With this cipher tool, you can encrypt and decrypt messages using various cipher algorithms such as Caesar, Morse, and Vigenere. Includes options for key input, message editing, and cipher selection.
AppRecs review analysis
AppRecs rating 4.5. Trustworthiness 0 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 0 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.
★★★★☆
4.5
AppRecs Rating
Ratings breakdown
5 star
82%
4 star
0%
3 star
9%
2 star
0%
1 star
9%
What to know
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High user satisfaction
82% of sampled ratings are 4+ stars (4.5★ average)
About Cipher Tool
With the Cipher Tool, users are able to utilize the encryption and decryption algorithms of several ciphers, including, but not limited to:
-Caesar Cipher
-Atbash Cipher
-Rail Fence Cipher
-Columnar Transposition Cipher
-Morse Code
-Vigenere Cipher
-Running Key Cipher
-Multi Cipher
Users are able to choose any of these six ciphers and encrypt and decrypt any message of their choosing. Overall, this application allows for the creation and unscrambling of secret messages such that only those with a certain integer key are able to interpret the messages.
As for the ciphers themselves, each one generally operates by taking in an integer key and a message and then scrambling or unscrambling that message to an extent determined by the integer key. How this key is exactly interpreted depends on which cipher algorithm is chosen by the user. This integer key is essentially the literal "key" to encryption and decryption of a message, given that the user knows which cipher algorithm was used in the first place.
-Caesar Cipher
-Atbash Cipher
-Rail Fence Cipher
-Columnar Transposition Cipher
-Morse Code
-Vigenere Cipher
-Running Key Cipher
-Multi Cipher
Users are able to choose any of these six ciphers and encrypt and decrypt any message of their choosing. Overall, this application allows for the creation and unscrambling of secret messages such that only those with a certain integer key are able to interpret the messages.
As for the ciphers themselves, each one generally operates by taking in an integer key and a message and then scrambling or unscrambling that message to an extent determined by the integer key. How this key is exactly interpreted depends on which cipher algorithm is chosen by the user. This integer key is essentially the literal "key" to encryption and decryption of a message, given that the user knows which cipher algorithm was used in the first place.
Cipher Tool Screenshots
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