There is a file with the kanji grouped together by reading for RTK and the movie method, is there such a file for RTK3?
2009-05-16, 8:33 pm
2009-05-17, 9:13 am
I'd be interested too, besides I just started using the movie method (after RTK 1) so I'd be able to learn RTK1 and RTK3 at the same time.
2009-05-17, 12:36 pm
There's a google spreadsheet floating around these forums that has all the RTK1+3 kanji and then some. You could filter out those that don't have a Heisig number, split readings into multiple entries, filter out kunyomi, and sort by the readings field. Just a little bit of excel magic.
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2009-05-19, 2:24 pm
If anyone find this (and that includes myself), post the link here please.
If this spreadsheet has additional kanji I don't think I'll remove them
If this spreadsheet has additional kanji I don't think I'll remove them
2009-05-19, 2:32 pm
Got it!
There it is: http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=p...yZHw&hl=en
I found it on this topic:
http://forum.koohii.com/showthread.php?tid=3034
PS: if this isn't obvious to someone, to actually download it you need to click on file->export and choose your filetype.
EDIT: after looking at the spreadsheet ... well, maybe I'll remove those Heisig doesn't cover (there are 6000 kanji there!)
There it is: http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=p...yZHw&hl=en
I found it on this topic:
http://forum.koohii.com/showthread.php?tid=3034
PS: if this isn't obvious to someone, to actually download it you need to click on file->export and choose your filetype.
EDIT: after looking at the spreadsheet ... well, maybe I'll remove those Heisig doesn't cover (there are 6000 kanji there!)
Edited: 2009-05-19, 4:28 pm
2009-05-19, 4:04 pm
oooooo
Edited: 2011-02-10, 7:17 pm
2009-05-19, 4:07 pm
kanjiwarrior Wrote:If you use Anki's RTK1+3 Deck the readings are already added starting at 2043, so coupled with Alyks' spreadsheet it shouldn't be a problem.They lack readings though, usually only 1 on'yomi is provided even though there are several in use. Personally, I use jisho.org to fill out the rest.
2009-05-19, 4:38 pm
aaaa
Edited: 2011-02-10, 7:17 pm
2009-05-20, 1:30 am
I used the same numbering system (1 to 6,355) in a few spreadsheets, including the one linked to above. The idea is that you can easily pick and choose the bits you need from each, and then match them up.
Spreadsheet list. (#the ones preceded by a "#" have a common numbering system.)
Spreadsheet list. (#the ones preceded by a "#" have a common numbering system.)
2009-05-20, 11:36 am
Ok, now I've only looked at the descriptions but this seems just awesome.
And congratulation for the amount of work O_o!
PS: too bad I'm a typical example of someone with a quite decent computer background who just sucks at using office softwares ... I guess I'll have to learn ...
And congratulation for the amount of work O_o!
PS: too bad I'm a typical example of someone with a quite decent computer background who just sucks at using office softwares ... I guess I'll have to learn ...
2009-05-21, 9:30 pm
Kan a program like editpad pro distinguish between katakana and hiragana?
2009-05-22, 4:20 pm
I don't know if it can but I guess that it's ok if it can use Unicode.
Openoffice does support it and I managed to clean the spreadsheet of stuff I didn't want by using regexes, which is a hard to find (well, not that hard) but awesome feature.
Openoffice does support it and I managed to clean the spreadsheet of stuff I didn't want by using regexes, which is a hard to find (well, not that hard) but awesome feature.
