kanjivg
makemeahanzi
kanjivg | makemeahanzi | |
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13 | 10 | |
944 | 1,717 | |
2.2% | - | |
8.7 | 0.0 | |
8 days ago | about 2 years ago | |
Python | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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kanjivg
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Doubt about 衆 stroke order
I am learning the most used kanjis and comparing some textbooks I have and the internet and I have found that depending on where I look I get a different stroke order. The kanji is question is 衆 and the orders I doubt about this two options, I guess it is the option that starts in the middle after "blood" but I can't find which is the actual writing order. Do you know how it is currently written and if there is any website or book where they explain these modifications? It is not the first kanji I have doubts about and I would like to have some material reference for these cases.
- Compare drawing with expected shape defined in a svg file
- The Kanji Vector Graphics (KanjiVG) project
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KanjiVG – SVGs of Kanji character strokes including order, shape and direction
I'm not sure why there are stroke order numbers on the alphabet/numerals. Looking at the history of the files,
https://github.com/KanjiVG/kanjivg/commits/master/kanji/0004...
they weren't there originally, then there is a commit where they were added which says "Recover stroke numbers from SVG directory". But in the same commit the stroke orders for kana were also added, so it might have been just a side effect of something useful.
Another thing I don't really understand is why all the ASCII characters were copied into the "wide ascii" positions:
https://github.com/KanjiVG/kanjivg/commits/master/kanji/0ff2...
The commit summary actually says "The ascii characters copied to the full width character positions." which I think was completely pointless. KanjiVG doesn't have the entire JIS character set, since that includes Greek and Russian letters, and various graphical symbols, as well as half-width katakana (narrow katakana), so there wasn't any clear reason to stuff these duplicates into there.
I might bring these two issues up on the mailing list at some point.
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Is there a correct way of storing svg files in either firestore or realtime database ?
I would like to store all the KanjiVG from this repository(https://github.com/KanjiVG/kanjivg/releases) and pair those with my already existing kanji database entries, so I could then display them together in my app.
makemeahanzi
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Stroke animations, new presentation of HamBaangLaang stories, etc.
I'm brand new to Reddit, but I wanted to share with you a few things that some of you may find helpful. (Sorry in advance for the long post.) First of all, when I started trying to memorize Cantonese vocabulary I quickly realized that I had to learn Chinese characters; but knowing that I won't spend hours with writing exercises, I was super excited when I found the stroke animations from the makemehanzi project. So I started making my own learning material by replacing the Chinese characters with SVG (vector graphics) that show the character being written on mouseover/when tapped on. I also made an online tool that let's you create vocab lists with this feature, see chinvocab.com. That tool works (except for the first tab, something broke there), but it's currently being redone.
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KanjiVG – SVGs of Kanji character strokes including order, shape and direction
This looks very much like Make Me A Hanzi (MMAH), which is exactly the same (Chinese) characters. It's just that Japanese knows those as Kanji.
https://github.com/skishore/makemeahanzi
- Show HN: Hanzi.gg – Wordle-inspired Chinese character guessing game
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Remembering Chinese Character- am I doing something wrong?
It's more effort, but I also use the Make Me a Hanzi database, and search through their text files. They have character decompositions.
- [Help] How to open a mostly JS Projetct from GitHub?
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Generating sloping 3D models from Chinese characters
This program generates a 3d model of a Hanzi/Kanji character using stroke data from Make me a Hanzi. It extrudes the character with the stroke order as the Z dimension.
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New Chinese character wiki that explains character origins and component breakdowns
I can't speak to how Skritter's system works internally, but the handwriting animation uses a stroke order dataset that primarily comes from makemeahanzi.
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Adding Chinese character animation / bishun to cards
I use the SVGs from makemeahanzi. The filename is just the Unicode code point of the character.
- I made this nifty website to teach my boyfriend to write
What are some alternatives?
kanji-flashcard-generator - Simple script to generate flashcards for studying kanji
anki-kunren - Interactive japanese kanji writing drill practice for anki with stroke order
vectorsynthesis - This library allows the creation and manipulation of vector shapes using audio signals sent directly to oscilloscopes, modified Vectrex consoles, ILDA laser displays, and oscilloscope emulation software using the Pure Data programming environment. Please scroll down for more info in the README below.
3d-hanzi-generator.
jiten - jiten - japanese android/cli/web dictionary based on jmdict/kanjidic — 日本語 辞典 和英辞典 漢英字典 和独辞典 和蘭辞典
cjklib - Han character library for CJKV languages
3d-hanzi-generator - Create 3d models and STLs of Hanzi/Kanji following the stroke order
yomichad - Japanese pop-up dictionary for qutebrowser
kanji-data - A JSON kanji dataset with updated JLPT levels and WaniKani information
trufont - TruFont is a streamlined and hackable font editor. À l’ancienne.