Find ASCII Value of a Character


In this example, you will learn how to find the ASCII value of a character.

Program to Print ASCII Value


#include <stdio.h> int main() { char c; printf("Enter a character: "); scanf("%c", &c); // %d displays the integer value of a character // %c displays the actual character printf("ASCII value of %c = %d", c, c); return 0; }

Output

Enter a character: G ASCII value of G = 71

Explanation


In C programming, a character variable holds ASCII value (an integer number between 0 and 127) rather than that character itself. This integer value is the ASCII code of the character.

For example, the ASCII value of 'A' is 65.

What this means is that, if you assign 'A' to a character variable, 65 is stored in the variable rather than 'A' itself.

In this program, the user is asked to enter a character. The character is stored in variable c.

When %d format string is used, 71 (the ASCII value of G) is displayed.

When %c format string is used, 'G' itself is displayed.