Technically ASCII is 8 bit, so all characters less than 256 are ASCII. I believe 128 - 255 are all printable, so "Printable 7-bit ASCII" is probably more accurate.
Nitpick, nitpick, nitpick, I know...
Update: I'm wrong. These people are too. An explanation of ISO 646 I found here pretty much sums it up: "ASCII uses only 7 bits and allows the most significant eighth bit to be used as parity bit, highlight bit, end-of-string bit (all of which are considered bad practice nowadays) or to include additional characters for internationalization (i18n for which we need 8bit-clean programs that do none of afore-mentioned silly tricks) but ASCII defined no standard for this and many manufacturers invented their own proprietary codepages." Sorry.
In reply to Re^2: Getting rid of non-standard ASCII characters
by Ionizor
in thread Getting rid of non-standard ASCII characters
by Anonymous Monk
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