Hello fellow minecraft forum dwellers, I come to ask you a very simple question; do you know of any ciphers? Or anything related to encryption and ciphers. I am very interested in this subject at the moment and would love to hear anything about it, from the codes you have seen or used to sharing your own cipher.
Currently I'm trying out removing vowels and replacing them with accents. It's working quite well but does get a bit weird if you include r as a vowel. Words like horrible become 3 letters long.
So, anything you have been doing related to ciphers or codes? Post below.
In a second sense, you can use r as a vowel because it's rather different the other consonants and is slightly like a vowel.
I've heard "w" and "j" (as in "Jens") be called approximates, but never "r" :/ Then again, the "r"s are a unique group, so maybe they can be considered approximates.
I've been trying to teach myself real ciphers and cryptosystems. I understand a lot of it, like public key vs. private key, and various ways of sending it, but I get lost on a lot of the math. See what I mean?
Currently I'm trying out removing vowels and replacing them with accents. It's working quite well but does get a bit weird if you include r as a vowel. Words like horrible become 3 letters long.
So, anything you have been doing related to ciphers or codes? Post below.
Why would... "R" isn't a vowel!
Use r as a replacement for vowels. It can work in most cases.
Lrkr Thrs.
You can still see the basic structure of the word with r replacing all the vowels.
In a second sense, you can use r as a vowel because it's rather different the other consonants and is slightly like a vowel.
I've heard "w" and "j" (as in "Jens") be called approximates, but never "r" :/ Then again, the "r"s are a unique group, so maybe they can be considered approximates.
Point: Include "w" and "j" if you include "r".
What discussion of cryptography would be complete without Ultra and the Engima?