Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire not far from present day Milton Keynes.
enigma
it took a long time of 2 hour's and 20 minutes
No simple answer. Many books have been written about the subject. There were various codes (not just one) in use by the Germans in WW2. The Germans had different codes for the German Foreign Service, Military Intelligence, Navy, Army, Air Force, etc. Some were broken easily, until the Germans changed them. The British, French or Americans would crack them (entirely or a portion) for a short time until the next change. It was a process that never ended and continued the entire pre-war and war period. The most important German Code was code-named by the Allies: "Ultra". It was broken over a period of years. This is probably 'the code' that you have heard about. Google Ultrafor more details.
I believe crew members off a British destroyer that had disabled a German submarine during WW2. The German crew was kept in isolation to insure the Germans did not learn that an enigma code machine had been captured by the British..........
The German Enigma Code, which they thought was uncrackable, was deciphered by British cryptologists at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire near the modern town of Milton Keynes.
droughtnot
enigma
The code making machine was German and it was called "Enigma". The British managed to crack how this worked and in the end built the first ever digital, electronic computer to help unscramble the German war messages. This computer was called "Colossus".
The German Military code during World War II. The Germans thought that it couldn't be broken.
1. The Allies crack the German naval code 2. A German army division surrenders at Stalingrad
it took a long time of 2 hour's and 20 minutes
Ad2907
What is ed helper crack the code answer id number 0457590
0937
b112
No simple answer. Many books have been written about the subject. There were various codes (not just one) in use by the Germans in WW2. The Germans had different codes for the German Foreign Service, Military Intelligence, Navy, Army, Air Force, etc. Some were broken easily, until the Germans changed them. The British, French or Americans would crack them (entirely or a portion) for a short time until the next change. It was a process that never ended and continued the entire pre-war and war period. The most important German Code was code-named by the Allies: "Ultra". It was broken over a period of years. This is probably 'the code' that you have heard about. Google Ultrafor more details.
I believe crew members off a British destroyer that had disabled a German submarine during WW2. The German crew was kept in isolation to insure the Germans did not learn that an enigma code machine had been captured by the British..........