Search results
Atbash cipher (also called mirror cipher or backwards alphabet or reverse alphabet) is the name given to a monoalphabetical substitution cipher which owes its name and origins to the Hebrew alphabet. Atbash replaces each letter with its symmetrical one in the alphabet, that is, A becomes Z , B becomes Y , and so on.
- Mirror Writing
Except explicit open source licence (indicated Creative...
- Gravity Falls Cipher
Gravity Falls ciphers are some of the most basic, but they...
- Mirror Writing
A monoalphabetical substitution cipher uses a fixed substitution over the entire message. The ciphertext alphabet may be a shifted, reversed, mixed or deranged version of the plaintext alphabet.
All you need to do is create a translation table with the letters of the alphabet written from A to Z across the top and reversed along the bottom. Find the letter in your cipher text on the bottom row and look above it to see it decrypted.
Backwards Alphabet Code - swap the order of the letters in the alphabet, and then convert all the letters to their opposite!
Atbash cipher is one of the single transliteration ciphers that encrypts by replacing the characters in the text with other characters. Character replacement is done by mapping the list of characters in reverse order. For example, in the alphabet "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ", "A" is encrypted to "Z" and "B" to "Y".
Caesar code decryption replaces a letter another with an inverse alphabet shift: a previous letter in the alphabet. Example: Decrypt GFRGHA with a shift of 3. To decrypt G , take the alphabet and look 3 letters before: D .
Atbash latin: Encode and decode online. Originally used to encode the hebrew alphabet, Atbash (אתבש) is formed by mapping an alphabet to its reverse, so that the first letter becomes the last letter. The Atbash cipher can be seen as a special case of the affine cipher. Hex to Base32.