How to write okay?

Okay, the writing is vertical, horizontal fold, horizontal, horizontal fold, vertical, horizontal, vertical hook.

Information expansion:

The stroke order rules of Chinese characters are: horizontal first and then vertical (such as "gan"), left first and then stroked (such as "eight"), from top to top Down (such as "main"), from left to right (such as "forest"), first and then close (such as "field"),

First in the middle and then on both sides (such as "water"), From the outside to the inside (eg: "back"), etc. For example, the stroke order of "fight" is 丿,丿丨,丿丨一,丿丨一丿,丿丨一丿乀.

Stroke order is related to the speed of writing and the quality of fonts to a certain extent. Stroke order is also important during exams. There are differences in the traditional stroke order of Chinese characters and the standard stroke order in various regions. The stroke order standard in Mainland China is the "Modern Chinese Common Character Stroke Order Standards".

Today, the governments of Mainland China, Taiwan, and Japan each have their own stroke order standards for school teaching. The stroke order rules followed by these standards are roughly the same, but there are differences and they are not completely consistent with the traditional stroke order.

The reason why these standards differ from the traditional stroke order is due to the needs of school teaching. If the stroke order is too complicated or there are many exceptions, students may feel overwhelmed.

Traditional stroke order was widely used in ancient times and is still used in the Chinese character culture circle today. The users are mainly scholars who know calligraphy, so it is also called the stroke order of calligraphy. By studying calligraphy works before the Republic of China, especially the works of famous calligraphers, it can be concluded that the stroke order has been recognized.

Most of these stroke orders follow word origin, glyph structure, glyph changes or ancient methods. Many characters have multiple variants (that is, multiple ways of writing them). The stroke order can be changed with the change of the fonts Zhuan, Li, Zhen, Xing and Cao.

Strokes (bǐ huà) usually refer to the uninterrupted points and lines of various shapes that make up Chinese characters, such as horizontal (一), vertical (丨), left (丿), 捺 (?), Zhe (?), etc., it is the smallest connected unit that constitutes the Chinese character glyph.

Stroke sometimes also refers to the number of strokes. For example, there is a Chinese character stroke index in front of a calligraphy book. When expressing these two meanings, "stroke" can also be used as "stroke", but currently it is standardized as "stroke".