The characters drawn in 22 are: Shu, Guangdong, Hui, Jiu, Fa, Ge, Jiang, Ting, Di, Luo, Xuan, Hong Kong, Hu, Xiang, Bo, Miao, Shi, Wen, Thirst, Chongqing, Bay, Du, You, Zi, Mei, Yu, Yu, Yu, Yu, Dao, Sui, Qi, Lin, Qi, Zhuo, Hu, Qiong, Spot, Leng, Zhi, Sen, Fei, Bin.
Stroke sequence table:
1. First left, then right: In a word, write the left first, then the right. Such characters include Da, Bei, Deng, Qian, etc.
2. First up, then down: write the top first, then the bottom strokes. Such characters include Shi, Li, Jing, etc.
3. First horizontally and then vertically: write horizontal drawings first and then vertical drawings. Such characters include Wang, Qian, Kai, etc.
4. Write first and then press: Such characters include ru, tai, qian, etc.
5. First outside then inside: write the outer strokes first, then the inner strokes. Such characters include Yue, Nei, Tong, Sen, etc.
The strokes usually referred to are based on the mainstream fonts of printing (Song style, Kai style, etc.). There are generally two ways to classify modern Chinese character strokes: a rough classification method divides strokes into eight Category (Yongzi Bafa) or Five Categories (Zhazi Method), the 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 a basic stroke (that is, a flat stroke), and the direction of the stroke that changes is called a derived stroke (a compound stroke, that is, a folded stroke).