Joined: Dec 2015
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Thank you to thecite for compiling this information and to others who have added to it.
I did notice that 嗅 is already in RTK 1 (6th edition) as frame 129 (key word: sniff). Perhaps 嗅 wasn't in the edition that was used to create this original list. I may have noticed another key word similar to one from the current RTK.
I am a completist, so I'll make a revised list that includes these kanji plus any kyūjitai or jinmeiyō kanji not included here or in RTK frames 1–3000.
Joined: Oct 2005
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KameDemaK Wrote: Imagine that I decide to print the document. Leaving aside that spreadsheets are sometimes a pain to print because of the page boundaries, I would rather study the Kanjis one by one in a format similar to Heisig's RtK instead of a spreadsheet where I can barely see the Kanji because the font is too small.
"Spreadsheets are useful for data entry and verification. Spreadsheets can also be easily exported to a format for loading into flashcard software (like Anki)." fkb9g is right and spreadsheets are versatile like nothing else, you can change or select exactly what you want. Including the font size of the kanji.
Joined: Mar 2009
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Has anyone compiled which of these have already been added to the latest RTK1+3 editions?
I'm also not sure if including kyujitai variants of characters already in RTK1+3 is valid idea if this is based on usage (for example RTK3 teaches you a lot of kanji for plants and birds which have specific use cases, while kyujitai variants of shinjitai share identical use cases). Still an interesting list though.
Joined: Feb 2007
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"Has anyone compiled which of these have already been added to the latest RTK1+3 editions? "
I just added some numbers to the spreadsheet in post #4.