Another easy one.
..7
717, 7117, 7
828, 7228..
or
..gGag, gaag, gHbh, gbbh..
The capitol letters or bold #'s have nothing to do with the next sequence and are there to throw you of on the # sequence, but are obvious in the letter sequence.
This is the simplest form of doing this and can be made very difficult. - Using letters as fractions or decimals adds to the difficulty.
If you use the letters out of sequence like you do in a sentance, it can be made near impossible to decipher.
Say, you use decimals to encript a letter or email. Never use the same decimal twice for the same letter. If you use the letter "a" ten times in one sentance, use .025, .026, .027 etc. each time you use "a", but be a bit more encryptic and
only use the same pattern for
one sentance. In the next sentance, use a different encription.
Also, if you want to throw someone off even more, use the opposite of the word you mean, as in yes = no. - Simple encript at the begining or end of the letter or email explaining this. Or you can skip letters, words, or whole phrases all together.
I have some free time on my hands at work.
None of his works unless you have a log you keep this written down on. It is hard trying to remember a page full of this when the pattern changes from sentance to sentance.
Edit, changed an h.