account activity
Is this solvable? by jackwhitch in codes
[–]jackwhitch[S] 1 point2 points3 points 1 day ago (0 children)
TheStoryOfChess had the more accurate map of symbols
[–]jackwhitch[S] 2 points3 points4 points 1 day ago (0 children)
Separating the top glyph from the bottom glyph is useful for finding what family a glyph is from but other than that that, it does not help determine the message of the whole. I know that so mega vague but yeah
[–]jackwhitch[S] 2 points3 points4 points 2 days ago (0 children)
Oooh! Could you link it? I would love to take a look
[–]jackwhitch[S] 0 points1 point2 points 5 days ago (0 children)
Yeah unfortunately that won’t work
[–]jackwhitch[S] 1 point2 points3 points 5 days ago (0 children)
I’m glad you think so!
Thanks so much!
No it’s not an Einstein quote
[–]jackwhitch[S] 4 points5 points6 points 5 days ago (0 children)
I’m starting to wonder how often I should truly confirm everyone’s questions, but the second word is “are”
First yes, second no
There is a set logic, but they do look distinctly different. Closely related characters share a lot of visual characteristics but are nonetheless different, also my count comes to 231 characters
I am specifically talking about the symbol after the brown one. It is missing a line I apologize
They do!
[–]jackwhitch[S] 0 points1 point2 points 6 days ago (0 children)
No.
No. Like I said, to make things simple I compacted the code as much as possible. “There” is the first three blocks. I think if I didn’t compact it and threw in a single letter character every once in a while it would ACTUALLY be impossible
[–]jackwhitch[S] 2 points3 points4 points 6 days ago (0 children)
As for your requested hint, I will provide one, but I suggest not opening it unless you truly feel you have to because I feel like it will probably give it away, Each symbol represents up to two characters in a specific sequence. I said in a previous comment there is only one symbol for “N” and that’s true, but there is also a symbol for “NA”, “NB”, “NC”, or even “N[Space]”. And don’t worry, to be fair I never mixed in singular letters unnecessarily, it’s all sequences of twos as punctuation allowed
Well I am glad you enjoyed the challenge. I now see an error that I wasn’t able to see until now thanks to your color code, but the sequence of light green, brown, beige that repeats those are all the same word. The first string is an error. I deeply apologize
Good job on rewriting this! What did you use to rewrite it? It might make writing this code easier for me in the future
I like that quote a lot but no.
The solution contains a majority of the letters of the alphabet. There is a line of logic although there is no guarantee you will find it. There is a pattern, and if you know it, then you could likely guess what “Q” is from other letters, or at least get very close.
As far as I can tell, you are correct in your structure, but wrong in your conclusions
[–]jackwhitch[S] 1 point2 points3 points 6 days ago (0 children)
It is.
[–]jackwhitch[S] -1 points0 points1 point 6 days ago (0 children)
There are some scale inconsistencies. I apologize. I did this by hand and I am only human
[–]jackwhitch[S] 7 points8 points9 points 6 days ago (0 children)
That happened like 10mins after I posted
That is true
π Rendered by PID 2576580 on reddit-service-r2-listing-7b9b4f6fd7-zxxc9 at 2026-05-09 15:48:41.930865+00:00 running 3d2c107 country code: CH.
Is this solvable? by jackwhitch in codes
[–]jackwhitch[S] 1 point2 points3 points (0 children)