
HTML URL Encoding Reference - W3Schools
ASCII Encoding Reference Your browser will encode input, according to the character-set used in your page. The default character-set in HTML5 is UTF-8.
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 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 ISO-8859-1 Reference - W3Schools
ISO-8859-1 ISO-8859-1 was the default character in HTML 4.01. ISO (The International Standards Organization) defines the standard character sets for different alphabets/languages. The different …
W3Schools Online Web Tutorials
W3Schools offers free online tutorials and references on web development languages such as HTML, CSS, JavaScript, PHP, SQL, and JQuery.
Start Teaching Coding - W3Schools
Step 1: Start with the Basics Choose a Beginner-Friendly Language: Start with something like HTML to make web pages or Python as a good first coding language. You can use Scratch, a visual, block …
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 …
HTML ASCII Reference - W3Schools
ASCII was the first character set (encoding standard) used between computers on the Internet. Both ISO-8859-1 (default in HTML 4.01) and UTF-8 (default in HTML5), are built on ASCII.
HTML Symbol Entities Reference - W3Schools
If you use an HTML entity name or a hexadecimal number, the character will always display correctly, independent of what character set (encoding) your page uses!
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.