|
|
|
|
|
by mm0lqf
1316 days ago
|
|
In real morse messages, you aren't always sending full words, most of the time you are sending prosigns (abbreviations) - Think like early SMS chat. "DE" means this is, you hand over with a "K", "SK" means you are going offline, "HIHI" is like LOL, "XYL" means significant other, etc... Things like Q get used a lot in Morse for example (look up Q-Codes) compared to real English. So, traditional letter frequencies are not applicable (Also because the code itself is language-agnostic) Using a tree like this to decodee also sucks from a speed perspective. You need to learn the sounds /not/ count the dits/dahs if you want to get a good word per minute. source: radio ham who knows morse and can do 20+ wpm. A lot of weird stuff in morse and things also comes from older comms methods like Semaphore - The reason we have M in Scottish callsigns for ham radio is because M is the saltire (Scottish flag) symbol in Sempahore, for example. |
|