(Codes and Ciphers)
(Codes and Ciphers)
• First you write out the whole alphabet in two grids, as shown:
•
• Each letter is represented by the part of the "pigpen" that surrounds it. If it's
the second letter in the box, then it has a dot in the middle.
• So an A looks like this: And a B looks like this:
Example:
• This is deciphered as
• "LISTEN TO THE WIND".
Braille is an example of a Cipher
DOG
Morse Code
is really a cipher
• Morse (Cipher) is sometimes
written with a slash (/) between
letters, to stop you from getting the
letters confused. A double slash (//)
means a break between words.
• Example:
• SOS = .../---/...
M E E T M E
“Code” word Cipher
• You can make a cipher based on a special word which only you know
about…such as the word "XYLOPHONE".
• First of all we write down the normal alphabet (it's called the Plain
Text alphabet), and below it we write the Cipher alphabet, starting
with the word, and following the word with the rest of the alphabet.
• But there's a trick to this - remember that you don't want repeated
letters! So you have to leave out the second O in XYLOPHONE, and
when you get to the normal alphabet you write down ABCDFGI...
leaving out the E, the H, and any other letters in the codeword.
• When you're solving this code, remember to look up the letter in the Code
alphabet. So the letter S is decoded as U, because U is above S.
• QLISR is decoded as SCOUT
Block Cipher
• We write the message in a rectangular block, one row at a
time, and then read off the columns.
• To encipher the message THIS IS VERY EASY!, write it in
a block like this:
– THISI
– S V ERY
– E A SY !
• The ciphered message is read by looking at the columns,
and writing them out like this:
• TSE HVA IES SRY IY!
• To decipher it, just write all the words in a block again, as
columns, and then read the message across the rows.
2 Dumbest Criminals