d→w a→s n→i l→k w→e d→w → "wskew"? That’s not right. Let me instead shift to encode; thus shift left to decode.
Let’s try shift to decode (so encoded by shifting left):
d ← w a ← s n ← i l ← k w ← e d ← w → "wsikew"? no. danlwd hat aspat shyld krk shdh bray wyndwz
d (left neighbor: w) a (left: s) n (left: i) l (left: k) w (left: e) d (left: w) → w s i k e w → “wsikew” no. So maybe shift right to decode instead.
Given the time, I’ll directly decode systematically using QWERTY (meaning original was typed with hands shifted right by one key): d→w a→s n→i l→k w→e d→w → "wskew"
"danlwd" → becomes "windows" "hat" → becomes "has" "aspat" → becomes "space" "shyld" → becomes "shield" "krk" → becomes "kjk" or possibly "job"/"jar"? Let me check carefully.
Let’s map each:
danlwd: d (key left is w) a (left is s) n (left is i) l (left is k) w (left is e) d (left is w) → wskew? That’s wrong. So not shift left.