Caesar's cypher is the simplest encryption algorithm. It adds a fixed value to the ASCII (unicode) value of each character of a text. In other words, it shifts the characters. Decrypting a text is simply shifting it back by the same amount, that is,
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function coded = caesar(a,b)
coded = char(a+b);
c = length(coded);
for ii = 1:c
    if coded(ii) > 126;
        d = coded(ii) - 126;
        coded(ii) = (32+d);
    elseif coded(ii)<32;
        d = coded(ii) - 32;
        coded(ii) = char(126-d);
    end
end
end
3 Comments
  David Hill
      
      
 on 13 Apr 2020
				What is a? Isn't 'a' already a character array like: 'my name is Dave'? Is b the shift number?
Answers (5)
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 13 Apr 2020
        You start by doing
coded = char(a+b);
Suppose b is negative enough that a+b would be less than zero. Because of the char() that would be char() of a negative value and because char cannot be negative that would be changed to 0.
You need to do your work in signed integer or in floating-point and convert to char afterwards
2 Comments
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 13 Apr 2020
				if b were 256 then that should probably be the same outcome as if it were 0, but you treat it as 126. You also do not raise negatives into the positive range at that stage.
  David Hill
      
      
 on 13 Apr 2020
        Are you using the full range from 0-255 for ascii? or do you want the output to have only letters (a-zA-Z) and no special characters?
function coded = caesar(a,b)
coded=char(mod(unicode2native(a)+b,256));
end 
0 Comments
  KaMATLAB
      
 on 2 Sep 2020
        function txt = caesar(txt,key)
    txt = double(txt) + key;
    first = double(' ');
    last = double('~');
    % use mod to shift the characters - notice the + 1
    % this is a common error and results in shifts 
    % being off by 1
    txt = char(mod(txt - first,last - first + 1) + first);
end
  Prerona Dey
 on 21 Nov 2020
        function y = caesar2(ch, key)
    v = ' ' : '~';
    [~, loc] = ismember(ch, v);
    v2 = circshift(v, -key);
    y = v2(loc);
end
Can u please explain me this soultion I found.
0 Comments
  Zia Ur Rehman
 on 28 Aug 2022
        Hi folks,
I write this code, this is working fine with the problem.
Need further improvement if any from seniors as I'm very novice in coding and MATLAB.
function coded = caesar(a,b)
% removing the ';' so you can see how it works in output
c = double(a) % to convert the given char(string) into double(numeric)
d=c+b % adding the shift smount to encrypt
l= length(d) % measuring the length as we need to traverse every element to check if it lies in the limit(32:126)
for e = 1:l % applying loop to check each element if it lies in the limit
    while d(e) > 126 % using while as if we use 'if' statement it will only execute once but we need execution untill the value comes in the limit
        d(e) = d(e)-95 % if number is greater than 126 so wrap around  by adding (126-32+1=95) we use +1 as we need next number not the same number
    end
    while d(e) < 32 % using while as if we use if statement it will only execute once but we need execution untill the value comes in the limit
        d(e) = d(e) + 95 % if number is less than 32 so wrap around by subtracting (126-32+1=95) we use +1 as we need next number not the same number
    end
end
coded=char(d) % d is now updated according to the limit
%coded = char(double(a) + b)
end
2 Comments
  John D'Errico
      
      
 on 28 Aug 2022
				This is not an answer to the question, instead a request for some coding adivce on how to improve your code.
Does your code work? Is there a problem with the code?
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 28 Aug 2022
				Let us test:
in = 'To whom it may concern'
O1 = caesar(in, 5)
O2 = caesar(O1, -5)
O3 = caesar(in, 5120)
O4 = caesar(O3, -5120)
function coded = caesar(a,b)
% removing the ';' so you can see how it works in output
c = double(a); % to convert the given char(string) into double(numeric)
d=c+b; % adding the shift smount to encrypt
l= length(d); % measuring the length as we need to traverse every element to check if it lies in the limit(32:126)
for e = 1:l % applying loop to check each element if it lies in the limit
    while d(e) > 126 % using while as if we use 'if' statement it will only execute once but we need execution untill the value comes in the limit
        d(e) = d(e)-95; % if number is greater than 126 so wrap around  by adding (126-32+1=95) we use +1 as we need next number not the same number
    end
    while d(e) < 32 % using while as if we use if statement it will only execute once but we need execution untill the value comes in the limit
        d(e) = d(e) + 95; % if number is less than 32 so wrap around by subtracting (126-32+1=95) we use +1 as we need next number not the same number
    end
end
coded=char(d); % d is now updated according to the limit
%coded = char(double(a) + b)
end
That seems to work.
Notices, though, that I added semi-colons everywhere, to prevent it from repeatedly outputing results as it goes.
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