ASCII 115 — s
The printable character "s" at ASCII code 115.
All Representations
1150x730o16301110011sCharacter Details
| Character | s |
| Name | s |
| Decimal | 115 |
| Hexadecimal | 0x73 |
| Octal | 0o163 |
| Binary | 01110011 |
| HTML Entity | s |
| Category | Lowercase |
| Printable | Yes |
About ASCII 115 (s)
The lowercase letter s (ASCII code 115) is the small form of the nineteenth letter in the Latin alphabet. Lowercase letters emerged from medieval scribal handwriting traditions where faster cursive writing produced smaller, rounder letterforms that eventually became standardized during the Renaissance era. In physics, 's' represents displacement and the SI second unit of time. In regular expressions, the shorthand '\s' matches any whitespace character.
The 26 lowercase Latin letters occupy ASCII codes 97 through 122, positioned exactly 32 code points after their uppercase equivalents. This systematic offset allows case conversion by toggling bit 5 in the binary representation — an elegant design choice from 1963 that still enables efficient case-insensitive string operations in modern software. Lowercase is the default case for most programming identifiers, Unix commands, file names, and body text, making these characters among the most frequently encoded in the entire ASCII set.
In the ASCII encoding table, Lowercase Letter s is assigned code point 115 in decimal (0x73 hexadecimal, 163 octal, 01110011 binary). The 7-bit ASCII standard, first published in 1963 by the American Standards Association, defines exactly 128 characters that remain the foundation of text encoding systems worldwide. UTF-8, the dominant encoding on the modern web, is fully backward compatible with ASCII — every ASCII character is encoded as the identical single byte in UTF-8, guaranteeing that Lowercase Letter s works reliably across all operating systems, programming languages, and internet protocols.
Related ASCII Characters
Nearby ASCII Codes
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