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Samuel Morse developed Morse Code for transmitting data using a series of dots and dashes.

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Q: Who invented a code for dots and dashes?
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Related questions

You use dots and dashes in code?

you use dots and dashes in the Morse code


Who invented a code of dots and dashes?

Are you refering to Morse code? If so, its inventor is Samuel Morse. Hope this helps!


What are Morse clicks called?

Morse clicks, called Morse code, are dots and dashes. Dots are the short clicks, while dashes are longer. Morse clicks, called Morse code, are dots and dashes. Dots are the short clicks, while dashes are longer.


Who invented a system of communicating using dashes and dots of sound?

This code was created for Samuel Morse's telegraph and is known as Morse Code


What is the system of dots and dashes?

Morse code


What is the code using dots and dashes called?

Morse Code


What system of communication that uses dots and dashes?

Morse code


Dots and dashes?

Dots would last only a short amount of time on a Morse code machine and dashes would be three times that length.


Why does Morse code use dots and dashes?

Actually Morse's original code used dots, dashes, long dashes, and very long dashes. It also used 5 different lengths of gaps. This was greatly simplified by the adoption of the International Morse Code (largely developed in Germany then modified a bit by international agreements) to just dots and dashes. The number of different length gaps was also reduced to only 3.


What the Morse code?

Morse Code is a system of dots and dashes associated with sending a telegram.


What do 4 dots in Morse Code mean?

Three dashes in Morse Code mean the letter O. 3 dots, followed by 3 dashes, followed by 3 dots is Morse Code for SOS.


How has a Morse code changed in its looks?

Morse's original code used dots, dashes, long dashes, very long dashes, and 5 different gap lengths. The International Morse Code that replaced it simplified this to just dots, dashes and 3 different gap lengths. Electromechanical and Electronic "automatic" keys that timed the dots, dashes, and gaps for the operator were eventually introduced, significantly reducing operator workload and increasing sending code speed while reducing the frequency of sending errors.