e with diaeresis
ASCII code 235 (0xEB) represents the e with diaeresis character in the extended ASCII table (128–255). It is a Latin accented character commonly used in European languages such as French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, and Scandinavian languages. The extended ASCII range builds upon the original 128-character ASCII set, adding accented letters, currency symbols, typographic marks, and mathematical symbols. These characters are defined by the Windows-1252 (CP-1252) encoding, which is a superset of ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1). In modern web development, UTF-8 encoding is preferred, but understanding extended ASCII remains important for legacy system compatibility and character encoding troubleshooting.
| Decimal | 235 |
| Octal | 353 |
| Hexadecimal | 0xEB |
| Binary | 11101011 |
| HTML Code | ë |
| HTML Entity | ë |
| Unicode | U+00EB |
| Unicode Name | LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS |
| URL Escape | %EB |
| Quoted-Printable | =EB |
| UTF-8 (Hex) | C3 AB |
| Category | Extended — Latin Accented Letters |
// Character literal
let char = 'ë';
// Using char code
let char2 = String.fromCharCode(235);
// Unicode escape
let char3 = '\u00EB'; # Character literal
char = 'ë'
# Using chr()
char = chr(235)
# Using ord() to get code
code = ord('ë') # Returns 235 <!-- Direct character -->
ë
<!-- HTML entity (numeric) -->
ë
<!-- Hex entity -->
ë // Character literal
char c = 'ë';
// Using cast
char c2 = (char)235;
// To get code from char
int code = (int)'ë'; // Returns 235