Brevity code
Brevity codes are used in amateur radio, maritime, aviation and military communications. The codes are designed to convey complex information with a few words or codes. Some terms are classified to the public.
List of brevity codes
- ACP-131 Allied military brevity codes
- ARRL Numbered Radiogram
- Commercial codes such as the Acme Commodity and Phrase Code, the ABC Telegraphic Code, Bentley's Complete Phrase Code, and Unicode.
- Fox (code word)
- Multiservice tactical brevity code used by various military forces. The codes' procedure words, a type of voice procedure, are designed to convey complex information with a few words, when brevity is required but security is not.
- Ten-code - North American police brevity codes, including such notable ones as 10-4.
- Phillips Code
- NOTAM Code
- Wire signal - Morse Code abbreviation, also known as 92 Code. Appears in informal language-independent HAM conversations.
gollark: Squid: can you project a 2D subcanvas thingy into 3D somehow?
gollark: <@184468521042968577> Cool idea: 3D world-positioned screens.
gollark: Shatter, I mean.
gollark: It's optimized now.
gollark: Oh, you mean don't use *ARCore*.
See also
- Operating signals
- SINPO code - code used to describe the quality of radio transmissions, especially in reception reports written by shortwave listeners
- R-S-T system- information about the quality of a radio signal being received. Used by amateur radio operators, shortwave listeners.
- Morse code abbreviations
- Telegraphese
External links
References
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