punctuation bit
1Colon (punctuation) — Colon Punctuation apostrophe ( ’ …
2Unicode — For the 1889 Universal Telegraphic Phrase book, see Commercial code (communications). The Unicode official logo since October 2009 …
3Apostrophe — redirects here. For other uses, see (disambiguation). Apostrophes redirects here. For the music book, see Apostrophes: A Book of Tributes to Masters of Music. For other uses, see Apostrophe (disambiguation). ’ Apostrophe …
4ArmSCII — or ArmSCII is the acronym of the Armenian Standard Code for Information Interchange. It refers to several single byte character encodings defined by Armenian national standard 166 97.However these encodings are not widely used because the… …
5Mapping of Unicode characters — Unicode’s Universal Character Set has a potential capacity to support over 1 million characters. Each UCS character is mapped to a code point which is an integer between 0 and 1,114,111 used to represent each character within the internal logic… …
6Dash — Not to be confused with Hyphen or Minus sign. This article is about the punctuation mark. For other uses, see Dash (disambiguation). For guidelines on dash usage in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Manual of Style#Dashes …
7American and British English differences — For the Wikipedia editing policy on use of regional variants in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Manual of style#National varieties of English. This is one of a series of articles about the differences between British English and American English, which …
8Wikipedia:Featured article candidates — Here, we determine which articles are to be featured articles (FAs). FAs exemplify Wikipedia s very best work and satisfy the FA criteria. All editors are welcome to review nominations; please see the review FAQ. Before nominating an article,… …
9Universal Character Set Characters — The Unicode Consortium (UC) and the International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) collaborate on the Universal Character Set. (UCS)] . The UCS is an international standard to map characters used in natural language (as opposed to… …
10ASCII — /as kee/, n. a standard code, consisting of 128 7 bit combinations, for characters stored in a computer or to be transmitted between computers. [A(merican) S(tandard) C(ode for) I(nformation) I(nterchange)] * * * in full American Standard Code… …