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  2. Playfair cipher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Playfair_cipher

    Playfair cipher. The Playfair cipher uses a 5×5 grid of letters, and encrypts a message by breaking the text into pairs of letters and swapping them according to their positions in a rectangle within that grid: "HI" becomes "BM". The Playfair cipher or Playfair square or Wheatstone–Playfair cipher is a manual symmetric encryption technique ...

  3. Two-square cipher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-square_cipher

    The Two-square cipher, also called double Playfair, is a manual symmetric encryption technique. [1] It was developed to ease the cumbersome nature of the large encryption/decryption matrix used in the four-square cipher while still being slightly stronger than the single-square Playfair cipher . The technique encrypts pairs of letters ...

  4. Polybius square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polybius_square

    Polybius square. The Polybius square, also known as the Polybius checkerboard, is a device invented by the ancient Greeks Cleoxenus and Democleitus, and made famous by the historian and scholar Polybius. [ 1] The device is used for fractionating plaintext characters so that they can be represented by a smaller set of symbols, which is useful ...

  5. Index of coincidence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_of_coincidence

    Index of coincidence. In cryptography, coincidence counting is the technique (invented by William F. Friedman [ 1]) of putting two texts side-by-side and counting the number of times that identical letters appear in the same position in both texts. This count, either as a ratio of the total or normalized by dividing by the expected count for a ...

  6. Bifid cipher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bifid_cipher

    4 4 3 3 3 5 3 2 4 3 1 3 5 5 3 1 2 3 2 5 Then divided up into pairs again, and the pairs turned back into letters using the square: 44 33 35 32 43 13 55 31 23 25 U A E O L W R I N S In this way, each ciphertext character depends on two plaintext characters, so the bifid is a digraphic cipher, like the Playfair cipher. To decrypt, the procedure ...

  7. Unicity distance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicity_distance

    Unicity distance. In cryptography, unicity distance is the length of an original ciphertext needed to break the cipher by reducing the number of possible spurious keys to zero in a brute force attack. That is, after trying every possible key, there should be just one decipherment that makes sense, i.e. expected amount of ciphertext needed to ...

  8. Joseph Mauborgne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Mauborgne

    Joseph Oswald Mauborgne (February 26, 1881 – June 7, 1971) co-invented the one-time pad with Gilbert Vernam of Bell Labs. In 1914 he published the first recorded solution of the Playfair cipher. Mauborgne became a Major General in the United States Army, and from October 1937 to his retirement in 1941 was the Army's 12th Chief Signal Officer ...

  9. Polygraphic substitution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygraphic_substitution

    Polygraphic substitution. Polygraphic substitution is a cipher in which a uniform substitution is performed on blocks of letters. When the length of the block is specifically known, more precise terms are used: for instance, a cipher in which pairs of letters are substituted is bigraphic . As a concept, polygraphic substitution contrasts with ...