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in this video weamp;#39;ll cover the basics of ASCII Unicode and utf-8 starting with ASCII ASCII is a character in coding it Maps some bits zeros and ones into characters and as we know computers store everything as zeros and ones thatamp;#39;s why itamp;#39;s needed ASCII uses 7 bits for encoding meaning that there are two to the 7 which is 128 different characters that can be represented so hereamp;#39;s an example 65 represents a 116 represents T and note that the case matters here now in binary this is how it would look now there are some drawbacks of ASCII the original Seven bits were only enough to represent English characters in punctuation and maybe some codes and because a byte is eight bits there was a lot of competition on which other characters should be supported with that last bit now enter Unicode Unicode is a Universal Character encoding it supports many different alphabets and even emojis however unlike ASCII Unicode does not define how its mapping should be implem