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character encoding

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.
(character)character encoding - (Or "character encoding scheme") A mapping of binary values to code positions and back; generally a 1:1 (bijective) mapping.

In the case of ASCII, this is generally a f(x)=x mapping: code point 65 maps to the byte value 65, and vice versa. This is possible because ASCII uses only code positions representable as single bytes, i.e., values between 0 and 255, at most. (US-ASCII only uses values 0 to 127, in fact.)

Unicode and many CJK coded character sets use many more than 255 positions, requiring more complex mappings: sometimes the characters are mapped onto pairs of bytes (see DBCS). In many cases, this breaks programs that assume a one-to-one mapping of bytes to characters, and so, for example, treat any occurrance of the byte value 13 as a carriage return. To avoid this problem, character encodings such as UTF-8 were devised.


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UTF-8, 8-bit Unified Transformation Format, is a lossless, variable-length character encoding which uses groups of bytes to represent the alphabets of many of the world's languages.
Big 5 is a character encoding method used in Taiwan (Republic of China) and Hong Kong to enable traditional Chinese characters to be rendered on computers.
With T9 Text Output, handset makers no longer need to keep up with language rendering rules, complicated writing systems and ever-changing character encoding standards.
 
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