I need to count how many times the same character is repeated and then use that count as an offset in ASCII. For example: ** * should give B A. Because 2 *s mean B (the second letter) and 1 * means A (the first letter).
My problem is that spaces are considered as a character and translated as A. How can I ignore spaces in the input, but include them in my print statement? I currently get BAA instead. This is my code:
def main():
encrypted = "** *"
#input("Enter an encrypted message: ")
count = 0
decoded = ''
for i, ch in enumerate(encrypted):
if i == 0 or ch == encrypted[i-1]:
count += 1
else:
decoded += chr(count + 64)
count = 1
if count > 0:
decoded += chr(count + 64)
print(decoded)
main()
Another example: the input:
********bbbbb&&&&&&&&&&&&999999999999zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz ********bbbbb&&&&&&&&&&&&999999999999zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
should print out HELLO HELLO.
To solve your problem with minimal changes, you can just add a special check for the space:
...
for i, ch in enumerate(encrypted):
if encrypted[i-1] == ' ':
decoded += ' '
elif i == 0 or ch == encrypted[i - 1]:
...
But you can opt for a simpler way by using groupby:
from itertools import groupby
def main():
encrypted = "** *"
# input("Enter an encrypted message: ")
decoded = ""
for key, group in groupby(encrypted):
if key == ' ':
decoded += ' '
else:
decoded += chr(sum(1 for _ in group) + 64)
print(decoded)
main()
how about a little different approach? Every char is seperated by a space, so just split the input to a list and check the length of each char.
Like this:
def main():
encrypted = "** *"
#input("Enter an encrypted message: ")
count = 0
inp_list= encrypted.split(' ')
decoded = [chr(len(elem) + 64) for elem in inp_list]
for ch in decoded:
print(ch, end=' ')
main()
Output: B A
I like the approach by Tomerikoo, though this is a different approach using what you've already written.
Since your code works without spaces, just run it once per word and join the result together.
def decode_word(word):
decoded = ''
count = 0
for i, ch in enumerate(word):
if i == 0 or ch == word[i-1]:
count += 1
else:
decoded += chr(count + 64)
count = 1
if count > 0:
decoded += chr(count + 64)
return decoded
def decode_string(encrypted):
return ' '.join(map(decode_word, encrypted.split()))
print(decode_string("** *"))
# B A
print(decode_string("********bbbbb&&&&&&&&&&&&999999999999zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz ********bbbbb&&&&&&&&&&&&999999999999zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz"))
# HELLO HELLO
I am coding a basic Caesar Cipher, which is almost finished, but has a small problem. When I run the code and it asks for the user's input, if the inputs any spaces, the program will include them in the cipher. I want to just pass it without encrypting.
This is the code -
#This is a working code encrypter and decrypter
#Created by Aykhan Salimov on 08.23.2020
#"s" specifies the number of the shift to encrypt
s = 3
text = input("Input text that you wish to be ciphered: ")
def cipherText(text,s):
global result
result = ""
x = len(text) - text.count(" ")
for i in range(len(text)):
char = text[i]
if char.isupper():
result += chr((ord(char) + s - 65) % 26 + 65)
else:
result += chr((ord(char) + s - 97) % 26 + 97)
print("Ciphertext:", result)
#This is the decrypter
#"d" is the amount need to shift back
d = s * -1
#a is the variable used to use the encrypted code
def plainText(text,d,result):
decrypt = ""
for i in range(len(result)):
char = result[i]
if char.isupper():
decrypt += chr((ord(char) + d - 65) % 26 + 65)
else:
decrypt += chr((ord(char) + d - 97) % 26 + 97)
print("Plaintext:", decrypt)
cipherText(text,s)
plainText(text,d,result)
This program does exactly what I want it to, but it isn't correctly able to exclude spaces from the cipher. I am a beginner programmer, and I really need help on creating my first cipher.
if what you want is to just pass it without encrypting it you can do the following
for i in range(len(text)):
char = text[i]
if char == " ":
result += " "
continue
if char.isupper():
result += chr((ord(char) + s - 65) % 26 + 65)
else:
result += chr((ord(char) + s - 97) % 26 + 97)
or if what you want is to completely remove it you can do result += "".
Fixed your code:
We handle each of the three cases:
Uppercase
Lowercase
Non-letters, such as spaces
What was the problem?
Lowercase and non-letters were treated in the same condition of:
if char.isupper():
<code>
# Here both space and lower-case were handeled
else:
<code>
Example:
Input text that you wish to be ciphered: Sabich dsF
Ciphertext: Vaelfk gvI
Plaintext: Sabich dsF
# This is a working code encrypter and decrypter
# Created by Aykhan Salimov on 08.23.2020
# "s" specifies the number of the shift to encrypt
s = 3
text = input("Input text that you wish to be ciphered: ")
def cipherText(text, s):
global result
result = ""
x = len(text) - text.count(" ")
for i in range(len(text)):
char = text[i]
if 'a' < char < 'z':
result += chr((ord(char) + s - 97) % 26 + 97)
elif 'A' < char < 'Z':
result += chr((ord(char) + s - 65) % 26 + 65)
else:
result += char
print("Ciphertext:", result)
# This is the decrypter
# "d" is the amount need to shift back
d = s * -1
# a is the variable used to use the encrypted code
def plainText(text, d, result):
decrypt = ""
for i in range(len(result)):
char = result[i]
if 'a' < char < 'z':
decrypt += chr((ord(char) + d - 97) % 26 + 97)
elif 'A' < char < 'Z':
decrypt += chr((ord(char) + d - 65) % 26 + 65)
else:
decrypt += char
print("Plaintext:", decrypt)
cipherText(text, s)
plainText(text, d, result)
If you want to remove spaces from input, You can use replace():
string = string.replace(" ","") #Replace space
Input:
Hi Aykhan
Output:
HiAykhan
I'm Making a sort of cipher that requires a string to be read backwards and i get an indexing error even though the index I reference is well within range:
M = str(input("Input Message: "))
M = M.upper()
L = len(M)
A = ["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"]
def DECRYPT():
global L
global M
global A
if L%2 != 0:
POS = False
else:
POS = True
i = L-1
NM = ""
while 1:
if M[i] != " ":
INDEX = A.index(M[i])
if POS == True:
INDEX += (i + 1)
else:
INDEX -= (i)
INDEX %= 26
NM = NM+A[INDEX]
i += 1
if POS == True:
POS = False
else:
POS = True
print("\n"+NM)
def ENCRYPT():
global L
global A
global M
POS = True
M = M[::-1]
i = 0
NM = ""
while 1:
if i == L:
break
if M[i] != " ":
INDEX = A.index(M[i])
if POS == True:
INDEX += (i + 1)
else:
INDEX -= (i + 1)
INDEX %= 26
NM = NM+A[INDEX]
i += 1
if POS == True:
POS = False
else:
POS = True
print("\n"+NM)
while 1:
C = int(input("\nWhat do you want to do:\n1) Encrypt Something\n2)Decrypt Something\n\n"))
if C == 1:
ENCRYPT()
if C == 2:
DECRYPT()
where i is a placeholder value. I run it and get this:
Input Message: ABC
What do you want to do:
1) Encrypt Something
2)Decrypt Something
2
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\Danny\Google Drive\SHIFT.py", line 67, in <module>
DECRYPT()
File "C:\Users\Danny\Google Drive\SHIFT.py", line 19, in DECRYPT
if M[i] != " ":
IndexError: string index out of range
I have tried changing value of i to no avail.
There are multiple problems with your code: as fernand0 noted, your index runs the wrong way; your inversion of POS happens at different levels in the code, the encryptor does it on every character, the decryptor does it on every letter -- they should work the same; five of your six global declarations aren't needed; you don't deal with word breaks correctly so the decryption won't match the original; once you encrypt, there's no way to decrypt in the same session as the local NM doesn't feedback into the global M.
Below is my rework of your code addressing the above problems and some style issues. The key phrase here is 'simplify'. I've kept your odd uppercase variable names but expanded them from single characters to what they represent:
MESSAGE = input("Input Message: ").upper()
ALPHABET = list("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ")
ALPHABET_LENGTH = len(ALPHABET)
def DECRYPT(MESSAGE):
LENGTH = len(MESSAGE)
IS_NEGATIVE = True
NEW_MESSAGE = ""
for I in range(LENGTH):
if MESSAGE[I] in ALPHABET:
INDEX = ALPHABET.index(MESSAGE[I])
if IS_NEGATIVE:
INDEX -= (I + 1)
else:
INDEX += (I + 1)
INDEX %= ALPHABET_LENGTH
NEW_MESSAGE += ALPHABET[INDEX]
IS_NEGATIVE = not IS_NEGATIVE
else:
NEW_MESSAGE += MESSAGE[I]
return NEW_MESSAGE[::-1]
def ENCRYPT(MESSAGE):
MESSAGE = MESSAGE[::-1]
LENGTH = len(MESSAGE)
IS_POSITIVE = True
NEW_MESSAGE = ""
for I in range(LENGTH):
if MESSAGE[I] in ALPHABET:
INDEX = ALPHABET.index(MESSAGE[I])
if IS_POSITIVE:
INDEX += (I + 1)
else:
INDEX -= (I + 1)
INDEX %= ALPHABET_LENGTH
NEW_MESSAGE += ALPHABET[INDEX]
IS_POSITIVE = not IS_POSITIVE
else:
NEW_MESSAGE += MESSAGE[I]
return NEW_MESSAGE
while True:
print("\nWhat do you want to do:")
print("1) Encrypt Message")
print("2) Decrypt Message")
CHOICE = int(input("\n"))
if CHOICE == 1:
MESSAGE = ENCRYPT(MESSAGE)
if CHOICE == 2:
MESSAGE = DECRYPT(MESSAGE)
print("\n" + MESSAGE)
TEST
> python3 file.py
Input Message: An opportunity to teach is an opportunity to learn
What do you want to do:
1) Encrypt Message
2) Decrypt Message
1
OPDAQ HB OEWAGIBFXIU JD RI JZEZZ GC NFVBFJAGWJT KC
What do you want to do:
1) Encrypt Message
2) Decrypt Message
2
AN OPPORTUNITY TO TEACH IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN
What do you want to do:
1) Encrypt Message
2) Decrypt Message
You are starting i at the end of the string and then, you are increasing it. I think the line i += 1 should be i -= 1
I'm trying to create a simple Caesar Cipher function in Python that shifts letters based on input from the user and creates a final, new string at the end. The only problem is that the final cipher text shows only the last shifted character, not an entire string with all the shifted characters.
Here's my code:
plainText = raw_input("What is your plaintext? ")
shift = int(raw_input("What is your shift? "))
def caesar(plainText, shift):
for ch in plainText:
if ch.isalpha():
stayInAlphabet = ord(ch) + shift
if stayInAlphabet > ord('z'):
stayInAlphabet -= 26
finalLetter = chr(stayInAlphabet)
cipherText = ""
cipherText += finalLetter
print "Your ciphertext is: ", cipherText
return cipherText
caesar(plainText, shift)
I realize that this answer doesn't really answer your question, but I think it's helpful anyway. Here's an alternative way to implementing the caesar cipher with string methods:
def caesar(plaintext, shift):
alphabet = string.ascii_lowercase
shifted_alphabet = alphabet[shift:] + alphabet[:shift]
table = string.maketrans(alphabet, shifted_alphabet)
return plaintext.translate(table)
In fact, since string methods are implemented in C, we will see an increase in performance with this version. This is what I would consider the 'pythonic' way of doing this.
You need to move cipherText = "" before the start of the for loop. You're resetting it each time through the loop.
def caesar(plainText, shift):
cipherText = ""
for ch in plainText:
if ch.isalpha():
stayInAlphabet = ord(ch) + shift
if stayInAlphabet > ord('z'):
stayInAlphabet -= 26
finalLetter = chr(stayInAlphabet)
cipherText += finalLetter
print "Your ciphertext is: ", cipherText
return cipherText
This is an improved version of the code in the answer of #amillerrhodes that works with different alphabets, not just lowercase:
def caesar(text, step, alphabets):
def shift(alphabet):
return alphabet[step:] + alphabet[:step]
shifted_alphabets = tuple(map(shift, alphabets))
joined_aphabets = ''.join(alphabets)
joined_shifted_alphabets = ''.join(shifted_alphabets)
table = str.maketrans(joined_aphabets, joined_shifted_alphabets)
return text.translate(table)
Example of usage:
>>> import string
>>> alphabets = (string.ascii_lowercase, string.ascii_uppercase, string.digits)
>>> caesar('Abc-xyZ.012:789?жñç', step=4, alphabets=alphabets)
'Efg-bcD.456:123?жñç'
References:
Docs on str.maketrans.
Docs on str.translate.
Docs on the string library
Using some ascii number tricks:
# See http://ascii.cl/
upper = {ascii:chr(ascii) for ascii in range(65,91)}
lower = {ascii:chr(ascii) for ascii in range(97,123)}
digit = {ascii:chr(ascii) for ascii in range(48,58)}
def ceasar(s, k):
for c in s:
o = ord(c)
# Do not change symbols and digits
if (o not in upper and o not in lower) or o in digit:
yield o
else:
# If it's in the upper case and
# that the rotation is within the uppercase
if o in upper and o + k % 26 in upper:
yield o + k % 26
# If it's in the lower case and
# that the rotation is within the lowercase
elif o in lower and o + k % 26 in lower:
yield o + k % 26
# Otherwise move back 26 spaces after rotation.
else: # alphabet.
yield o + k % 26 -26
x = (''.join(map(chr, ceasar(s, k))))
print (x)
Batteries included
while 1:
phrase = raw_input("Could you please give me a phrase to encrypt?\n")
if phrase == "" : break
print "Here it is your phrase, encrypted:"
print phrase.encode("rot_13")
print "Have a nice afternoon!"
https://docs.python.org/2/library/codecs.html#python-specific-encodings
Python 3 update
The fine docs say
[Now the rot_13] codec provides a text transform: a str to str mapping. It is not supported by str.encode() (which only produces bytes output).
Or, in other words, you have to import encode from the codecs module and use it with the string to be encoded as its first argument
from codecs import decode
...
print(encode(phrase, 'rot13'))
The problem is that you set cipherText to empty string at every cycle iteration, the line
cipherText = ""
must be moved before the loop.
As pointed by others, you were resetting the cipherText in the iteration of the for loop. Placing cipherText before the start of the for loop will solve your problem.
Additionally, there is an alternate approach to solving this problem using Python's Standard library. The Python Standard Library defines a function maketrans() and a method translate that operates on strings.
The function maketrans() creates translation tables that can be used with the translate method to change one set of characters to another more efficiently. (Quoted from The Python Standard Library by Example).
import string
def caesar(plaintext, shift):
shift %= 26 # Values greater than 26 will wrap around
alphabet_lower = string.ascii_lowercase
alphabet_upper = string.ascii_uppercase
shifted_alphabet_lower = alphabet_lower[shift:] + alphabet_lower[:shift]
shifted_alphabet_upper = alphabet_upper[shift:] + alphabet_upper[:shift]
alphabet = alphabet_lower + alphabet_upper
shifted_alphabet = shifted_alphabet_lower + shifted_alphabet_upper
table = string.maketrans(alphabet, shifted_alphabet)
return plaintext.translate(table)
Here, a more functional way:
(if you use shift i to encode, then use -i to decode)
def ceasar(story, shift):
return ''.join([ # concentrate list to string
(lambda c, is_upper: c.upper() if is_upper else c) # if original char is upper case than convert result to upper case too
(
("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"*2)[ord(char.lower()) - ord('a') + shift % 26], # rotate char, this is extra easy since Python accepts list indexs below 0
char.isupper()
)
if char.isalpha() else char # if not in alphabet then don't change it
for char in story
])
plainText = raw_input("What is your plaintext? ")
shift = int(raw_input("What is your shift? "))
def caesar(plainText, shift):
for ch in plainText:
if ch.isalpha():
stayInAlphabet = ord(ch) + shift
if stayInAlphabet > ord('z'):
stayInAlphabet -= 26
finalLetter = chr(stayInAlphabet)
#####HERE YOU RESET CIPHERTEXT IN EACH ITERATION#####
cipherText = ""
cipherText += finalLetter
print "Your ciphertext is: ", cipherText
return cipherText
caesar(plainText, shift)
As an else to if ch.isalpha() you can put finalLetter=ch.
You should remove the line: cipherText = ""
Cheers.
As #I82much said, you need to take cipherText = "" outside of your for loop. Place it at the beginning of the function. Also, your program has a bug which will cause it to generate encryption errors when you get capital letters as input. Try:
if ch.isalpha():
finalLetter = chr((ord(ch.lower()) - 97 + shift) % 26 + 97)
>>> def rotate(txt, key):
... def cipher(i, low=range(97,123), upper=range(65,91)):
... if i in low or i in upper:
... s = 65 if i in upper else 97
... i = (i - s + key) % 26 + s
... return chr(i)
... return ''.join([cipher(ord(s)) for s in txt])
# test
>>> rotate('abc', 2)
'cde'
>>> rotate('xyz', 2)
'zab'
>>> rotate('ab', 26)
'ab'
>>> rotate('Hello, World!', 7)
'Olssv, Dvysk!'
I have a hard time remember the char to int conversions so this could be optimized
def decryptCaesar(encrypted, shift):
minRange = ord('a')
decrypted = ""
for char in encrypted:
decrypted += chr(((ord(char) - minRange + shift) % 26) + minRange)
return decrypted
def encrypt():
plainText = input("What is your plaintext? ")
shift = int(input("What is your shift? "))
cipherText = ""
for ch in plainText:
if ch.isalpha():
stayInAlphabet = ord(ch) + shift
if stayInAlphabet > ord('z'):
stayInAlphabet -= 26
finalLetter = chr(stayInAlphabet)
cipherText += finalLetter
print ("Your ciphertext is: ", cipherText,"with a shift of",shift)
def decrypte():
encryption=input("enter in your encrypted code")
encryption_shift=int(input("enter in your encryption shift"))
cipherText1 = ""
for c in encryption:
if c.isalpha():
stayInAlphabet1 = ord(c) - encryption_shift
if stayInAlphabet1 > ord('z'):
stayInAlphabet1 += 26
finalLetter1 = chr(stayInAlphabet1)
cipherText1 += finalLetter1
print ("Your ciphertext is: ", cipherText1,"with negative shift of",encryption_shift)
from tkinter import *
menu=Tk()
menu.title("menu")
menu.geometry("300x300")
button1= Button(menu,text="encrypt",command=encrypt)
button1.pack()
button2= Button(menu,text="decrypt",command=decrypte)
button2.pack()
button3= Button(menu,text="exit",command=exit)
button3.pack()
menu.mainloop()
message = 'The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 1234567890 !##$%^&*()_+-'
encrypted = ''.join(chr(ord(char)+3) for char in message)
decrypted = ''.join(chr(ord(char)-3) for char in encrypted)
print(encrypted)
print(decrypted)
# Wkh#txlfn#eurzq#ir{#mxpshg#ryhu#wkh#od}|#grj1#456789:;<3#$C&'(a)-+,b.0
# The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. 1234567890 !##$%^&*()_+-
def encrypt(text,shift):
'''
INPUT: text as a string and an integer for the shift value.
OUTPUT: The shifted text after being run through the Caeser cipher.
'''
# Create a placeholder list
encrypted_text = list(range(len(text)))
alphabet = string.ascii_lowercase
# Create shifted alphabet
first_half = alphabet[:shift]
second_half = alphabet[shift:]
shifted_alphabet = second_half+first_half
for i,letter in enumerate(text.lower()):
# Check for spaces or punctuation
if letter in alphabet:
# Find the original index position
original_index = alphabet.index(letter)
# Shifted letter
new_letter = shifted_alphabet[original_index]
encrypted_text[i] = new_letter
# Punctuation or space
else:
encrypted_text[i] = letter
return ''.join(encrypted_text)
For example, decod string:
"uo jxuhu! jxyi yi qd unqcfbu ev q squiqh syfxuh. muhu oek qrbu je tusetu yj? y xefu ie! iudt cu q cuiiqwu rqsa myjx jxu iqcu evviuj!".
This message has an offset of 10.
Code below:
import string
alphabet = list(string.ascii_lowercase)
print(alphabet, len(alphabet))
messege = "xuo jxuhu! jxyi yi qd unqcfbu ev q squiqh syfxuh. muhu oek qrbu je tusetu yj? y xefu ie! iudt cu q cuiiqwu rqsa myjx jxu iqcu evviuj!"
messege_split = messege.split()
print(messege_split)
encrypted_messege = ""
position = 0
for i in messege_split:
for j in i:
if ord(j) < 65:
encrypted_messege += j
else:
for k in alphabet:
if j == k:
position = alphabet.index(k)
if (position + 10) >= len(alphabet):
encrypted_messege += alphabet[abs((position + 10) - len(alphabet))]
else:
encrypted_messege += alphabet[position + 10]
encrypted_messege += " "
print(encrypted_messege)
Decoded string:
"hey there! this is an example of a caesar cipher. were you able to decode it? i hope so! send me a message back with the same offset!"
TRY IT!
Using cyclic generator:
import string
from itertools import cycle
def caesarCipherEncryptor(s, key):
def generate_letters():
yield from cycle(string.ascii_lowercase)
def find_next(v, g, c):
# Eat up characters until we arrive at the plaintext character
while True:
if v == next(g):
break
# Increment the plaintext character by the count using the generator
try:
for _ in range(c):
item = next(g)
return item
except UnboundLocalError:
return v
return "".join([find_next(i, generate_letters(), key) for i in s])
# Outputs
>>> caesarCipherEncryptor("xyz", 3)
>>> 'abc'
from string import ascii_lowercase as alphabet
class CaesarCypher:
alpha_len = len(alphabet)
min_guess_rate = 0.2
Encryption and decryption is a same stuff. when you want to decrypt for example with shift 10 that means that you can encrypt it with shift 26 - 10. In this case cycle will repeat at if you going to shift whole alphabet it will be the same. Also here i've proceed upper case and non chars
def __call__(self, text, offset, encrypt=True):
if not encrypt:
offset = self.alpha_len - offset
result = []
for letter in text:
if not letter.isalpha():
result.append(letter)
continue
letter_to_process = letter.lower()
processed_letter = self._encrypt_letter(letter_to_process, offset)
if letter.isupper():
processed_letter = processed_letter.upper()
result.append(processed_letter)
return ''.join(result)
all encryption goes here at most.
def _encrypt_letter(self, letter, offset=0):
position = (alphabet.find(letter) + offset) % self.alpha_len
return alphabet[position]
this part is for broot force and guess throug dictionary frequency.
#staticmethod
def __how_many_do_i_know(text):
clean_words = filter(lambda x: x.isalpha(), text.split())
clean_words = ['\'{}\''.format(x) for x in clean_words]
cursor = conn.cursor()
query = 'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mydictionary WHERE word IN ({})'.format(",".join(clean_words))
cursor.execute(query)
response = cursor.fetchone()[0]
return response / len(clean_words)
def guess_encode(self, text):
options = [self(text, offset, encrypt=False) for offset in range(self.alpha_len)]
best_option = [self.__how_many_do_i_know(option) for option in options]
best_key, guess_rate = max(enumerate(best_option), key=lambda x: x[-1])
guess_text = options[best_key]
return best_key, guess_rate, guess_text
import string
wrd=raw_input("Enter word").lower()
fwrd=""
for let in wrd:
fwrd+=string.ascii_lowercase[(string.ascii_lowercase).index(let)+3]
print"Original word",wrd
print"New word",fwrd
according to me this answer is useful for you:
def casear(a,key):
str=""
if key>26:
key%=26
for i in range(0,len(a)):
if a[i].isalpha():
b=ord(a[i])
b+=key
#if b>90: #if upper case letter ppear in your string
# c=b-90 #if upper case letter ppear in your string
# str+=chr(64+c) #if upper case letter ppear in your string
if b>122:
c=b-122
str+=chr(96+c)
else:
str+=chr(b)
else:
str+=a[i]
print str
a=raw_input()
key=int(input())
casear(a,key)
This function shifts all letter to right according to given key.
Why not use the function reverse on the shift input, and and join the plain_text with the shift, and input it as the cipher text:
Plain = int(input("enter a number "))
Rev = plain[::-1]
Cipher = " ".join(for cipher_text in Rev)
The code is very large, but easy to understand. I think it fits your situation.
alphabet = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
class CaesarCipher(object):
def __init__(self, shift):
self.shift = shift
def encode(self, str):
encode = ''
str = str.lower()
for i in str:
if i in alphabet:
encode += alphabet[alphabet.index(i) + self.shift]
else:
encode += i
return encode.upper()
def decode(self, str):
decode = ''
str = str.lower()
for i in str:
if i in alphabet:
decode += alphabet[alphabet.index(i) - self.shift]
else:
decode += i
return decode.upper()
Using map:
def caesar(text, key):
return ''.join(map(lambda c:
chr((ord(c.lower()) - ord('a') + key) % 26 + ord('a')) if c.isalpha() else ''
, text))
This solution is more intuitively without the use of ord function:
def caesar_cipher(raw_text, key):
alphabet = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
shifted_alphabet = alphabet[26-key:]+alphabet[0:(26-key)]
cipher_text = ""
for i in range(len(raw_text)):
char = raw_text[i]
idx = alphabet.find(char.upper())
if idx == -1:
cipher_text = cipher_text + char
elif char.islower():
cipher_text = cipher_text + shifted_alphabet[idx].lower()
else:
cipher_text = cipher_text + shifted_alphabet[idx]
return(cipher_text)
And an example:
plain_text = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog!"
caesar_cipher(plain_text,3)
And we get:
'Qeb nrfzh yoltk clu grjmp lsbo qeb ixwv ald!'
If we want to decrypt it:
caesar_cipher(caesar_cipher(plain_text,3),26-3)
and we get:
'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog!'
More details here:https://predictivehacks.com/caesar-cipher-in-python/
caesar-cipher
message = str(input("Enter you message:"))
shift = int(input("Enter a number:"))
# encode
stringValue = [ord(message) - 96 for message in message]
print(stringValue)
encode_msg_val = []
[encode_msg_val.append(int(stringValue[i])+shift) for i in
range(len(stringValue))]
encode_msg_array = []
for i in range(len(encode_msg_val)):
encode_val = encode_msg_val[i] + 96
encode_msg_array.append(chr(encode_val))
print(encode_msg_array)
encode_msg = ''.join(encode_msg_array)
# dedcode
[deocde_msg_val = [ord(encode_msg) - 96 for encode_msg in encode_msg]
decode_val = []
[decode_val.append(deocde_msg_val[i] - shift) for i in
range(len(deocde_msg_val))]
decode_msg_array = []
[decode_msg_array.append(decode_val[i] + 96) for i in range(len(decode_val))]
decode_msg_list = []
[decode_msg_list.append(chr(decode_msg_array[i])) for i in
range(len(decode_msg_array))]
decode_msg = ''.join(decode_msg_list)
print(decode_msg)
alph = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'
# shift = int(input("Please enter the number of places to shift:"))
shift = 15
text = "python is fun!"
alph_len = len(alph)
if shift >=0 and shift <= alph_len:
# text = input("Please enter a sentence:")
shifted_alph = alph[shift:] + alph[:shift] # rotate
text = text.lower()
crypted_text = ""
for letter in text:
if letter in alph:
ind = alph.index(letter)
crypted_letter = shifted_alph[ind]
else:
crypted_letter = letter
crypted_text += crypted_letter
print(crypted_text)
else:
print(f"You need to enter a number between 0 and {alph_len}!")
# eniwdc xh ujc! # output
key = 3
def wub():
def choice():
choice = input("Do you wish to Encrypt of Decrypt?")
choice = choice.lower()
if choice == "e" or "encrypt":
return choice
elif choice == "d" or "decrypt":
return choice
else:
print("Invalid response, please try again.")
choice()
def message():
user = input("Enter your message: ")
return user
def waffle(choice, message, key):
translated = ""
if choice == "e" or "encrypt":
for character in message:
num = ord(character)
num += key
translated += chr(num)
derek = open('Encrypted.txt', 'w')
derek.write(translated)
derek.close()
return translated
else:
for character in message:
num = ord(character)
num -= key
translated += chr(num)
return translated
choice = choice() #Runs function for encrypt/decrypt selection. Saves choice made.
message = message() #Run function for user to enter message. Saves message.
final = waffle(choice, message, key) #Runs function to translate message, using the choice, message and key variables)
print("\n Operation complete!")
print(final)
wub()