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== Reciprocal cipher == {{More citations needed section|date=December 2015}} A reciprocal cipher is a cipher where, just as one enters the [[plaintext]] into the [[cryptography]] system to get the [[ciphertext]], one could enter the ciphertext into the same place in the system to get the plaintext. A reciprocal cipher is also sometimes referred as '''self-reciprocal cipher'''.<ref> Paul Reuvers and Marc Simons. Crypto Museum. [https://www.cryptomuseum.com/crypto/enigma/uhr/ "Enigma Uhr"]. 2009. </ref><ref> Chris Christensen. [https://www.nku.edu/~christensen/section%201%20substitution%20ciphers.pdf "Simple Substitution Ciphers"]. 2006. </ref> Practically all mechanical cipher machines implement a reciprocal cipher, a [[involution (mathematics)|mathematical involution]] on each typed-in letter. Instead of designing two kinds of machines, one for encrypting and one for decrypting, all the machines can be identical and can be set up (keyed) the same way.<ref> Greg Goebel. [http://vc.airvectors.net/ttcode_05.html "The Mechanization of Ciphers"]. 2018. </ref> Examples of reciprocal ciphers include: * [[Atbash]] * [[Beaufort cipher]]<ref> "... the true Beaufort cipher. Notice that we have ''reciprocal encipherment''; encipherment and decipherment are identically the same thing." -- Helen F. Gaines. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Zb2RBQAAQBAJ "Cryptanalysis: A Study of Ciphers and Their Solution"]. 2014. p. 121. </ref> * [[Enigma machine]]<ref> Greg Goebel. [http://vc.airvectors.net/ttcode_05.html "The Mechanization of Ciphers"]. 2018. </ref> * Marie Antoinette and [[Axel von Fersen the Younger|Axel von Fersen]] communicated with a self-reciprocal cipher.<ref> Friedrich L. Bauer. [https://books.google.com/books?id=hfWTDr_bvMwC "Decrypted Secrets: Methods and Maxims of Cryptology"]. 2006. p. 144 </ref> * the Porta polyalphabetic cipher is self-reciprocal.<ref> David Salomon. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Zr9bjEpXKnIC "Coding for Data and Computer Communications"]. 2006. p. 245 </ref> * [[Purple cipher]]<ref> Greg Goebel. [http://vc.airvectors.net/ttcode_06.html "US Codebreakers In The Shadow Of War"]. 2018. </ref> * [[RC4]] * [[ROT13]] * [[XOR cipher]] * [[Vatsyayana cipher]] The majority of all modern ciphers can be classified as either a [[stream cipher]], most of which use a reciprocal [[XOR cipher]] combiner, or a [[block cipher]], most of which use a [[Feistel cipher]] or [[Lai–Massey scheme]] with a reciprocal transformation in each round.{{cn|date=May 2024}}
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