Stroke count method

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Keyboard of a Chinese mobile phone, showing roles of the numbers 1–5 in the Wubihua method
T9 keypad of a Chinese mobile phone, showing roles of the numbers 1–5 in the Wubihua method
Decomposition of some characters by their basic strokes. Some implementations of this input method assign the keys "h", "s", "p", "n" and z", which are the first letter of the pinyin of the name of the basic stroke they correspond to

The Stroke Count Method (Chinese: 笔画; pinyin: bǐ huà), Wubihua method, Stroke input method or Bihua IME (Chinese: 五笔画输入法; pinyin: wǔ bǐhuà shūrù fǎ or Chinese: 筆劃輸入法; pinyin: Bǐhuà shūrù fǎ) (lit. 5-stroke input method) is a relatively simple Chinese input method for writing text on a computer or a mobile phone. It is based on the stroke order of a word, not pronunciation.[1] It uses five or six buttons, and is often placed on a numerical keypad. Although it is possible to input Traditional Chinese characters with this method, this method is often associated with Simplified Chinese characters. The Wubihua method should not be confused with the Wubi method.

Each of the five keys from 1 to 5 are assigned a certain type of stroke (resembling the Eight Principles of Yong; these five are sometimes called 橫竖撇捺折[a] (héng-shù-piē-nà-zhé) with each character of this phrase being a one-syllable description of the respective five strokes:[b]

  1. A horizontal stroke from left to right (一)
  2. A vertical stroke from top to bottom (丨)
  3. A long diagonal stroke downward from right to left (丿)
  4. A very short dash stroke downward from left to right (丶)
  5. A horizontal stroke from left to right, ending with a downwards hook to the left (乙)

To input any character, the user simply presses the keys corresponding to the strokes of a character then select from a list of matching characters. The list of suggestions to choose from becomes more and more specific as more digits of the code are entered.[1] The system will not recognize a character input with an incorrect stroke order.[1] Some people find this method of entering characters into a mobile phone to be faster than pinyin. In fact, as pinyin is based upon Mandarin Chinese, many Chinese people – particularly in the southern regions of China like Hong Kong and Macau – who speak other varieties of Chinese and never learned pinyin relied solely on this method of entering characters on their phones, until touchscreen-based Smartphones allowed the possibility of Handwriting recognition.

Wubihua is one of the easiest to learn methods because it is simple and does not require knowledge of pronunciation or Pinyin. However, it tends to be vague, as a Wubihua code will normally match ten characters, and each character has one correct code, which confuses users whose stroke orders are wrong.

Strokes map to Wubihua input generally according to the following table:

Wubihua Character Stroke Type Stroke Name of stroke
(simplified Chinese and pinyin)
1 Horizontal, or Rising Héng
2 Vertical Shù
竖钩 Shù Gōu
3 Falling to the Left Piě
4 Dot, or Falling to the Right Diǎn
提捺 Tí Nà
5 Turning 横折 Héng Zhé
横撇 Héng Piě
横钩 Héng Gōu
竖折 Shù Zhé
竖弯 Shù Wān
竖提 Shù Tí
撇折 Piě Zhé
撇点 Piě Diǎn
撇钩 Piě Gōu
弯钩 Wān Gōu
斜钩 Xié Gōu
横折折 Héng Zhé Zhé
横折弯 Héng Zhé Wān
横折提 Héng Zhé Tí
横折钩 Héng Zhé Gōu
横斜钩 Héng Xié Gōu
竖折折 Shù Zhé Zhé
竖折撇 Shù Zhé Piě
竖弯钩 Shù Wān Gōu
横折折折 Héng Zhé Zhé Zhé
横折折撇 Héng Zhé Zhé Piě
横折弯钩 Héng Zhé Wān Gōu
横撇弯钩 Héng Piě Wān Gōu
竖折折钩 Shù Zhé Zhé Gōu
横折折折钩 Héng Zhé Zhé Zhé Gōu

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ In traditional characters, 橫豎撇捺折.
  2. ^ In the list 橫竖撇捺折 (héng-shù-piē-nà-zhé), the fourth stroke ( []) is also sometimes called (diǎn), i.e. 橫竖撇点折 (héng-shù-piē-diǎn-zhé) or 橫豎撇點折 in traditional characters.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Wicentowski, Joe (1994). "Wubihua for Speakers of English". Yale University. Retrieved 10 October 2013.

External links[edit]