This is a list of some binary codes that are (or have been) used to represent text as a sequence of binary digits "0" and "1". Fixed-width binary codes use a set number of bits to represent each character in the text, while in variable-width binary codes, the number of bits may vary from character to character.
Five-bit binary codes
Several different five-bit codes were used for early punched tape systems.
Five bits per character only allows for 32 different characters, so many of the five-bit codes used two sets of characters per value referred to as FIGS (figures) and LTRS (letters), and reserved two characters to switch between these sets. This effectively allowed the use of 60 characters.
Standard five-bit standard codes are:
The following early computer systems each used its own five-bit code:
The steganographic code, commonly known as Bacon's cipher uses groups of 5 binary-valued elements to represent letters of the alphabet.
Six-bit binary codes
Six bits per character allows 64 distinct characters to be represented.
Examples of six-bit binary codes are:
- International Telegraph Alphabet No. 4 (ITA4)[4]
- Six-bit BCD (Binary Coded Decimal), used by early mainframe computers.
- Six-bit ASCII subset of the primitive seven-bit ASCII
- Braille – Braille characters are represented using six dot positions, arranged in a rectangle. Each position may contain a raised dot or not, so Braille can be considered to be a six-bit binary code.
See also: Six-bit character codes
Seven-bit binary codes
Examples of seven-bit binary codes are:
- International Telegraph Alphabet No. 3 (ITA3) – derived from the Moore ARQ code, and also known as the RCA
- ASCII – The ubiquitous ASCII code was originally defined as a seven-bit character set. The ASCII article provides a detailed set of equivalent standards and variants. In addition, there are various extensions of ASCII to eight bits (see Eight-bit binary codes)
- CCIR 476 – Extends ITA2 from 5 to 7 bits, using the extra 2 bits as check digits[4]
- International Telegraph Alphabet No. 4 (ITA4)[4]
Variable-length binary codes
- UTF-8 – Encodes characters in a way that is mostly compatible with ASCII but can also encode the full repertoire of Unicode characters with sequences of up to four 8-bit bytes.
- UTF-16 – Extends UCS-2 to cover the whole of Unicode with sequences of one or two 16-bit elements
- GB 18030 – A full-Unicode variable-length code designed for compatibility with older Chinese multibyte encodings
- Huffman coding – A technique for expressing more common characters using shorter bit strings than are used for less common characters
Data compression systems such as Lempel–Ziv–Welch can compress arbitrary binary data. They are therefore not binary codes themselves but may be applied to binary codes to reduce storage needs.