$WW,1$$FG,5$$TX+CX,"Char Overview"$$FG$ A $FG,2$Char$FG$acter is a single byte holding an ASCII code for a letter, num or sym. The $FG,2$TempleOS$FG$ term is a $FG,2$U8$FG$. Standard ASCII values range from 0 to 127. Values below 32 are ctrl key's. So, an ASCII #3 is a $FG,2$$FG$. TempleOS uses a few nonstandard values below 32. See $LK,"Char Definitions",A="MN:CH_SHIFT_SPACE"$. ASCII #5 is the cursor location in a saved file. ASCII #28 is $FG,2$$FG$. ASCII #31 is a $FG,2$$FG$. TempleOS ASCII is 8-bit instead of 7-bit, so it also uses the range from 128-255. Press $FG,2$$FG$ to see shapes for 128-255. Technically, $FG,2$$FG$ are $LK,"screen codes",A="HI:TextBase Layer"$. A $FG,2$Key$FG$ is typically specified with a scan code. TempleOS scan codes contain the key value in the lowest $FG,2$U8$FG$, and flags in the upper 3 bytes. See $LK,"Scan Code Flags",A="MN:SCF_CTRL"$ and $LK,"Scan Codes",A="MN:SC_INS"$. TempleOS stores scan codes in 8 bytes. $FG,2$Byte 0$FG$ is the code. NumPad keys, SHIFT, ALT, CTRL and GUI keys combined. $FG,2$Byte 1-3$FG$ are $LK,"flags",A="MN:SCf_KEY_UP"$ The upper 4-bytes are copied from lower 4-bytes. $FG,2$Byte 4$FG$ is the code. Left, Right and NumPad keys distinct. $FG,2$Byte 5-7$FG$ are $LK,"flags",A="MN:SCf_KEY_UP"$ Run the program $LK,"::/Demo/MsgLoop.CPP"$ to examine scan code. Press $FG,2$$FG$ and "Insert ASCII/ScanCode".$FG$ See $LK,"Key Allocations",A="FI:::/Doc/KeyAlloc.TXT"$ and $LK,"CKbdStateGlbls",A="MN:CKbdStateGlbls"$. A $FG,2$String$FG$ is a bunch of ASCII characters terminated with a zero.