At present, the governments of Chinese mainland, Taiwan Province Province and Japan all have a set of stroke order standards for school teaching. The rules of stroke order followed by these standards are basically the same, but there are also differences, which are not completely consistent with the traditional stroke order.
The traditional stroke order, which was widely used in ancient times, is still used in the cultural circle of Chinese characters today. Users are mainly scholars who understand calligraphy, so it is also called calligraphy stroke order. By studying the calligraphy works before the Republic of China, especially the works of famous calligraphers, we can draw the conclusion that the order of strokes has been recognized.
Extended data:
General character stroke order specification
On March 25th, 1988, the State Language Commission and the Press and Publication Administration jointly issued the List of Modern Chinese Common Characters, which determined the standard stroke order of 7,000 Chinese characters.
1. Write dots and dots first and vertical lines last.
2, "finish" first write off, and then write vertical hook.
3. "Wan" should be written horizontally first, then folded horizontally, then left.
The last three strokes of the word "mother" are dot, horizontal and dot.
5. Write off the sum first, then write it off horizontally, and then write it off.
6. "Nai" should be written with a horizontal hook first, and then with a left fold. This word is similar to the "He" shape, but the stroke order is completely different.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-stroke order