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Utility guide6 წთ კითხვაგანახლებული 5 ივლ. 2026

Dots and dashes

How Morse code actually works.

Morse code turns every letter into a short pattern of dots and dashes, with timing doing the work of spaces. Learn the timing rules and the most common letters and you can start reading it.

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  • 01Each letter is a unique pattern of dots (short) and dashes (long); common letters get shorter patterns.
  • 02Timing is the whole system: a dash is three dots long, and gaps of different lengths separate letters and words.
  • 03SOS is the famous distress signal because its pattern is unmistakable and easy to send.

The system: two symbols and silence

Morse code represents text using just two signal elements — a short mark called a dot (or dit) and a long mark called a dash (or dah) — plus the silences between them. Every letter, number, and punctuation mark is assigned a unique sequence of dots and dashes. E is a single dot; T is a single dash; S is three dots; O is three dashes. Because it needs only two states — signal on, signal off — Morse can be sent by almost anything: a key clicking, a lamp flashing, a hand tapping, a horn beeping.

Cleverly, the code is efficient by design. Samuel Morse and Alfred Vail studied how often each letter appears in English and gave the most common letters the shortest codes. That is why E (the most frequent letter) is a single dot and rarer letters like Q and Y get long four-element patterns. It is a hand-built forerunner of modern data compression.

Timing is the real language

The dots and dashes are only half the code — the gaps carry just as much meaning, and getting the timing right is what separates readable Morse from noise. Everything is measured in units of one dot's length. A dash lasts three units. The gap between dots and dashes within a single letter is one unit. The gap between two letters is three units. The gap between words is seven units.

This is why "SOS" sent as one run (...---...) is understood as three letters only if the sender pauses correctly, and why beginners who rush their spacing become unreadable even when their individual letters are perfect. When you learn by ear, you are really learning to hear these rhythms: the tight stutter of a letter versus the longer rest that means a new word has begun.

The most useful letters to learn first

Start with the short, high-frequency letters and the distress call — they cover a lot of ground.

  • 01E = . (dot) — the shortest and most common letter
  • 02T = - (dash)
  • 03A = .- and N = -. — mirror images of each other
  • 04I = .. and M = --
  • 05S = ... and O = --- — the two halves of SOS
  • 06SOS = ...---... — the international distress signal, chosen for being simple and unmistakable

How to translate text to Morse code

Whether you are learning or just need a quick encode, the translator handles both directions.

  1. 01

    Open the Morse code translator

    Go to Handytool's Morse code translator. It runs entirely in your browser.

  2. 02

    Type text or Morse

    Enter plain text to encode it into dots and dashes, or paste Morse to decode it back into letters.

  3. 03

    Read the result

    See the translation instantly, with dots and dashes spaced into letters and words.

  4. 04

    Play or copy it

    Use the audio playback to train your ear, or copy the output to share or study.

How to actually learn it

The mistake most beginners make is learning Morse from a visual chart of dots and dashes. In practice, fluent operators do not see dots and dashes — they hear rhythms. The recommended approach, known as the Koch method, is to learn by sound from the start: listen to letters played at full speed and memorize their rhythm, adding one new letter at a time once the previous ones are automatic.

A translator with audio playback is a handy practice partner for this. Type a word, listen to how it sounds, and try to anticipate each letter's rhythm before it plays. Start with the short high-frequency letters, build up to whole words, and resist the urge to slow the individual letters down — it is easier to learn the correct rhythm fast than to speed up a slow one later. With a few minutes a day, the common letters become second nature surprisingly quickly.

Morse code FAQ

How does Morse code work?

Each letter and number is encoded as a unique sequence of short signals (dots) and long signals (dashes), separated by carefully timed gaps. A dash is three times as long as a dot, and longer gaps mark the boundaries between letters and words.

What is the timing in Morse code?

Everything is measured in dot-lengths: a dash is 3 units, the gap inside a letter is 1 unit, the gap between letters is 3 units, and the gap between words is 7 units. Correct spacing is essential to being understood.

What is SOS in Morse code?

SOS is three dots, three dashes, three dots (...---...). It was chosen as the international distress signal because the pattern is simple, symmetric, and hard to mistake, not because the letters stand for anything.

What is the easiest way to learn Morse code?

Learn by sound rather than from a chart. Memorize each letter's rhythm at full speed, adding one letter at a time, and use a translator with audio playback to practise recognizing the patterns by ear.

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