Frequently Asked Questions
ASCII art is designed to be viewed in a font where every character takes up the same amount of space (a monospace font). If you paste it into a program that uses a different font, the lines might not stay straight.
It uses a simple formula to take the red, green, and blue values of a color and average them to get a single number that represents its brightness, or grayscale value.
You can, but it might be slow. The tool processes a lot of information, and if your image is very big, it could take some time and might slow down your browser.
ASCII art started back in the day of typewriters and early computers when there were no graphics. People used the available characters to draw pictures with text.
It gets its name from the ASCII standard, which is a code that gives a number to every letter, number, and symbol on a keyboard.