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What's the difference between the ansi, unicode and unicode?


Asked by Kate Patel on Dec 14, 2021 FAQ



ANSI is the US standards body that defines character sets. However, I think you’re referring to the Windows character sets which are actually not ANSI-compliant.
And,
1.UTF-8 is a widely used encoding while ANSI is an obsolete encoding scheme. 2.ANSI uses a single byte while UTF-8 is a multibyte encoding scheme. 3.UTF-8 can represent a wide variety of characters while ANSI is pretty limited.
Likewise, Unicode is a superset of ASCII, and the numbers 0–128 have the same meaning in ASCII as they have in Unicode. ASCII has 128 code points, 0 through 127. It can fit in a single 8-bit byte, the values 128 through 255 tended to be used for other characters.
Besides,
ANSI encoding is a slightly generic term used to refer to the standard code page on a system, usually Windows.
Accordingly,
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