Sorry, neither the P-51 nor the Zero were revolutionary. Neither brought about a sudden change in the way fighter and bomber operations were carried out and neither had such influence that every other air force or operator changed their tactics to emulate what both aircraft could do. They were game changers, but not revolutionary.
For clairification, look at the battleship Dreadnought as suggested earlier and its example on its peers. Navies were further more classifed by whether they were equipped with dreadnoughts or not, every other capital warship was rendered obsolete by fleets of them. Can't say the same impact was held by either aeroplane types.
As for the Swordfish, Parsifal, no, the idea that battleships could be rendered obsolete did not arise with the Swordfish demonstrating an old concept that had been around since the Great War. Churchill as First Lord of the Admiralty before WW1 broke out was having meetings in the Admiralty discussing that very thing using torpedoplanes. Sir Percy Scott was publicly a big critic of the dreadnought and claimed in a series of articles that were published in newspapers post war that the torpedoplane would signal the end of the dreadnought, so the idea that battlefleets were coming to an end because of torpedoplanes had been around for longer thn the Swordfish, also, every post WW1 aircraft carrier navy had fleets of them, if not to sink capital warships, then what?
The revolution in the case of the Swordfish was the torpedo itself and even then its threat and far reaching influence goes right back to Victorian navies, who developed new classes of warship to introduce it into service, warships carried extra protection against them and it suddenly became a very real threat to the existence of surface fleets. At the outbreak of war the Royal Navy suffered bouts of what was described as 'Periscope-itis' - panic sightings of pericopes where there were none as a result of early successes of German U boats against naval vessels. The torpedo had considerable impact on naval fleets during the Great War - during Jutland it caused Jellicoe to turn away from the High Seas Fleet he was hotly pursuing at a cruicial moment, thus losing the initiative, and even before the war broke out, Fred T. Jane, him of the Jane's series of benchmark military libraries wrote questioning the future of dreadnoughts owing to the impact of the torpedo. Murray Sueter wrote that the impact of the torpedo, mine and submarine would render battlefleets obsolete in his previously mentioned book Airmen or Noahs.