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Morse Code Tools

This tools hub groups high-intent Morse workflows across generation, decoding, export, and visual signaling. Choose the page that matches your use case and jump directly into the right workbench.

If you want to hear Morse instantly, start with the live sound generator. If you need an asset for editing, open Morse code audio download. If tone character matters most, review the tone styles guide. If your Morse string has no character spaces, open the no-space decoder. If you have a beep recording instead of typed Morse, use the audio decoder. If you need visible light output instead of sound, open the flashlight sender.

Tools FAQ

Which Morse tool should I start with?

Start with the sound generator if you want quick playback, use the audio download page when you need a reusable WAV file, use the tone styles page when tone character matters most, use the no-space decoder when separators are missing, and use the audio decoder when your source is an actual beep recording.

What is the difference between live playback and WAV export?

Live playback is best for quick rhythm checks in the browser. WAV export is better when you need a file for editing, publishing, collaboration, or reuse in production tools.

Do all tool pages use the same Morse timing logic?

Yes. The tool pages share the same Morse timing rules, WPM controls, and tone profile system, so settings stay consistent as you move between generation, comparison, and export workflows.

Which tool should I use for broken or ambiguous Morse input?

Use the no-space decoder when you have a continuous dot-dash string but lost character boundaries. Use the audio decoder when the ambiguity comes from an uploaded recording rather than typed Morse.

Which tool should I use for visual signaling instead of sound?

Use the flashlight sender when you need visible Morse output on screen or torch. It is the right choice for demonstrations, mobile signaling, and no-audio environments.