NickT wrote:I am interested in the idea of a electronic dictionary that you can draw unkown kanji on using a stylus. I am worried about the comment about stroke order though. Do you really have to draw it using the correct stroke order for it to recognise it? Surely the fact that you don't know the kanji means you probably won't know the correct stroke order?
Some recognition software is better than others. You have to remember that it has been developed with adult Japanese in mind rather than language students.
Oddly one of the best I've seen myself is on nintendo that seems to look at the complete shape rather than the strokes. It's pretty good at recognising my efforts and seems 100% accurate when a native uses it, including cursive forms which is interesting.
That said there are fairly regular rules as to how a kanji is written, so even if you don't know it you could probably copy it accurately. Good software would make allowances for any irregular stroke orders. But obviously you'll get more accurate results if stroke order and count are correct.
Also some recognition systems I've seen for single kanji return several kanji based on what you've written for you to chose one.
If I had the money I'd definitely go for a dictionary that had character recognition.
I wonder if we'll ever see software that could analyse a photo on a camera phone and do OCR on it? 笑