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  1. HTML URL Encoding Reference - W3Schools

    URL Encoding (Percent Encoding) 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. …

  2. URL Encode/Decode - W3Schools

    URL Encoding and Decoding Tools Encode special characters for use in URLs, or decode URL-encoded strings.

  3. Base64 Encode/Decode - W3Schools

    Base64 Encoding and Decoding Tool Encode text to Base64 or decode Base64 to text. Supports file/image encoding too.

  4. 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. URLs …

  5. HTML UTF-8 Reference - W3Schools

    UTF-8 is encoding. It is how unicode numbers are translated into binary numbers to be stored in the computer: UTF-8 encoding will store "hello" like this (binary): 01101000 01100101 01101100 …

  6. HTML Charset - W3Schools

    HTML charset defines the character encoding for web pages, ensuring proper display of text and symbols.

  7. 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 …

  8. 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 …

  9. DSA Huffman Coding - W3Schools

    Huffman Coding Implementation The correct word for creating Huffman code based on data or text is "encoding", and the opposite would be "decoding", when the original data or text is recreated based …

  10. 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.