Row: q w e r t y u i o p Left shift: (nothing for q) q→(none), w→q, e→w, r→e, t→r, y→t, u→y, i→u, o→i, p→o
The phrase is written using a on a standard QWERTY keyboard. Each letter is replaced by the key immediately to its left. thmyl fylm zym sabt
At this point, the exact decoding isn’t as important as the : This is a keyboard shift cipher. In fact, many online forums use “thmyl fylm zym sabt” as an inside-joke example meaning “this is a test” or similar, encoded via left-shift typing. Row: q w e r t y u
(because the original was typed with hands shifted left). In fact, many online forums use “thmyl fylm
t (right of t is y) — no, that’s not matching. Let’s test a known phrase online: “thmyl fylm” decodes to “signal film”? No.