It would be much easier to read if it was actually table, i.e., if hex codes and the characters were separated into their own columns.
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I'm confused, what does this have to so with typst?
A good ASCII table makes it easy to find the effects of the Shift and Ctrl keys. Like, at a glance, I should be able to answer questions like "which control character corresponds to ^V
?"
On a Unix terminal, the Shift key zeros out bit 6 and the Ctrl key zeros out both bits 6 and 7. (And the Alt key sets bit 8.)
In man ascii
on Linux, it's trivial to see that ^V
is SYN.
Why is it better?
No, I don't think you did.
What's wrong with man ascii
?
What’s wrong with EBCDIC?
How is breaking a decades-old relied-upon standard better?
What do you mean, "breaking"? This isn't a new encoding scheme, it's an informational page showing ASCII encoding.
Love typst! I'm looking forward to writing RPGs in it some day :)
Very useful!
Would be nice to have an additional checkbox for enabling that a purely numeric input also shows the number characters.
E.g. with input: "32"
- Unchecked: Shows just the space character (same behaviour as of now)
- Checked: Shows the space character, "2" and "3"
The "octal" toggle replaces decimal, not hexadecimal contrary to its label.