The correct stroke order of Ba is: horizontal fold, vertical, horizontal, vertical hook
Writing skills: the vertical section of the horizontal fold is slightly left-slanted; the horizontal strokes are parallel, and the short vertical strokes are centered , the vertical curved hook turns naturally, the bottom of the hook should be flat, and the tip of the hook should be upward.
The Eight Methods of Yongzi:
Refers to the eight basic strokes of Chinese characters, namely "dot, horizontal, vertical, left, N, lift, fold and hook". The eight strokes of the character "Yong" are actually the eight strokes of the character "Yong", which represent the general strokes in Chinese calligraphy, namely "side (point), Le (horizontal), Nu (vertical), Qiao (hook), Ce (lift), sweep (Left), Peck (right short left), Zhe (捺)" eight paintings.
Stroke order classification:
There are two types of fonts: handwritten and printed. Script refers to the handwriting form of text. It is flexible and diverse and easy to express personal style. There are three main types of modern Chinese handwriting: regular script, cursive script, and running script. The pen shape of handwritten Chinese characters varies depending on the hard and soft pens used when writing. For example, the vertical pen shape is used when writing with a hard pen, and it can also be divided into short vertical, long vertical, hanging needle vertical and vertical pen when writing with a soft pen such as a brush. The shape of the pen is vertical and exposed.
Print style refers to the printing form of text. There are four main types of modern Chinese character printing styles: Song style, Song style, Kai style, and Hei type. Among them, Song style and Kai style are the most commonly used printing styles. Before the arrangement of Chinese character glyphs, the stroke shapes and gestures of printed Song style and printed regular style were quite different. For example, the "ji" in printed regular style was "?" and "卽" in printed Song style.
In order to make the fonts of printed Song and printed regular scripts as consistent as possible, and in principle make printed Song script closer to printed regular script, the Ministry of Culture of the People's Republic of China and the Chinese Character Reform Commission, today's National Language The Character Working Committee issued the "Table of Common Chinese Character Fonts for Printing" on January 30, 1965, which standardized the common Chinese character glyphs for printing.
The strokes usually referred to are the mainstream fonts in print. Song style, regular style, etc. As an object of analysis, there are generally two methods for classifying modern Chinese character strokes: a rough classification method divides strokes into eight categories. The Eight Methods of Yongzi. or five categories. Zhazi method; detailed classification method divides strokes into two categories: basic strokes and derived strokes, compound strokes.
When writing, the direction of the strokes that does not change from beginning to end is called basic strokes, that is, flat strokes, and those that change the direction of the strokes are called derived strokes, or compound strokes, that is, folded strokes.