In the November 1989 Word Ways, Peter Newby presented a set of literate cryptarithms. This name was coined by Newby, but is is a well-known concept: these are cryptarithms in which the code letters form interrelated words. They are discussed in Mathematics on Vacation (1966) by Joseph Madachy, editor of the Journal of Recreational Mathematics. He calls them alphametics, a word coined by J.A.H. Hunter in 1955
This thesis describes a system of algorithms which have been implemented on a digital computer in an...
Before computers, military tacticians and government agents had to rely on pencil-and-paper methods ...
This was prompted by Doug McIlroy\u27s Dual Cryptograms (Word Ways, August 1997). A dual cryptogr...
The hybridization of words and numbers finds its classic expression in cryptarithmetic . In my view...
An alphametic, as most Word Ways readers are surely aware, is a puzzle like SEND + MORE = MONEY, in ...
In recent years, there has risen a seemingly insurmountable wall about cyrptogram solving. It would ...
Alphametics (AMs) are crypted arithmetic problems; one or two are included in almost every collectio...
A cryptogram is a puzzle in cipher, usually a sentence of varying length, in which each letter is re...
Webster\u27s Third New International Dictionary (NI3) defines pattern-word as, (in) cryptology: a p...
Solutions to these puzzles can be found in Answers and Solutions at the end of this issue
Many mathematicians enjoy wordplay, and for obvious reasons. It is almost a branch of combinatorial...
In a recent textbook (1) on the theory of numbers Professor B. M. Stewart suggests the usefulness of...
In this paper some new mathematical technique used in the design and analysis of cipher systems hav...
Some years ago, while doing research on typography, I made a special font of type that obscured the ...
The more I have considered Computer Science, the more I see that it is truly a type of connected Mat...
This thesis describes a system of algorithms which have been implemented on a digital computer in an...
Before computers, military tacticians and government agents had to rely on pencil-and-paper methods ...
This was prompted by Doug McIlroy\u27s Dual Cryptograms (Word Ways, August 1997). A dual cryptogr...
The hybridization of words and numbers finds its classic expression in cryptarithmetic . In my view...
An alphametic, as most Word Ways readers are surely aware, is a puzzle like SEND + MORE = MONEY, in ...
In recent years, there has risen a seemingly insurmountable wall about cyrptogram solving. It would ...
Alphametics (AMs) are crypted arithmetic problems; one or two are included in almost every collectio...
A cryptogram is a puzzle in cipher, usually a sentence of varying length, in which each letter is re...
Webster\u27s Third New International Dictionary (NI3) defines pattern-word as, (in) cryptology: a p...
Solutions to these puzzles can be found in Answers and Solutions at the end of this issue
Many mathematicians enjoy wordplay, and for obvious reasons. It is almost a branch of combinatorial...
In a recent textbook (1) on the theory of numbers Professor B. M. Stewart suggests the usefulness of...
In this paper some new mathematical technique used in the design and analysis of cipher systems hav...
Some years ago, while doing research on typography, I made a special font of type that obscured the ...
The more I have considered Computer Science, the more I see that it is truly a type of connected Mat...
This thesis describes a system of algorithms which have been implemented on a digital computer in an...
Before computers, military tacticians and government agents had to rely on pencil-and-paper methods ...
This was prompted by Doug McIlroy\u27s Dual Cryptograms (Word Ways, August 1997). A dual cryptogr...