Products | Support | Solutions | CodeDev | About  

ASCII Tables
Macintosh ASCII Table

 

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

0

Nul

HM

 

 

End

Ins

 

 

BS

Tab

1

 

Pup

Pdn

CR

ð

 

 

 

 

 

2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Esc

LA

RA

3

UA

DA

Spc

!

"

#

$

%

&

'

4

(

)

*

+

,

-

.

/

0

1

5

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

:

;

6

<

=

>

?

@

A

B

C

D

E

7

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

8

P

Q

R

S

T

U

V

W

X

Y

9

Z

[

\

]

^

_

'

a

b

c

10

d

e

f

g

h

i

j

k

l

m

11

n

o

p

q

r

s

t

u

v

w

12

x

y
z
{
|
}
~
Del
 
 

13

Ç
É
Ñ Ö Ü á à â ä ã

14

å
ç
é
è
ê
ë
í
ì
î
ï

15

ñ
ó
ò
ô
ö
õ
ú
ù
û
ü

16

°
¢
£
§
ß
®
©

17

´
¨
­
Æ
Ø
°
±

18

¥
µ
·
¸
º
ª
º

19

æ
ø
¿
¡
¬
Ã
ƒ
Å
Æ
«

20

»
nbs
À
Ã
Õ
Œ
œ

21

÷
ÿ
Ù
Ú

22

Ü
ß
·
â
Â

23

Ê
Á
Ë
È
Í
Î
Ï
Ì
Ó
Ô

24

Ò
Ú
Û
Ù
õ
ö
÷
¯
ù

25

ú

û

¸

ý

þ

ÿ

 

  • Tab = Tab key
  • BS = BackSpace
  • CR = Enter key
  • LA = Left Arrow key
  • RA = Right Arrow Key
  • DA = Down Arrow Key
  • UP = Up Arrow Key
  • Del = Delete key
  • Esc = Escape key
  • HM = Home key
  • Pdn = Page Down
  • Pup = Page Up
  • Spc = Space Bar

To look up a key use the first column and then add the number on the first row. For example spc = 3 and 2 = 32. z = 12 and 2 = 122.

IBM/Windows ASCII

ASCII stands for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. ASCII was developed a long time ago and now the characters are not always used in the same way on some machines. Below is the ASCII character table and this includes descriptions of the first 32 characters. ASCII was designed for use with teletypes and so the descriptions are somewhat obscure and their use is frequently not as intended.

Regular ASCII Chart

Extended ASCII Chart (IBM PC environment)
These characters occupy DECIMAL numbers 128 through 255. Strictly speaking, the ASCII character set only includes values up to 127 decimal (7F hex). However, when the IBM PC was developed, the video card contained one byte for each character in the 80x25 character display. Gee...what to do with that extra bit per character? Why not invent 128 new characters, for line-drawing and special symbols? The result, of course, was the extended ASCII character set for the IBM PC. The chart below shows (most of) the characters that can be generated by the display in the original IBM PC.

Microsoft Windows ® has a different notion about what the high-order (upper 128) characters are, as shown in the table below.

ISO Latin 1 Character Entities and HTML Escape Sequence Table

 #      Symbol  HTML Code       | #     Symbol  HTML Code
===============================================================

32 &#32; |143 ? &#143;
33 ! &#33; |144 ? &#144;
34 " &#34; |145 ‘ &#145;
35 # &#35; |146 ’ &#146;
36 $ &#36; |147 “ &#147;
37 % &#37; |148 ” &#148;
38 & &#38; |149 • &#149;
39 ' &#39; |150 – &#150;
40 ( &#40; |151 — &#151;
41 ) &#41; |152 ˜ &#152;
42 * &#42; |153 ™ &#153;
43 + &#43; |154 ? &#154;
44 , &#44; |155 › &#155;
45 - &#45; |156 œ &#156;
46 . &#46; |157 ? &#157;
47 / &#47; |158 ? &#158;
48 0 &#48; |159 Ÿ &#159;
49 1 &#49; |160   &#160;
50 2 &#50; |161 ¡ &#161;
51 3 &#51; |162 ¢ &#162;
52 4 &#52; |163 £ &#163;
53 5 &#53; |164 ? &#164;
54 6 &#54; |165 ¥ &#165;
55 7 &#55; |166 ? &#166;
56 8 &#56; |167 § &#167;
57 9 &#57; |168 ¨ &#168;
58 : &#58; |169 © &#169;
59 ; &#59; |170 ª &#170;
60 < &#60; |171 « &#171;
61 = &#61; |172 ¬ &#172;
62 > &#62; |173 ? &#173;
63 ? &#63; |174 ® &#174;
64 @ &#64; |175 ¯ &#175;
65 A &#65; |176 ° &#176;
66 B &#66; |177 ± &#177;
67 C &#67; |178 ? &#178;
68 D &#68; |179 ? &#179;
69 E &#69; |180 ´ &#180;
70 F &#70; |181 µ &#181;
71 G &#71; |182 ¶ &#182;
72 H &#72; |183 · &#183;
73 I &#73; |184 ¸ &#184;
74 J &#74; |185 ? &#185;
75 K &#75; |186 º &#186;
76 L &#76; |187 » &#187;
77 M &#77; |188 ? &#188;
78 N &#78; |189 ? &#189;
79 O &#79; |190 ? &#190;
80 P &#80; |191 ¿ &#191;
81 Q &#81; |192 À &#192;
82 R &#82; |193 Á &#193;
83 S &#83; |194 Â &#194;
84 T &#84; |195 Ã &#195;
85 U &#85; |196 Ä &#196;
86 V &#86; |197 Å &#197;
87 W &#87; |198 Æ &#198;
88 X &#88; |199 Ç &#199;
89 Y &#89; |200 È &#200;
90 Z &#90; |201 É &#201;
91 [ &#91; |202 Ê &#202;
92 \ &#92; |203 Ë &#203;
93 ] &#93; |204 Ì &#204;
94 ^ &#94; |205 Í &#205;
95 _ &#95; |206 Î &#206;
96 ` &#96; |207 Ï &#207;
97 a &#97; |208 ? &#208;
98 b &#98; |209 Ñ &#209;
99 c &#99; |210 Ò &#210;
100 d &#100; |211 Ó &#211;
101 e &#101; |212 Ô &#212;
102 f &#102; |213 Õ &#213;
103 g &#103; |214 Ö &#214;
104 h &#104; |215 ? &#215;
105 i &#105; |216 Ø &#216;
106 j &#106; |217 Ù &#217;
107 k &#107; |218 Ú &#218;
108 l &#108; |219 Û &#219;
109 m &#109; |220 Ü &#220;
110 n &#110; |221 ? &#221;
111 o &#111; |222 ? &#222;
112 p &#112; |223 ß &#223;
113 q &#113; |224 à &#224;
114 r &#114; |225 á &#225;
115 s &#115; |226 â &#226;
116 t &#116; |227 ã &#227;
117 u &#117; |228 ä &#228;
118 v &#118; |229 å &#229;
119 w &#119; |230 æ &#230;
120 x &#120; |231 ç &#231;
121 y &#121; |232 è &#232;
122 z &#122; |233 é &#233;
123 { &#123; |234 ê &#234;
124 | &#124; |235 ë &#235;
125 } &#125; |236 ì &#236;
126 ~ &#126; |237 í &#237;
127  &#127; |238 î &#238;
128 € &#128; |239 ï &#239;
129 ? &#129; |240 ? &#240;
130 ‚ &#130; |241 ñ &#241;
131 ƒ &#131; |242 ò &#242;
132 „ &#132; |243 ó &#243;
133 … &#133; |244 ô &#244;
134 † &#134; |245 õ &#245;
135 ‡ &#135; |246 ö &#246;
136 ˆ &#136; |247 ÷ &#247;
137 ‰ &#137; |248 ø &#248;
138 ? &#138; |249 ù &#249;
139 ‹ &#139; |250 ú &#250;
140 Œ &#140; |251 û &#251;
141 ? &#141; |252 ü &#252;
142 ? &#142; |253 ? &#253; 143 ? &#143; |254 ? &#254;