Visual test

Morse Code Visual Quiz

Test dot-dash recognition with hidden flashing prompts, score feedback, and follow-up review for missed patterns.

Question 1/10Attempts 0Accuracy 0%Streak 0
Strobe warning

Strobe warning: flashing light may be uncomfortable or unsafe for people with photosensitive epilepsy or light sensitivity. Turn off Flash or use audio-only practice if you are sensitive to strobing.

14 WPM
10 WPM

Slows spacing only.

Visual quiz spec

How this visual Morse quiz works

The visual quiz hides the prompt, flashes the Morse signal, and asks you to copy what you saw. It keeps the visual practice timing controls, including Farnsworth spacing, so practice and testing feel consistent.

Hidden prompt

READY

Watch the full sequence before answering. Replays use your current timing settings.

Hidden answer
The word is hidden until you check it, unlike visual practice.
Same timing controls
Character speed and Farnsworth spacing match visual practice.
Shareable results
The quiz tracks attempts, accuracy, streak, and best streak.

Test prompt

Prompt

Each question chooses a short MorseWords practice prompt and flashes it as a light signal. Replay the prompt when needed, then type the copied word.

Result summary

Scoring

Every answer check counts as an attempt. Correct answers increase your score and streak; misses reset the current streak but keep the question active.

Learner timing

Farnsworth

Farnsworth spacing slows only the gaps between characters and words. This helps you copy visual Morse without distorting the dit and dah shapes.

Next drill

Review

After the quiz, turn missed words into a word trainer set or printable worksheet so the next session starts with the weak prompts.

Visual quiz guide

Use this page to test dot-dash recognition

The visual quiz is the scored version of flash practice. It hides the prompt, flashes the Morse signal, checks your answer, and shows whether sight-based recall is holding.

Who it is for

Learners who have practiced visual Morse and want a fixed scored check instead of open-ended reveal practice.

What it tests

Visual prompt recall, answer accuracy, streak consistency, and whether current flash timing is readable.

How to use it

Watch the full flash sequence, type the prompt from memory, check the answer, and review missed patterns afterward.

Worked examples

Visual quiz scenarios

Use these scenarios to decide when a quiz score is useful.

A-Z recognition check

.- -... -.-.

Take a visual quiz after alphabet review to confirm short letter patterns are recognizable as flashes.

Missed character review

MISS -> PRACTICE

When a pattern is missed, go back to visual practice instead of retaking the same quiz immediately.

Combine with word trainer

FLASH -> WORD

If missed prompts are actual words, repeat them in the word trainer so visual recognition connects to vocabulary.
Use it well

Common visual quiz mistakes

Visual quiz scores are most useful when they follow targeted visual practice.

Quizzing before practicing

Use open-ended visual practice first if flash timing or prompt length still feels unfamiliar.

Ignoring missed prompts

A miss should send you to visual practice, typing, or word trainer review. Repeating the quiz alone is less efficient.

Confusing visual and audio skill

A strong visual score does not prove listening recall. Use audio practice separately.
Next step

Use missed flashes as the next review set

A visual quiz should point to a follow-up drill, especially when certain words or patterns keep failing.

Review

Build review from missed visual prompts

FAQ

Visual quiz FAQ

Is the visual Morse quiz scored?>

Yes. The quiz flashes a hidden prompt, checks your typed answer, and tracks attempts, accuracy, streak, and a shareable result card.

Should I use visual practice or visual quiz first?>

Use visual practice first if the flashes still feel unfamiliar. Use the quiz when you want a scored check of dot-dash recognition.

What should I do when I miss a visual prompt?>

Replay short visual prompts in practice mode, lower the speed or Farnsworth pressure, then retake the quiz after the pattern feels clearer.

Is visual quiz enough for audio Morse?>

No. Visual quiz measures sight-based recognition. Use audio practice or audio quiz separately for listening recall.

How often should I retake the visual quiz?>

Retake it after a short practice session, not repeatedly without review. The score is most useful when it checks whether targeted practice worked.

Is the visual quiz safe for light-sensitive users?>

Strobe warning: flashing light may be uncomfortable or unsafe for people with photosensitive epilepsy or light sensitivity. Turn off Flash or use audio-only practice if you are sensitive to strobing.

Morse code navigation

Explore the Morse code toolkit

Jump between the translator, encoder, decoder, practice pages, printable worksheets, audio tools, and Morse code reference guides.

View the full MorseWords toolkit+

Core Morse tools

Learn by doing

Reference and output tools

Helpful Morse code pages