When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Readability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Readability

    Readability is the ease with which a reader can understand a written text.The concept exists in both natural language and programming languages though in different forms. In natural language, the readability of text depends on its content (the complexity of its vocabulary and syntax) and its presentation (such as typographic aspects that affect legibility, like font size, line height ...

  3. Wikipedia:Readability tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Readability_tools

    A readability survey actually gives the text to real people and determines how quickly they read it and how well they understood it. Using a readability formula is quick, cheap, easy, automated, and often free way to stick a number on a text. However, the results often differ significantly from the results of a readability survey.

  4. Help:How to write a readable article - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:How_to_write_a...

    Readability is extremely important for Wikipedia. As a free encyclopedia with the goal of democratizing knowledge, Wikipedia serves an extremely diverse audience with a wide range of backgrounds, preparation, interests, and goals. Even in the most technically demanding subjects, these readers include not only subject experts but also students ...

  5. Wikipedia : WikiProject Usability/Readability guidelines

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Readability_guidelines

    An extensive number of usability studies were made about the impact of text size on readability. They found that small text is much harder to read, for example by reducing reading speed: if a text with a comfortable size would be read by average users in 15 seconds, the same text in a smaller size would be read in 27 seconds.

  6. Raygor readability estimate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raygor_Readability_Estimate

    A rendition of the Raygor Graph. The Raygor estimate graph is a readability metric for English text. It was developed by Alton L. Raygor, who published it in 1977. [1]The US grade level is calculated by the average number of sentences and letters per hundred words.

  7. Lexile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexile

    The Lexile Framework for Reading is an educational tool in the United States that uses a measure called a Lexile to match readers with reading resources such as books and articles. Readers and texts are assigned a Lexile score, where lower scores reflect easier readability for texts and lower reading ability for readers.

  8. How to Read a Book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Read_a_Book

    How to Read a Book is a book by the American philosopher Mortimer J. Adler. Originally published in 1940, it was heavily revised for a 1972 edition, co-authored by Adler with editor Charles Van Doren. The 1972 revision gives guidelines for critically reading good and great books of any tradition.

  9. Help:Books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Books

    A Wikipedia Book created using the Book Creator tool is a collection of articles or other pages from Wikipedia. It is stored as a single page which specifies the book title, the articles to be included and some other information. It has three uses: As a saved reading list, simply by clicking through to the listed articles.