94 (number)

Natural number


title: "94 (number)" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["integers", "private-eye"] description: "Natural number" topic_path: "general/integers" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/94_(number)" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Natural number ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox number"]

FieldValue
number94
divisor1, 2, 47, 94
::

| number = 94 | divisor = 1, 2, 47, 94 94 (ninety-four) is the natural number following 93 and preceding 95.

In mathematics

94 is:

In computing

The ASCII character set (and, more generally, ISO 646) contains exactly 94 graphic non-whitespace characters, which form a contiguous range of code points. These codes (0x21–0x7E, as corresponding high bit set bytes 0xA1–0xFE) also used in various multi-byte encoding schemes for languages of East Asia, such as ISO 2022, EUC and GB 2312. For this reason, code pages of 942 and even 943 code points were common in East Asia in 1980s–1990s.

In other fields

94 is:

  • Used as a nonsense number by the British satire magazine Private Eye. Most commonly used in spoof articles end halfway through a sentence with "(continued p. 94)". The magazine never extends to 94 pages: this was originally a reference to the enormous size of some Sunday newspapers.
  • The international calling code for Sri Lanka

References

References

  1. {{Cite OEIS
  2. "Sloane's A051869 : 17-gonal numbers". OEIS Foundation.
  3. "Sloane's A005277 : Nontotients". OEIS Foundation.
  4. "Sloane's A059756 : Erdős-Woods numbers". OEIS Foundation.
  5. "Sloane's A006753 : Smith numbers". OEIS Foundation.

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