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Why Should I Use Letters and Numbers in a Password?

Passwords are used for everything now, so they need to be safe. Here is the basis behind password theory:

Each plaintext Character entered increases the permutations by a factor of the plaintext possibilities.

For example, pin numbers, which use only 0-9:

a three digit password would have 10x10x10= 1000 permutations
a four digit would have 10x10x10x10= 10,000 permutations

so the more digits, the hard the password is to crack via brute force (checking all the possibilities systematically)

Normally, modern passwords are case sensitive and allow a variety of characters, Case sensitivity allows for much more permutations, and should be used.

take this example password:

chicken

7 letters with 26 possibilities= 26^7

versus a strong password of the same vein:

Ch1cken

7 letters still, but with a Capital letter and number to increase possibilities:

0-9 =10 possibilities + lower case alphabet (26) + uppercase alphabet (26)= 26+26+10 =62 possibilities
OR 62^7 possibilities

62^7 vs 27^7

the "Ch1cken" password would take 438.45839 times longer to brute force crack than "chicken" would.

Linux systems and many modern websites allow special charaters too. {{%$#@!^&*(), etc.

this can increase the permutions greatly, moving the base options for characters to 112. If you can use a password with extra charaters, it is the most safe.