![]() ![]() See the article for an explanation of why this encoding is usually referred to as ANSI. This difference is due to the fact that “ANSI” encoding is 8-bit rather than 7-bit as ASCII is (ASCII is almost always encoded nowadays as 8-bit bytes with the MSB set to 0). (It can represent certain other Windows code pages on other systems.) This is essentially an extension of the ASCII character set in that it includes all the ASCII characters with an additional 128 character codes. ![]() It is more properly referred to as Windows-1252 on Western/U.S. _ ANSI encoding is a slightly generic term used to refer to the standard code page on a system, usually Windows. Hello recently I had the same problem, and found that you can use this code: Windows-1252, it will work just like the ANSI, when generating a file you will see that the encoding format will be ANSI if you use that code,I refer to this text that I found in stackoverflow.
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