ASCII 75 — K
The printable character "K" at ASCII code 75.
All Representations
750x4B0o11301001011KCharacter Details
| Character | K |
| Name | K |
| Decimal | 75 |
| Hexadecimal | 0x4B |
| Octal | 0o113 |
| Binary | 01001011 |
| HTML Entity | K |
| Category | Uppercase |
| Printable | Yes |
About ASCII 75 (K)
The uppercase letter K (ASCII code 75) is the eleventh letter of the modern Latin alphabet, derived from the Phoenician kaph (meaning palm) through Greek kappa. In English text, the letter k appears with a frequency of approximately 0.8%, ranking as the 22nd most common letter. K was rarely used in Latin and remains uncommon in Romance languages, but it is essential in Germanic, Nordic, and many Asian transliteration systems.
The 26 uppercase Latin letters span ASCII codes 65 through 90, forming the capital letter block of the character set. Their placement exactly 32 code positions before the corresponding lowercase letters (97–122) was a deliberate engineering decision enabling case conversion through toggling a single bit. Uppercase letters are essential for proper nouns, sentence openings, acronyms, and programming constants. Early computing systems often supported only uppercase characters, making ASCII's inclusion of both cases a forward-looking design choice.
In the ASCII encoding table, Uppercase Letter K is assigned code point 75 in decimal (0x4B hexadecimal, 113 octal, 01001011 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 Uppercase Letter K works reliably across all operating systems, programming languages, and internet protocols.
Related ASCII Characters
Nearby ASCII Codes
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Browse all 128 ASCII characters with codes, representations, and detailed references.