Null character 1 01 SOH ^A Start of Header 2 02 STX ^B Start of Text 3 03 ETX ^C End of Text 4 04 EOT ^D End of Transmission 5 05 ENQ ^E Enquiry 6 06 ACK ^F Acknowledgment 7 07 BEL ^G \a Bell 8 08 BS ^H \b Backspace[d][i] 9 09 HT ^I \t Horizontal Tab 10 0A LF ^J \n Line feed 11 0B VT ^K \v Vertical Tab 12 0C FF ^L \f Form feed 13 0D CR ^M \r Carriage return[h] 14 0E SO ^N Shift Out 15 0F SI ^O Shift In 16 10 DLE ^P Data Link Escape 17 11 DC1 ^Q Device Control 1 (oft. XON) 18 12 DC2 ^R Device Control 2 19 13 DC3 ^S Device Control 3 (oft. XOFF) 20 14 DC4 ^T Device Control 4 21 15 NAK ^U Negative Acknowledgement 22 16 SYN ^V Synchronous Idle 23 17 ETB ^W End of Trans. Block 24 18 CAN ^X Cancel 25 19 EM ^Y End of Medium 26 1A SUB ^Z Substitute 27 1B ESC ^[ \e[f] Escape[g] 28 1C FS ^\ File Separator 29 1D GS ^] Group Separator 30 1E RS ^^ Record Separator 31 1F US ^_ Unit Separator
Dec Hex Abbr 1 2 Description 32 20 SP 33 21 ! 34 22 " 35 23 # 36 24 $ 37 25 % 38 26 & 39 27 ' 40 28 ( 41 29 ) 42 2A * 43 2B + 44 2C , 45 2D - 46 2E . 47 2F / 48 30 0 49 31 1 50 32 2 51 33 3 52 34 4 53 35 5 54 36 6 55 37 7 56 38 8 57 39 9 58 3A : 59 3B ; 60 3C < 61 3D = 62 3E > 63 3F ? 64 40 @ 65 41 A 66 42 B 67 43 C 68 44 D 69 45 E 70 46 F 71 47 G 72 48 H 73 49 I 74 4A J 75 4B K 76 4C L 77 4D M 78 4E N 79 4F O 80 50 P 81 51 Q 82 52 R 83 53 S 84 54 T 85 55 U 86 56 V 87 57 W 88 58 X 89 59 Y 90 5A Z 91 5B [ 92 5C \ 93 5D ] 94 5E ^ 95 5F _ 96 60 ` 97 61 a 98 62 b 99 63 c 100 64 d 101 65 e 102 66 f 103 67 g 104 68 h 105 69 i 106 6A j 107 6B k 108 6C l 109 6D m 110 6E n 111 6F o 112 70 p 113 71 q 114 72 r 115 73 s 116 74 t 117 75 u 118 76 v 119 77 w 120 78 x 121 79 y 122 7A z 123 7B { 124 7C | 125 7D } 126 7E ~ 127 7F DEL ^? Delete[e][i]
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The information provided in this document is intended for your information only. Lubby makes no claims to the validity of this information. Use of this information is at own risk!About the Author
Author: Wim Peeters - Keskon GmbH & Co. KG
Wim Peeters is electronics engineer with an additional master in IT and over 30 years of experience, including time spent in support, development, consulting, training and database administration. Wim has worked with SQL Server since version 6.5. He has developed in C/C++, Java and C# on Windows and Linux. He writes knowledge base articles to solve IT problems and publishes them on the Lubby Knowledge Platform.
Latest update: 17.08.2022 | Comment: