Why Morse code still matters
Morse code is simple, durable, and still recognizable long after telegraph systems disappeared. You still see it in aviation references, amateur radio, survival training, and accessibility experiments because short and long signals can travel through sound, light, or touch.
What this converter helps with
This tool converts plain text into International Morse code and decodes valid Morse back into text. It normalizes spacing, supports common punctuation, and gives you a quick way to copy the result or play the signal in the browser.
When to use it
Use it when you are learning Morse code, preparing training material, checking a distress sequence like SOS, or turning a short message into a signal you can share or rehearse. It is especially useful when you want a fast browser-based converter without installing anything.