English challenge: The Roman ruler Julius Caesar used the cipher that you are using right now for his secret communication. He substituted each letter of the alphabet with the letter three positions further along. Later, any code that used displacement in the same way in the creation of code was referred to as a Caesar ciphers. There are twenty-five possible combinations to the Caesar code. This means it is easy to solve it if you have time. Plaintext: theromanrulerjuliuscaesarusedthecipherthatyouareusingrightnowforhissecretcommunicationhesubstitutedeachletterofthealphabetwiththeletterthreepositionsfurtheralonglateranycodethatuseddisplacementinthesamewayinthecreationofcodewasreferredtoasacaesarcipherstherearetwentyfivepossiblecombinationstothecaesarcodethismeansitiseasytosolveitifyouhavetime The Caezar Cipher: shift for 9 on English alphabet, with each third character being blind, but preserving the distribution of letters in the cipher. CQBNA DXVQJ WXADC UNLAS JDURR DCBLM JNNBJ AADDB NJMCF QNJLR BYQQN ANCQB JCYHX RDJUA NYDBC RWCPA MRPRQ CCWXR FOCXA UQRJB BMNLN ANVCL YXVCV DUWRC LJQCR QXWQQ NNBDR KBDCR JCDVC NQMNL JLJQU RNCLC NRAXW OCCQN WJUDY QDJKN NCRFR BCQQC QCNUU NCACN JACQQ ALNNY YXABR BCRLX WRBOJ DAQCQ BNANJ UPXWJ PUNJC YNANJ WNHLJ XMANC NQJRC DQBNB MMBRB AYUXJ LNNVC NWNCR QWCWQ NNBJU VNNFJ BHRXW CNQNB LACNJ NCRXX WCXOX LXCMN JFJAB AQNON NARAN XMCCX JBBJW LJPNB BJAWL RJYQB NAABC AQNCA NNJAB NCCFN CWCNH OAREC NYDXB RBRBK UYNLQ XVXKR AWJBC RNXWB BCJXC RQNCL JYNBU JABLX LMNXC QORBX VNLJW NBRNC RABNW JBNHC RXBBX UDENX RCQRO QHXQD QQJEY NCBRV JNACC