• @maaneeack
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    235 months ago

    D…r.i…n.k mo…r.e o…v…a l…t…I…n.e

    Drink more Ovaltine?!

  • @[email protected]
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    185 months ago

    This is cool to look at but its worthless to use to learn Morse code. Actually learning requires recognizing audio patterns not quickly translating characters into words from a flowchart.

    • @[email protected]
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      5 months ago

      I think the charts were meant for an inexperienced or almost untrained operator (civilian in wartime e.g.) that could write down what they heard, then use a chart to decode it and maybe even send a reply.

      No sources, though.

  • @FuryMaker
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    75 months ago

    How does one distinguish between “Tea” and “X”?

    Both are dash dot dot dash.

    Are there gaps between words or letters?

    • @avguser
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      185 months ago

      International Morse code is composed of five elements:

      • short mark, dot or dit: “dit duration” is one time unit long
      • long mark, dash or dah: three time units long
      • inter-element gap between the dits and dahs within a character: one dot duration or one unit long
      • short gap (between letters): three time units long
      • medium gap (between words): seven time units long (formerly five)
      • @[email protected]
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        75 months ago

        So in between every sound is a silent dot, between letter a silent dash, and every word ~2 silent dashes

  • @ccunning
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    55 months ago

    This is awesome.

    If anyone could explain the reasoning behind it; that would be even more awesome. It always just seemed random to me.

    • @avguser
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      5 months ago

      It’s effectively a Huffman tree based off the frequency letters occur in the English language used to minimize the overall symbol length duration of each letter in a message.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      5 months ago

      If anyone could explain the reasoning behind it

      The reason behind morse code? It was created to transfer messages through telegraphs

      • @Wild_Mastic
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        65 months ago

        Pretty sure he means the dot and dash combinations. As in, why ‘A’ is not dot, since it’s the first letter of the alphabet?

        • @ccunning
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          45 months ago

          This is what I mean and am only now realizing I phrased very poorly…

      • @mojofrododojo
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        5 months ago

        I think he meant on how the chart is used.

        as in, start at the wheel, if the first sound is a dot, go left, if it’s a dash, go right. second sound etc

        I think this one is easier to read: https://lemmy.world/post/14922746