Morse Code (Numbers)
Numbers encoded in International Morse code, digit by digit
About Morse Code for Numbers
Morse code is a method of encoding text as sequences of two signal durations called dots (·) and dashes (−). International Morse code defines a unique sequence for each digit 0–9. To represent a number, each decimal digit is encoded in order, with a space between digits.
NumDic uses the standard ITU-R encoding: dot (.) and dash (-). Numbers are written digit-by-digit, so for example 42 is rendered as ....- ..--- (4 then 2).
Further Reading:
Digits 0–9 in Morse Code
| Digit | Morse code |
|---|---|
| 0 | ----- |
| 1 | .---- |
| 2 | ..--- |
| 3 | ...-- |
| 4 | ....- |
| 5 | ..... |
| 6 | -.... |
| 7 | --... |
| 8 | ---.. |
| 9 | ----. |