1593 character map bundle
$114.96
Bought separately
$64.00
Bundle Price

1593 character map bundle

About the Bundle

Character maps are large grids of Chinese characters sorted by shape.

One of the main challenges with learning Chinese characters is inefficient indexing for beginners. Usual character indexes rely on some knowledge of radicals, stroke count, stroke types or pronunciation. 

Character maps use consistent shape based indexing to sort and group characters. This makes specific characters easy to find. It can also provides contexts for making particular aspects of particular characters easy to remember.

Due to the constraints of paper, traditional indexes tend to include page numbers or entry numbers where you find all the details about that entries character.

With character maps, the index itself contains information about the character as well as the character itself.

1593 Traditional Chinese characters

The 1593 series of character maps includes 1593 Traditional Chinese characters. These are all characters that appear in the context of words. So learning them is a little like learning the alphabet. Plus these 1593 characters are all fitted onto a single a0 (reduceable and printable on a1 size) page. However, there are three pages. Each includes different details.

  • The first page focuses on cangjie input codes.
  • The second on pinyin, radical and stroke count.
  • The third on English definitions.

Like Giant Flash Cards

The reason for spreading this information across different pages is so that each page can fit the aforementioned 1593 characters.

Because of space constraints, for characters with more than one pronunciation, only one is included.

In addition, for English definition, only one possible definition is included. This definition ideally captures the essential meaning of the character.

As such these posters can act like giant sets of flashcards with the advantage that you can see characters with the same, or similiar, elements grouped together.

As for cangjie input codes, what are they?

Cangjie codes are a shape based method for inputting Chinese characters. They use a maximum of 5 elements and when you learn the cangjie input method you can essentially type any Chinese character even if you don't know it's pronunciation.

And that is one of the key drivers of these character maps, to help make it easy for you to learn the Cangjie input method.

With this method you have the freedom to input characters which means you can use google translate and other web based resources easily. And if you already know how to touch type, this method lends itself to touch typing Chinese characters. That's because there are 24 basic elements, and each of these maps to one of 24 letters of the English alphabet.

Sorting Chinese Characters Alphabetically by Shape?

Note that because cangjie input codes map to letters of the English alphabet, they also provide a method for indexing and sorting Chinese characters by shape. (And alphabetically by shape too!) And that is the basis of the C1 and C3 series of character maps.

C1 and C3 indexing differences

The C1 series sorts characters by the initial element of their cangjie input code. As a result you'll see characters that begin with the same element grouped together.

The C3 series sorts characters by their final element. As a result you'll see characters that end in the same element grouped together.

Note that there are also the E1 and E3 series of character maps. These are also sorted by shape but they use a refined shape based lookup system that relies on 12 basic shapes for both initial and final element lookup.

All four series taken together provide slightly different "views" of the same 1593 Traditional Chinese characters.

Note the sample pdf is provided in the same size. The sample PDF also show all three sheets but with only about 200 characters as opposed to 1593.

1593 c1 character map

1593 c3 character map

1593 E1 character map

1593 E3 character map

  • Share this bundle
  • Categories

    • Linguistics

About the Books

C1 Character Map, 1593 Traditional Chinese Characters

    • PDF

    Character maps are large grids of Chinese characters sorted by shape.

    One of the main challenges with learning Chinese characters is inefficient indexing for beginners. Usual character indexes rely on some knowledge of radicals, stroke count, stroke types or pronunciation. 

    Character maps use consistent shape based indexing to sort and group characters. This makes specific characters easy to find. It can also provides contexts for making particular aspects of particular characters easy to remember.

    Due to the constraints of paper, traditional indexes tend to include page numbers or entry numbers where you find all the details about that entries character.

    With character maps, the index itself contains information about the character as well as the character itself.

    1593 Traditional Chinese characters

    The 1593 series of character maps includes 1593 Traditional Chinese characters. These are all characters that appear in the context of words. So learning them is a little like learning the alphabet. Plus these 1593 characters are all fitted onto a single a0 (reduceable and printable on a1 size) page. However, there are three pages. Each includes different details.

    • The first page focuses on cangjie input codes.
    • The second on pinyin, radical and stroke count.
    • The third on English definitions.

    Like Giant Flash Cards

    The reason for spreading this information across different pages is so that each page can fit the aforementioned 1593 characters.

    Because of space constraints, for characters with more than one pronunciation, only one is included.

    In addition, for English definition, only one possible definition is included. This definition ideally captures the essential meaning of the character.

    As such these posters can act like giant sets of flashcards with the advantage that you can see characters with the same, or similiar, elements grouped together.

    As for cangjie input codes, what are they?

    Cangjie codes are a shape based method for inputting Chinese characters. They use a maximum of 5 elements and when you learn the cangjie input method you can essentially type any Chinese character even if you don't know it's pronunciation.

    And that is one of the key drivers of these character maps, to help make it easy for you to learn the Cangjie input method.

    With this method you have the freedom to input characters which means you can use google translate and other web based resources easily. And if you already know how to touch type, this method lends itself to touch typing Chinese characters. That's because there are 24 basic elements, and each of these maps to one of 24 letters of the English alphabet.

    Sorting Chinese Characters Alphabetically by Shape?

    Note that because cangjie input codes map to letters of the English alphabet, they also provide a method for indexing and sorting Chinese characters by shape. (And alphabetically by shape too!) And that is the basis of the C1 and C3 series of character maps.

    C1 and C3 indexing differences

    The C1 series sorts characters by the initial element of their cangjie input code. As a result you'll see characters that begin with the same element grouped together.

    The C3 series sorts characters by their final element. As a result you'll see characters that end in the same element grouped together.

    Note that there are also the E1 and E3 series of character maps. These are also sorted by shape but they use a refined shape based lookup system that relies on 12 basic shapes for both initial and final element lookup.

    All four series taken together provide slightly different "views" of the same 1593 Traditional Chinese characters.

    Note the sample pdf is provided in the same size. The sample PDF also show all three sheets but with only about 200 characters as opposed to 1593.

    1593 c3 character map

    1593 E1 character map

    1593 E3 character map

    C3 Character Map for Traditional Chinese Symbols

      • PDF

      Character maps are large grids of Chinese characters sorted by shape.

      One of the main challenges with learning Chinese characters is inefficient indexing for beginners. Usual character indexes rely on some knowledge of radicals, stroke count, stroke types or pronunciation. 

      Character maps use consistent shape based indexing to sort and group characters. This makes specific characters easy to find. It can also provides contexts for making particular aspects of particular characters easy to remember.

      Due to the constraints of paper, traditional indexes tend to include page numbers or entry numbers where you find all the details about that entries character.

      With character maps, the index itself contains information about the character as well as the character itself.

      1593 Traditional Chinese characters

      The 1593 series of character maps includes 1593 Traditional Chinese characters. These are all characters that appear in the context of words. So learning them is a little like learning the alphabet. Plus these 1593 characters are all fitted onto a single a0 (reduceable and printable on a1 size) page. However, there are three pages. Each includes different details.

      • The first page focuses on cangjie input codes.
      • The second on pinyin, radical and stroke count.
      • The third on English definitions.

      Like Giant Flash Cards

      The reason for spreading this information across different pages is so that each page can fit the aforementioned 1593 characters.

      Because of space constraints, for characters with more than one pronunciation, only one is included.

      In addition, for English definition, only one possible definition is included. This definition ideally captures the essential meaning of the character.

      As such these posters can act like giant sets of flashcards with the advantage that you can see characters with the same, or similiar, elements grouped together.

      As for cangjie input codes, what are they?

      Cangjie codes are a shape based method for inputting Chinese characters. They use a maximum of 5 elements and when you learn the cangjie input method you can essentially type any Chinese character even if you don't know it's pronunciation.

      And that is one of the key drivers of these character maps, to help make it easy for you to learn the Cangjie input method.

      With this method you have the freedom to input characters which means you can use google translate and other web based resources easily. And if you already know how to touch type, this method lends itself to touch typing Chinese characters. That's because there are 24 basic elements, and each of these maps to one of 24 letters of the English alphabet.

      Sorting Chinese Characters Alphabetically by Shape?

      Note that because cangjie input codes map to letters of the English alphabet, they also provide a method for indexing and sorting Chinese characters by shape. (And alphabetically by shape too!) And that is the basis of the C1 and C3 series of character maps.

      C1 and C3 indexing differences

      The C1 series sorts characters by the initial element of their cangjie input code. As a result you'll see characters that begin with the same element grouped together.

      The C3 series sorts characters by their final element. As a result you'll see characters that end in the same element grouped together.

      Note that there are also the E1 and E3 series of character maps. These are also sorted by shape but they use a refined shape based lookup system that relies on 12 basic shapes for both initial and final element lookup.

      All four series taken together provide slightly different "views" of the same 1593 Traditional Chinese characters.

      Note the sample pdf is provided in the same size. The sample PDF also show all three sheets but with only about 200 characters as opposed to 1593.

      1593 c1 characters map

      1593 E1 character map

      1593 E3 character map

      E1 Character Map, 1593 Traditional Chinese Characters

        • PDF

        Character maps are large grids of Chinese characters sorted by shape.

        One of the main challenges with learning Chinese characters is inefficient indexing for beginners. Usual character indexes rely on some knowledge of radicals, stroke count, stroke types or pronunciation. 

        Character maps use consistent shape based indexing to sort and group characters. This makes specific characters easy to find. It can also provides contexts for making particular aspects of particular characters easy to remember.

        Due to the constraints of paper, traditional indexes tend to include page numbers or entry numbers where you find all the details about that entries character.

        With character maps, the index itself contains information about the character as well as the character itself.

        1593 Traditional Chinese characters

        The 1593 series of character maps includes 1593 Traditional Chinese characters. These are all characters that appear in the context of words. So learning them is a little like learning the alphabet. Plus these 1593 characters are all fitted onto a single a0 (reduceable and printable on a1 size) page. However, there are three pages. Each includes different details.

        • The first page focuses on cangjie input codes.
        • The second on pinyin, radical and stroke count.
        • The third on English definitions.

        Like Giant Flash Cards

        The reason for spreading this information across different pages is so that each page can fit the aforementioned 1593 characters.

        Because of space constraints, for characters with more than one pronunciation, only one is included.

        In addition, for English definition, only one possible definition is included. This definition ideally captures the essential meaning of the character.

        As such these posters can act like giant sets of flashcards with the advantage that you can see characters with the same, or similiar, elements grouped together.

        As for cangjie input codes, what are they?

        Cangjie codes are a shape based method for inputting Chinese characters. They use a maximum of 5 elements and when you learn the cangjie input method you can essentially type any Chinese character even if you don't know it's pronunciation.

        And that is one of the key drivers of these character maps, to help make it easy for you to learn the Cangjie input method.

        With this method you have the freedom to input characters which means you can use google translate and other web based resources easily. And if you already know how to touch type, this method lends itself to touch typing Chinese characters. That's because there are 24 basic elements, and each of these maps to one of 24 letters of the English alphabet.

        Sorting Chinese Characters Alphabetically by Shape?

        Note that because cangjie input codes map to letters of the English alphabet, they also provide a method for indexing and sorting Chinese characters by shape. (And alphabetically by shape too!) And that is the basis of the C1 and C3 series of character maps.

        C1 and C3 indexing differences

        The C1 series sorts characters by the initial element of their cangjie input code. As a result you'll see characters that begin with the same element grouped together.

        The C3 series sorts characters by their final element. As a result you'll see characters that end in the same element grouped together.

        E1 and E3 indexing

        An alternative shape based indexing system is called the Easy lookup system. This system uses 12 basic shapes to index and group characters together. As with using cangjie input codes for indexing, characters can be sorted via their initial element and their final element.

        Unlike cangjie input codes, the easy lookup system is not an input system for Chinese characters.

        That being said, it can make character lookup a little bit easier than the cangjie system because there are only 12 elements, versus 24.

        All four series taken together provide slightly different "views" of the same 1593 Traditional Chinese characters.

        Note the sample pdf is provided in the same size. The sample PDF also show all three sheets but with only about 200 characters as opposed to 1593.

        1593 c1 characters map

        1593 c3 character map

        1593 E3 character map

        E3 Character Map, 1593 Traditional Chinese Characters

          • PDF

          Character maps are large grids of Chinese characters sorted by shape.

          One of the main challenges with learning Chinese characters is inefficient indexing for beginners. Usual character indexes rely on some knowledge of radicals, stroke count, stroke types or pronunciation. 

          Character maps use consistent shape based indexing to sort and group characters. This makes specific characters easy to find. It can also provides contexts for making particular aspects of particular characters easy to remember.

          Due to the constraints of paper, traditional indexes tend to include page numbers or entry numbers where you find all the details about that entries character.

          With character maps, the index itself contains information about the character as well as the character itself.

          1593 Traditional Chinese characters

          The 1593 series of character maps includes 1593 Traditional Chinese characters. These are all characters that appear in the context of words. So learning them is a little like learning the alphabet. Plus these 1593 characters are all fitted onto a single a0 (reduceable and printable on a1 size) page. However, there are three pages. Each includes different details.

          • The first page focuses on cangjie input codes.
          • The second on pinyin, radical and stroke count.
          • The third on English definitions.

          Like Giant Flash Cards

          The reason for spreading this information across different pages is so that each page can fit the aforementioned 1593 characters.

          Because of space constraints, for characters with more than one pronunciation, only one is included.

          In addition, for English definition, only one possible definition is included. This definition ideally captures the essential meaning of the character.

          As such these posters can act like giant sets of flashcards with the advantage that you can see characters with the same, or similiar, elements grouped together.

          As for cangjie input codes, what are they?

          Cangjie codes are a shape based method for inputting Chinese characters. They use a maximum of 5 elements and when you learn the cangjie input method you can essentially type any Chinese character even if you don't know it's pronunciation.

          And that is one of the key drivers of these character maps, to help make it easy for you to learn the Cangjie input method.

          With this method you have the freedom to input characters which means you can use google translate and other web based resources easily. And if you already know how to touch type, this method lends itself to touch typing Chinese characters. That's because there are 24 basic elements, and each of these maps to one of 24 letters of the English alphabet.

          Sorting Chinese Characters Alphabetically by Shape?

          Note that because cangjie input codes map to letters of the English alphabet, they also provide a method for indexing and sorting Chinese characters by shape. (And alphabetically by shape too!) And that is the basis of the C1 and C3 series of character maps.

          C1 and C3 indexing differences

          The C1 series sorts characters by the initial element of their cangjie input code. As a result you'll see characters that begin with the same element grouped together.

          The C3 series sorts characters by their final element. As a result you'll see characters that end in the same element grouped together.

          E1 and E3 indexing

          An alternative shape based indexing system is called the Easy lookup system. This system uses 12 basic shapes to index and group characters together. As with using cangjie input codes for indexing, characters can be sorted via their initial element and their final element.

          Unlike cangjie input codes, the easy lookup system is not an input system for Chinese characters.

          That being said, it can make character lookup a little bit easier than the cangjie system because there are only 12 elements, versus 24.

          All four series taken together provide slightly different "views" of the same 1593 Traditional Chinese characters.

          Note the sample pdf is provided in the same size. The sample PDF also show all three sheets but with only about 200 characters as opposed to 1593.

          1593 c1 characters map

          1593 c3 character map

          1593 E1 character map

          The Leanpub 60 Day 100% Happiness Guarantee

          Within 60 days of purchase you can get a 100% refund on any Leanpub purchase, in two clicks.

          Now, this is technically risky for us, since you'll have the book or course files either way. But we're so confident in our products and services, and in our authors and readers, that we're happy to offer a full money back guarantee for everything we sell.

          You can only find out how good something is by trying it, and because of our 100% money back guarantee there's literally no risk to do so!

          So, there's no reason not to click the Add to Cart button, is there?

          See full terms...

          80% Royalties. Earn $16 on a $20 book.

          We pay 80% royalties. That's not a typo: you earn $16 on a $20 sale. If we sell 5000 non-refunded copies of your book or course for $20, you'll earn $80,000.

          (Yes, some authors have already earned much more than that on Leanpub.)

          In fact, authors have earnedover $13 millionwriting, publishing and selling on Leanpub.

          Learn more about writing on Leanpub

          Free Updates. DRM Free.

          If you buy a Leanpub book, you get free updates for as long as the author updates the book! Many authors use Leanpub to publish their books in-progress, while they are writing them. All readers get free updates, regardless of when they bought the book or how much they paid (including free).

          Most Leanpub books are available in PDF (for computers) and EPUB (for phones, tablets and Kindle). The formats that a book includes are shown at the top right corner of this page.

          Finally, Leanpub books don't have any DRM copy-protection nonsense, so you can easily read them on any supported device.

          Learn more about Leanpub's ebook formats and where to read them

          Write and Publish on Leanpub

          You can use Leanpub to easily write, publish and sell in-progress and completed ebooks and online courses!

          Leanpub is a powerful platform for serious authors, combining a simple, elegant writing and publishing workflow with a store focused on selling in-progress ebooks.

          Leanpub is a magical typewriter for authors: just write in plain text, and to publish your ebook, just click a button. (Or, if you are producing your ebook your own way, you can even upload your own PDF and/or EPUB files and then publish with one click!) It really is that easy.

          Learn more about writing on Leanpub