Four-corner method: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
m clean up, replaced: Dynasty → dynasty
Unsourced 17 years
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 3:
 
[[File:four-corner method.svg|200px|right|thumb|The code of 法 ({{zh|p=fǎ}}; meaning "method/law/France") is an example of a fifth digit for an extra part: 3413<sub>1</sub> (丶十一丶<sub>一</sub>). (The numbers refer to the code for the colored ''part'', not the order of entry (which is left to right, top to bottom.)]]
The '''Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod''' or '''Fourfour-Cornercorner Systemsystem''' ({{zh|t=四角號碼檢字法|s=四角号码检字法|p=sì jiǎo hàomǎ jiǎnzì fǎ|l=four corner code lookup-character method}}) is a [[Chinese input methods for computers|character-input method]] used for [[Character encoding|encoding]] [[Chinese character]]s into either a computer or a manual typewriter, using four or five numerical digits per [[Character (computing)|character]].
 
The four digits encode the shapes found in the four corners of the symbol, upper left to lower right. Although this does not uniquely identify a Chinese character, it leaves only a very short list of possibilities. A fifth digit can be added to describe an extra part above the lower right if necessary.
 
The four-corner method, in its three revisions, was supported by the Chinese state for a while, and is found in numerous older reference works and some still in publication. The small ''Kangorin Sino-Japanese Dictionary'' by Yoneyama had a four-corner index when it was introduced in the 1980s, but it has been since been deleted. However, it is not in common usage today, although dictionaries using it are available. It is identified, in public opinion, with the time when many Chinese were illiterate and the language was not yet unified; more Chinese today use the dictionary to help them write, not read. But it is useful for scholars, clerks, editors, compilers, and especially for foreigners who read Chinese. In recent years it has achieved a new usage as a character input system for computers, generating very short lists to browse.
 
==Origin==
The Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod was invented in the 1920s by [[Wang Yunwu]], the editor in chief at Commercial Press Ltd., China. It was based on experiments by [[Lin Yutang]] and others.{{Citation needed|date=April 2007}} Its original purpose was to aid telegraphers in looking up [[Chinese telegraph code]] numbers in use at that time from long lists of characters. This was mentioned by Wang Yunwu in an introductory pamphlet called ''Four-Corner Method'', published in 1926. [[Cai Yuanpei]] and [[Hu Shih]] wrote introductory essays for this pamphlet.
 
==Mnemonics==
The four digits used to encode each character are chosen according to the "shape" of the four corners of each character.{{clarify|date=October 2021}} In order, these corners are upper left, upper right, lower left and lower right. The shapes can be memorized using a poem composed by [[Hu Shih]], called ''Bihuahaoma Ge'' ({{Lang-zh|t=筆畫號碼歌|p=Bǐhuà hàomǎ gē|labels=no|l=stroke number song}}), as a "[[Mnemonic device|memory key]]" to the system:
 
{|border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" style="margin:0.5em;margin-left:2em;background:transparent"
|-
!Traditional
Line 47:
|}
 
In the 1950s, [[lexicographer]]s in the [[People's Republic of China]] changed the poem somewhat in order to avoid association with Hu Shih, who had criticized the [[Chinese Communist Party]], although the contents remain generally unchanged. The 1950s version is as follows:
 
{|border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" style="margin:0.5em;margin-left:2em;background:transparent"
|-
!Traditional
Line 85:
* If the character is fenced by {{Linktext|囗}}, {{Linktext|門}} (门), or {{Linktext|鬥}}, the lower corners are used to denote what is inside the [[Radical (Chinese character)|radical]], instead of 00 for 囗 or 22 for the others. (e.g. the code for 回 is 6060)
 
There have been scores, maybe hundreds, of such numerical and alpha-numerical systems proposed or popularized (such as [[Lin Yutang]]'s "[[Lin Yutang's Chinese-English Dictionary of Modern Usage|Instant Index]]", [[A Chinese–English Dictionary#Content|Trindex]], Head-tail, [[Wang An]]'s ''Sanjiahaoma'', [[Jack Halpern (linguist)|Halpern]]); some Chinese refer to these generically as ''sijiaohaoma'' (after the original pamphlet) though this is not correct.
 
==Versions==
Over time, the Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod has gone through some changes.
 
===First Version===
Line 99:
The ''Wang Yun-wu Da Cidian'' of 1928 was remarkable for its time, and although the pronunciations were very much in line with today's Standard Chinese, the lack of a phonetic index diminished its overall usefulness. The northern [[Mandarin Chinese|Mandarin]] pronunciations were given in [[Gwoyeu Romatzyh]], a romanization system devised by linguist [[Yuen Ren Chao|Zhao Yuanren]], as well as in [[Bopomofo|Mandarin Phonetic System (MPS or Bopomofo)]] characters with a dotted corner for tone. It also delineated parts of speech, and all compounds were listed by the four-corner method as well.
 
The famed lexicographer and editor of ''[[Ciyuan]]'', Lu Erkui, as well as other lexicographers, became early proponents of the Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod. By 1931, it was used extensively by the Commercial Press to index virtually all classical reference works and collections of China, such as the ''Pei Wen Yun Fu'' and ''[[Complete Library of the Four Treasuries]]'', as well as many modern ones.
 
Hospital, personnel and police records were organized just like the biographical indexes and dynastic histories of former times. For a while (Nash, Trindex, 1930), it seemed that use of the 214 [[Kangxi radicals]], introduced during the Qing dynasty, was being replaced by the Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod.
 
Internationally, Harvard and other universities were using the method for their book collections, and the [[Kuomintang|KMT]] government in Nanjing seemed to have selected this numerical system as its standard. It was taught in primary schools to children in [[Shanghai]] and other locations during the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, up to the outbreak of war with Japan in 1937. The Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod was extremely popular in government education circles to promote spoken language unification until pronunciation-based systems became fashionable in the mid-1930s.
 
The first large-scale project to promote spoken language unification was in 1936: [[Wang Li (linguist)|Wang Li]]'s 4-volume Mandarin Phonetic System entry, ''Guoyu Cidian''. In 1949 it was re-edited into the MPS ''[[Hanyu Da Cidian]]'' with Kangxi radical index, and a small Four Corner dictionary was available as the ''Xin Sijiaohaoma Cidian'' of 1953. After 1949, limited use of MPS and the original Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod continued in the People's Republic of China, until the introduction of [[pinyin]] in 1958 and after. Today's Chinese dictionaries still contain MPS characters below each pinyin class entry and sometimes in a phonetics chart in tables (''Xinhua Cidian''), while main entries are all in Hanyu Pinyin order. There is one all-''sijiaohaoma'' small dictionary (Third Revision, below).
 
===Second Revision===
A minor Second Revision was made during and just after World War II. This was used by most postwar lexicographers including [[Morohashi Tetsuji]], who created his 12-volume Sino-Japanese dictionary, the ''[[Dai Kan-Wa jiten]]'' and included the Fourfour-Cornercorner index among several other lookup methods. [[Oshanin]] included a Four Cornerfour-corner index in his Chinese-Russian dictionary and an edition of the ''25 Histories'' (''Ershiwu shi'') was published in the early 1950s with a Fourfour-Cornercorner index volume containing the entire content.
 
Then, in 1958, with the introduction of pinyin, a small ''Xin Sijiaohaoma Cidian'' was produced by the Beijing Commercial Press, but the rapid Han character simplification of the following years made the small (30,000 compound) book obsolete in China. Overseas and in Hong Kong, it remained popular for a number of years as a high speed key to phonetic dictionaries and indexes. It was used by those partly literate in or unfamiliar with [[Standard Chinese]], especially Hanyu Pinyin.
Line 115:
 
===Third Revision===
During the [[Cultural Revolution]] in mainland China, the Fourfour-Cornercorner Methodmethod underwent a radical Third Revision during the compilation of the experimental volume of the [[Chinese dictionary#Chinese–Chinese dictionaries|''Xiandai Hanyu Cidian'']], Commercial Press, Beijing, 1972. Another medium-sized dictionary, the ''[[Xinhua Zidian]]'', appeared with this index as well, but in the late 1990s the four-corner index disappeared from newer editions. Both works now use only the pinyin main entry and multi-door radical index systems that make it possible to look up a character with perhaps a wrong radical (i.e., characters appear redundantly under different radicals) and the number of strokes and variant forms are greatly reduced, and many more people are literate and capable of transcribing Chinese with pinyin. The use of stroke counting and radicals puts memorization of the character ahead of sheer speed in handling it. This method is more supportive of mass literacy than classical scholarship or processing and filing names or characters for the majority in China today.
 
The four-corner method is ultimately for readers, researchers, editors and fileclerks, not for writers who seek a character that they know in speech or recitation. In China today, a new version of the excellent small ''Xin Sijiaohaoma Cidian'', soft cover from Commercial Press, Beijing, has been available since the late 1970s, updated in several new editions and printings. It also uses the Third Revision.
Line 132:
===Uses===
* [[CKC Chinese Input System]], implementation of the four-corner method
* [[Wiktionary:Wiktionary:Chinese four corner index|Chinese four-corner index]], listing of many Chinese characters sorted by Fourfour-Cornercorner number
 
===Other structural encodings===
Line 152:
{{Chinese language}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Four Cornercorner Methodmethod}}
[[Category:CJK input methods]]
[[Category:Index (publishing)]]