Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
Where's ASCII?
Message
De
20/06/1999 01:55:15
 
 
À
18/06/1999 18:29:14
Dragan Nedeljkovich (En ligne)
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Titre:
Divers
Thread ID:
00230872
Message ID:
00231866
Vues:
21
>>Umm, thanks Paul, but outside of command.com, DOS is extinct here :) Finally found the charts on the MSDN, though...now, if I can figure out what the code definition abbreviations mean...
>
>Now you're starting another archaeology thread. AFAIR, most of the code abbreviations had some meaning while they were used for teletype - CAN was a signal to cancel a connection, BEL rang a real bell, LF forwarded the paper one line, CR returned the printing carriage to the left side of the paper... No, I'm not that old to have used the thing, but I knew some people who had to learn these codes, for historical reasons. I've found them described somewhere... some 15 years ago, or so.

Regular ASCII Chart (character codes 0 - 127)
000...(nul)...016...(dle)
001...(soh)...017...(dc1)
002...(stx)...018...(dc2)
003...(etx)...019...(dc3)
004...(eot)...020 ¶ (dc4)
005...(enq)...021 § (nak)
006...(ack)...022...(syn)
007...(bel)...023...(etb)
008...(bs)....024...(can)
009...(tab)...025...(em)
010...(lf)....026...(eof)
011...(vt)....027...(esc)
012...(np)....028...(fs)
013...(cr)....029...(gs)
014...(so)....030...(rs)
015 ¤ (si)....031...(us)

Here are all of the control codes. If you need the rest of them (ASCII codes), let me know.
Paul M.
MCSE/MCSA/MCT/MCP+I, A+, Network+, I-Net+
Nil carborundum illegitimi.
Précédent
Suivant
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform