From: Neil Smith Date: Wed, 14 May 2014 17:42:50 +0000 (+0100) Subject: Mostly finished keyword ciphers X-Git-Url: https://git.njae.me.uk/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=40e5d3954e5dc9fcc10d1a3683ac46f7a9759436;p=cipher-training.git Mostly finished keyword ciphers --- diff --git a/slides/keyword-encipher.html b/slides/keyword-encipher.html index be151a3..e96de86 100644 --- a/slides/keyword-encipher.html +++ b/slides/keyword-encipher.html @@ -66,9 +66,100 @@ Ciphertext alphabet: start with a keyword, write out the rest of the alphabet, r Write out the rest of the alphabet... 1. ...starting from 'a' (keywordabcf...) -2. ...starting from the last unique letter of the keyword (keywordfgh...) +2. ...starting from the last letter of the keyword (keywordfgh...) 3. ...starting from the largest letter of the keyword (keywordzabc...) +--- + +# A more Pythonic way + +_string_`.translate()` and _string_`.maketrans()` + +* Make the 'ciphertext' alphabet, relate to the 'plaintext' alphabet (`string.ascii_lowercase`) +* Use those to make the translation table +* Enciphering is simply applying `plaintext.translate(enciphering_table)` +* Deciphering just uses a different table + +--- + +# Making the cipher alphabet from a keyword + +Three challenges: + +1. How to say which type of cipher alphabet to use +2. Where to start the rest of the alphabet +3. Removing duplicate letters + +Solutions: + +1. Keyword arguments for procedures +2. sort and slices +3. Use something like an ordered set + +Both enciphering and deciphering need the same keyword-based alphabet, so pull this out into another procedure. + +--- + +# Keyword arguments + +Used to: +1. give a default value for a parameter +2. allow parameters to be named (not just positional) + +Give our `keyword_encipher` and `keyword_decipher` procedures a keyword parameter of `wrap_alphabet`. + +Pass this parameter to the `keyword_alphabet` procedure. + +## Note: `Enum` introduced in Python 3.4. This is a better solution. + +--- + +# Deduplicating a sequence + +We need + +* Something set-like +* Something ordered + +No ordered set in Python, but do have an ordered dict. + +* Keys of a dict are a set. +* Keys in an ordered dict retain their order (subsequent instances are ignored) + +`deduplicated_list = list(collections.OrderedDict.fromkeys(list))` + +--- + +# Sorts and slices + +## Recap +Write out the rest of the alphabet... + +1. ...starting from 'a' (keywordabcf...) +2. ...starting from the last letter of the keyword (keywordfgh...) +3. ...starting from the largest letter of the keyword (keywordzabc...) + +* Santitise the keyword before we use it + +## Cases +1. As we're deduplicating anyway, just add the entire alphabet to the end of the keyword, then deduplicate. +`deduplicate(keyword + string.ascii_lowercase)` + +2. and 3. How to find the appropriate letter of the keyword. + +Indexing pulls out letters. `'keyword'[0]` = 'k' ; `'keyword'[3]` = 'w' ; `'keyword'[-1]` = 'd' +Slices pulls out substrings. `'keyword'[1:4]` = 'eyw' ; `'keyword'[:3]` = 'key' ; `'keyword'[5:]` = 'rd' + +`deduplicate(keyword + string_ascii_lowercase[from:] + string.ascii_lowercase)` + +Question: why not take a slice of the second alphabet copy? + +Question: what do we use as the last letter of 'character'? 'r' or 'e'? + +`sorted()` will put a string in lexicographical order. +`.find()` will find an item in a sequence + +