Search results with tag "For information interchange"
INTERNATIONAL ISO/IEC STANDARD 18004
www.swisseduc.chJIS X 0201, JIS 8-bit Character Set for Information Interchange. JIS X 0208-1997,Japanese Graphic Character Set for Information Interchange. ANSI X3.4, Coded Character Sets — 7-bit American National Standard Code for Information Interchange (7-bit ASCII).
DICTIONARY OF IBM & COMPUTING TERMINOLOGY
www.ibm.comASCII (American National Standard Code for Information Interchange) n. The standard code, using a coded character set consisting of 7-bit coded characters (8 bits including parity check), that is used for information interchange among data processing systems, data communication systems, and associated equipment.
A Simpli ed Computer Science Glossary - University of Idaho
marvin.cs.uidaho.eduASCII - Pronounced ass-key. Stands for the American Standard Code for Information Interchange. It is a 7bit code for characters. For example: the letter ’x’ is represented as 1111000. Because it is only 7 bits long, an ASCII character can be stored in a byte.
Modbus Protocol Reference Guide - M-System
www.m-system.co.jpStandard Code for Information Interchange) or RTU (Remote Terminal Unit). The mode must be the same for all devices on a Modbus network. In ASCII mode, each 8-bit byte in a message is sent as two ASCII characters. In RTU mode, each 8-bit byte in a message contains two 4-bit hexadecimal characters.
Chapter 6 Data Types - Southeastern Louisiana University
www2.southeastern.eduCharacter Types – Char types are stored as numeric codings (ASCII / Unicode) – Traditionally, the most commonly used coding was the 8-bit code ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) – An alternative, 16-bit coding: Unicode (UCS-2) – Java was the first widely used language to use the Unicode character set. Since then, it
Chapter 6 Data Type - Southeastern Louisiana University
www2.southeastern.eduCharacter Types – Char types are stored as numeric codings (ASCII / Unicode). – Traditionally, the most commonly used coding was the 8-bit code ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange). – A 16-bit character set named …
for Information Systems - Coded Character Sets - 7-Bit ...
sliderule.mraiow.comThis standard is a revision of American National Standard Code for Information Inter- change, ANSI X3.4-1 977, and was developed in parallel with its international counterpart, Informational Processing - IS0 7-Bit Coded Character Set for Information Interchange,