a little help! :)

Honestly, I don’t know if anyone else beat me to it, In case it is so, remove this post/ I will delete the post after being informed

I found out what the Chinese keyboard stroke It has greatly accelerated my learning in this language, and I was wondering if this could be of great help to you, So I decided to share it

The only thing that is needed to use it is to know the order in which the kanjis are written, qlthough, many of them are quite similar to the Chinese characters, there will be some that are different from those that are used in the Chinese language, So, if this is the case, it’s not too much of a problem, you can look up its kanji version, in my case I use Wikipedia to do it, But I recommend that you adapt it in your own way :)!

Examples:

通常
乛丶丨乛一一丨丶乛丶‘丨丶丿丶乛丨乛一丨乛丨

道長対策
丶丿一丿丨乛一一一丶乛丶‘一丨一一一乛丿丶’丶一丿丶一丨丶‘丿一丶丿一丶一丨乛丨丿丶


丨乛丿丶


丶丿丿丶

4 comments
  1. What OP probably means is input methods like [this](https://f-droid.org/packages/io.github.yawnoc.strokeinput/) that allow you to input kanji by its shape (in this case, stroke-by-stroke) instead of by sound. There are a bunch of input methods like this, with [Cangjie](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cangjie_input_method) probably being the most famous.

    They can be helpful for writing characters you don’t know the pronunciation of, but take a long time to learn. On a phone, handwriting input would probably be more useful.

  2. Doesn’t some Kanji stroke order differ from Chinese to Japanese? My dad is native Chinese and when I practice writing Kanji he points out differences all the time from, stuff like stroke order and simplified/traditional Chinese writing to whatever Kanji I’m writing. So, wouldn’t the difference in stroke order and simplified/trad Chinese on this “Chinese keyboard” not work for some Kanij? I’m sure it’s probably okay for most Kanji, but if the point is for learning wouldn’t a consistent method be better?

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