I've been tinkering with Python all day today... it's pretty slick. Just for practice, I tried to cobble together a tripcode decoder that would let you have "real" words in your tripcode as !WAHa and Sling and others do, and it actually came out better than I thought it would be. I'm aware there's already a program that does this, but if memory serves me, it's Windows-only and in Japanese besides. My script is kind of dumb in the way it goes about things -- it basically just tears through random strings until it finds one that fits -- but I've tested it repeatedly and it seems to work. If you'd like to check it out, nab it here:
http://www.anre.org/crap/detripper.bz2
Of course, you may need to modify the hashbang line depending on where Python is on your machine, and don't forget those execute bits, people... Use "-h" for help.
First person to ask how to get this to run on Windows gets pointed and laughed at.
>>408 That'd likely work; there's not much call for tripcode cracking. That said, make sure you at least make a note that it's not a perfect system, and whatever key they use, don't make it your password for anything else!
A note of caution: Some characters (like &<>"',) get translated into HTML entities, and can push the rest of the characters off the end of the 8-character limit. This is essentially a bug, but is implemented in Wakaba and Kareha for bug-by-bug compatibility with the original implementation.