
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 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) …
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 …
HTML Unicode UTF-8 Emoji - 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, …
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 …
HTML Unicode General Punctuation - W3Schools
HTML Unicode UTF-8 General Punctuation reference guide for various punctuation symbols and their corresponding codes in HTML.
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 …
XML and XSLT - W3Schools
Example XSLT Stylesheet: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <html xsl:version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"> <body style="font-family:Arial;font …
Bash Tutorial - W3Schools
Understanding Shells A shell is a text-based interface that lets you talk to your computer. There are different types of shells, but Bash (Bourne Again SHell) is the most popular because it's …
JSON Syntax - W3Schools
JSON syntax is derived from JavaScript object notation syntax: Data is in name/value pairs Data is separated by commas Curly braces hold objects Square brackets hold arrays