English edit

 
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Etymology edit

From code +‎ text.

Noun edit

codetext (plural codetexts)

  1. (cryptography) An encoded form of a message, as opposed to plaintext.
    Antonym: plaintext
    • 1974, The Family Creative Workshop, Plenary Publications International:
      To work well, a code must have thousands of plaintext words or phrases with a codetext equivalent for each. Usually, for the sake of manageability, a codetext word is limited to three to five letters or numbers. All the codetexts and their plaintext meanings are listed in a codebook.
    • 2004, David Kahn, “Yardley’s Triumph”, in The Reader of Gentlemen’s Mail: Herbert O. Yardley and the Birth of American Codebreaking, New Haven, Conn., London: Yale University Press, page 67:
      The repetitions of the codetext matched those of the proposed plaintext perfectly. [] The two spent the morning inserting his equivalents into the codetexts, but none stood close enough together in the texts to obtain confirmation through new identifications.
    • 2018, Jamie A. Davies, “Synthetic biology for engineering”, in Synthetic Biology: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, page 82:
      DNA encryption of images, part 1: Alice uses her library of primers to make codetextc-plaintextc pairs. [] The result of adding the whole library to the long DNA, letting the copying happen, and then dissociating the copied DNA from the original is that Alice will have a collection of plaintextc-codetextc pairs, the codetextc being photosensitive (the superscript c indicates a strand complementary, so able to bind to the original DNA). Alice then adds her mixture of plaintextc-codetextc pairs to her chip, and the strands will hybridize to the complementary, immobile strands on the chip.

See also edit