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A stroke of group heng is before a stroke of group shu, group shu is before group pie, group pie is before group dian, and group dian is before group zhe. This is the so-called heng-shu-pie-dian-zhe (横竖撇点折) stroke group order. For example, both characters 二 and 十 have two strokes, and both start with stroke 一.
[citation needed] The stroke order follows a few simple rules, though, which aids in memorizing these. To write CJK characters, one must know how to write CJK strokes, and thus, needs to identify the basic strokes that make up a character. The most basic rules of stroke order are: Heng, (㇐) then shu (㇑). Examples: 十 、 卄 .
The Standard of GB13000.1 Character Set Chinese Character Order (Stroke-Based Order) (GB13000.1字符集汉字字序(笔画序)规范)) [6] is a standard released by the National Language Commission of China in 1999 for Chinese characters sorting by strokes. This is an enhanced version of the traditional stroke-count–stroke-order sorting.
Stroke order refers to the order in which the strokes of a Chinese character are written. Stroke order may also refer to: Hangul, whose letters have a stroke order; Surname stroke order, a method of listing Chinese names in order of increasing stroke count; Stroke-based sorting, a method of sorting characters in Chinese dictionaries
The YES stroke alphabetical order (一二三漢字筆順排檢法), also called YES stroke-order sorting, briefly YES order or YES sorting, is a Chinese character sorting method based on a stroke alphabet and stroke orders. It is a simplified stroke-based sorting method free of stroke counting and grouping. [1] [2] [3]
Stroke number, or stroke count (simplified Chinese: 笔画数; traditional Chinese: 筆畫數; pinyin: bǐhuà shù), is the number of strokes of a Chinese character. It may also refer to the number of different strokes in a Chinese character set.
Chinese character order, or Chinese character indexing, Chinese character collation and Chinese character sorting (simplified Chinese: 汉字排序; traditional Chinese: 漢字排序; pinyin: hànzì páixù), is the way in which a Chinese character set is sorted into a sequence for the convenience of information retrieval. [1]
A horizontal stroke from left to right (一) A vertical stroke from top to bottom (丨) A long diagonal stroke downward from right to left (丿) A very short dash stroke downward from left to right (丶) A horizontal stroke from left to right, ending with a downwards hook to the left (乙)