doranchak wrote:Jarlve wrote:I've been looking at the encoding again and ran all combinations of removing 2 rows from the cipher and scored the encoding. The highest peak occured while removing rows 12 and 14 (pivot rows). Then ran all combinations of removing 2 columns from the cipher. The highest peak occured while removing column 8 and 13 (pivot columns). Could anyone confirm this find?
What did you score them with? AZdecrypt?
As stated, the test is scoring the encoding. Which is my 2 symbol cycles measurement and another thing added.
doranchak wrote:Very interesting finding. I wonder if you would see the same effect if you randomly rearranged the symbols in the selected rows or columns instead of deleting them.
Good suggestion, here are the results. The color brightness is the encoding score. Each images is made up of small 10 by 10 pixels subsquares, each sub subsquare are 100 different randomizations of the same intersection.
Image 1 (rows by rows):X-axis are the randomized rows positions 1 to 20. Y-axis are the randomized rows positions 1 to 20.
Row 14 gives good returns.
Image 2 (columns by columns):X-axis are the randomized columns positions 1 to 17. Y-axis are the randomized columns positions 1 to 17.
Column 13 very clearly shows good returns. The diagonal shows increased brightness because randomization of 1 column (overlapped) on average is better than scores of 2 randomized columns.
Image 3 (columns by rows):X-axis are the randomized columns positions 1 to 17. Y-axis are the randomized rows positions 1 to 20.
Column 13 pops out again and there is no sign of interaction.

This loosely seems to confirm my test for row and column removal a few posts above although there were was not much return from row 12 and column 8. Perhaps the disturbance does not affect the entirety of the row and/or column.