four dots is H
Sarah Elizabeth Griswold. She was a deaf woman and they had four children together. He first created Morse Code because of her. The way he communicated with her was by tapping on the table (Morse Code). She was very influential to him.
Dash...four letter word Dot...three letter word
no they are qall mixed up
Samuel FB Morse devised both the telegraph system and the code. the mode of code- that is dots and dashes was more or less discovered accidentally, the code itself was not. They used printing telegraphs which were clockwork tape registers ( this being the l840"s) and these were tied into the power supply so the shortest interval was a dot, a longer one, a dash. So, this being understood the Code was worked out. There are differences between the original Morse Code and the modern International Morse Code on some letters and punctuations. Somewhat oddly, one of the best-known Morse ciphers- the code for Red Alert: - - - - Four longs, evenly spaced- is not in the original land line (Morse) or international ( Radio-telegraph) forms of the Morse Code, but it well known. Four Longs- Red Alert! Even Spector used it in some of his songs.
The resistor color code use to help to identify the resistance of the resistor. There are four color in the resistor that help to identify the resistance of the resistor. The first and second color represent the numerical value of the resistor. The third color represent the multiplier. The four color represent the tolerance.
Morse code is actually a kind of cipher where patterns of long and short stand for the letters of the alphabet as well as numbers. For example, the pattern . . . stands for the letter "S" and the pattern _ _ _ stands for the letter "O" so that . . . _ _ _ . . . stands for SOS, the distress signal. In the Second World War, the first four notes of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony were used as a symbol for victory as the rhythm is the same as the Morse for "V" (short-short-short-long)
It is difficult to give a sensible answer to the question since there is no information on what the four numbers represent. The fact that the four numbers are multiplied together would, in mathematical terms, represent a body in 4-dimensional hyper-space. In such a case it is not clear what square footage would represent.
I have never heard of it in this context- but be advised- in French, the animal known as the Walrus is called the Morse. a surprising number of early Rock songs have rhythmic structures which resemble Morse telegraphy- (Be My Baby, by Specor is one. a number of songs came on with the understood ( but it is not in the usual Code charts) cipher for a Red Alert- Four Longs - - - - evenly spaced- examples include Dey Do Ron Ron, and oddly- the Spector version of the Bells of Saint Mary"s where it is done with a peal of bells- but Four Longs- take cover! the song -I am the Walrus, is not a dance, but the pun on Morse and Morse code- well it may have something. Now if you have a dream about a Walrus sitting down at a Western Union office- well there is the(telegraph) Key!
Not strictly speaking a password , but in the Service ( Army, Navy, etc) the coded sound of Four Longs - Four Dashes- - - - - evenly spaced- was used to sound Red Alert. This occurs in several of Spector"s songs. Somewhat oddly, it is not in the original or International versions of the Morse Code, though it is a code cipher!
The first four digits represent college code, next two digits are year of joining, and lastly the last three digits are the department code for the college.
This depends upon the language. In some languages the first bits may represent an address or label. Most assembly languages the first byte or two is an op code. Four bits is pretty small for an address--that is only half a byte. Four bits on the Intel 4004 chip represent a "word."
What hath God wrought?