MORSE CODE

Morse code is a strategy utilized in media transmission to encode content characters as traditional groupings of two distinctive sign lengths, called spots and runs or dits and dahs.[2][3] Morse code is named for Samuel F. B. Morse, an innovator of the broadcast.

The International Morse Code encodes the 26 English letters A through Z, some non-English letters, the Arabic numerals and a little arrangement of accentuation and procedural signs (prosigns). There is no qualification among upper and lower case letters.[1] Each Morse code image is shaped by an arrangement of spots and runs. The spot length is the essential unit of time estimation in Morse code transmission. The length of a scramble is multiple times the term of a speck. Each speck or run inside a character is trailed by time of sign nonattendance, called a space, equivalent to the dab length. The letters of a word are isolated by a space of span equivalent to three specks, and the words are isolated by a space equivalent to seven dots.[1] To expand the proficiency of encoding, Morse code was planned so the length of every image is roughly converse to the recurrence of event in content of the English language character that it speaks to. Accordingly, the most well-known letter in English, the letter “E”, has the briefest code: a solitary spot. Since the Morse code components are indicated by extent as opposed to explicit time spans, the code is generally transmitted at the most noteworthy rate that the collector is equipped for unraveling. The Morse code transmission rate (speed) is determined in bunches every moment, regularly alluded to as words per minute.[4]

Morse code is generally transmitted by on-off scratching of a data conveying medium, for example, electric flow, radio waves, noticeable light, or sound waves. The flow or wave is available during the timespan of the spot or run and missing during the time among specks and dashes.

Morse code can be retained, and Morse code motioning in a structure noticeable to the human detects, for example, sound waves or unmistakable light, can be legitimately deciphered by people prepared in the skill.

MORSE CODE:

A • −
B − • • •
C − • − •
D − • •
E •
F • • − •
G − − •
H • • • •
I • •
J • − − −
K − • −
L • − • •
M − −
N − •
O − − −
P • − − •
Q − − • −
R • − •
S • • •
T −
U • • −
V • • • −
W • − −
X − • • −
Y − • − −
Z − − • •

0 − − − − −
1 • − − − −
2 • • − − −
3 • • • − −
4 • • • • −
5 • • • • •
6 − • • • •
7 − − • • •
8 − − − • •
9 − − − − •