
If you wrote a word on a ball of string, then unravelled it, how challenging would it be to decipher the word?
Bryn Glover
Kirkby Malzeard, North Yorkshire, UK
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I would expect that a word written on the ball pictured (above) could never be deciphered.
In any coding or ciphering process, the vital factor is that the coder and intended decoder operate according to a logical, predictable process known to both. The first step for a decoder is to discover what this process is.
Some balls of string are wound systematically by machinery, producing a regular cylinder, for example. In such a case, it may be possible to predict the position of any small segment of the string, even taking into account the fact that the circumference of the 鈥渂all鈥 will increase as the wrapping proceeds.
But the ball illustrated has clearly been created by a random process, which, by definition, means it would be impossible to work backwards to recreate any words that had been written on it.
To answer this question 鈥 or ask a new one 鈥 email lastword@newscientist.com.
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