What is an ASCII?

ASCII stands for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. It’s a way that computers and other devices use to represent letters, numbers, and symbols. Each letter or symbol in ASCII has a special code made up of numbers. For example, the letter “A” is represented by the number 65, and the spacebar is represented by the number 32. Computers use this system to understand text and symbols because they only understand numbers.

Imagine ASCII as a secret code that helps computers talk to each other. When you type something on your keyboard, like a word, your computer turns each letter into an ASCII number so it can understand and display it on the screen. This code is used in almost every device that works with text, from computers to smartphones, making sure they all “speak the same language.”

ASCII is super important because it makes sure that when you send an email, type a message, or use a computer program, everything shows up correctly on the other end. It keeps things simple and organized so that technology can understand what we want to say!