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Morse code
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=== Unusual variants === During early World War I (1914β1916), Germany briefly experimented with 'dotty' and 'dashy' Morse, in essence adding a dot or a dash at the end of each Morse symbol. Each one was quickly broken by Allied SIGINT, and standard Morse was resumed by Spring 1916. Only a small percentage of Western Front ([[North Atlantic]] and [[Mediterranean Sea]]) traffic was in 'dotty' or 'dashy' Morse during the entire war. In popular culture, this is mostly remembered in the book ''[[The Codebreakers]]'' by [[David Kahn (writer)|David Kahn]] and in the national archives of the UK and Australia (whose [[SIGINT]] operators copied most of this Morse variant). Kahn's cited sources come from the popular press and wireless magazines of the time.<ref name=Wythoff-2014/> Other variations include forms of "fractional Morse" or "fractionated Morse", which recombine the characters of the Morse code{{endash}}encoded message and then encrypt them using a cipher in order to disguise the text.<ref name=Quadibloc-pp1323/>
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