
HTML URL Encoding Reference - W3Schools
URL encoding converts characters into a format that can be transmitted over the Internet. URLs can only be sent over the Internet using the ASCII character-set.
HTML Unicode UTF-8 - W3Schools
To display HTML correctly, the browser must know what encoding to use. All modern computer languages use the UTF-8 character encoding as default. UTF-8 covers the most languages and …
HTML URL Encoding - W3Schools
URL encoding converts non-ASCII characters into a format that can be transmitted over the Internet. URL encoding replaces non-ASCII characters with a "%" followed by hexadecimal digits.
HTML UTF-8 Reference - W3Schools
The HTML Standard is Unicode UTF-8 The default character set in HTML-4 (ISO-8859-1) were limited in size and not compatible in multilingual environments. The default character encoding in HTML-5 is …
HTML Charset - W3Schools
The ASCII Character Set ASCII was the first character encoding standard for the web. It defined 128 different latin characters that could be used on the internet: English letters (a-z and A-Z) Numbers (0 …
Unicode UTF-8 Reference - W3Schools
W3Schools offers free online tutorials, references and exercises in all the major languages of the web. Covering popular subjects like HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Python, SQL, Java, and many, many more.
HTML Windows-1252 - ANSI Reference - W3Schools
Windows-1252 - ANSI Windows-1252 was the first default character set in Microsoft Windows. It was the most popular character set in Windows from 1985 to 1990. The name "ANSI Code Pages" was used …
Git .gitattributes - W3Schools
What is .gitattributes? The .gitattributes file is a special file that tells Git how to handle specific files in your repository. It controls things like line endings, file types, merge behavior, custom diff tools, and …
Python String encode () Method - W3Schools
Definition and Usage The encode() method encodes the string, using the specified encoding. If no encoding is specified, UTF-8 will be used.
HTML Tutorial - W3Schools
At W3Schools you will find complete references about HTML elements, attributes, events, color names, entities, character-sets, URL encoding, language codes, HTTP messages, browser support, and more: