T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
588.1 | have a match | UNTADI::ODIJP | o.......now + here = nowhere.......o | Wed Nov 30 1988 10:16 | 10 |
| It's all to do with who you are writing your document for . It is
an indicator test which should show you the level at which you
have/should aim your text .
For instance , the Times would have a high index , and the Sun would
need a fraction to several decimal places .
Or vice versa .
John J
|
588.2 | Eschew obfuscation (if you can) | CLOSET::T_PARMENTER | Tongue in cheek, fist in air! | Wed Nov 30 1988 14:49 | 18 |
| Rudolf Flesch, I think. He thought that short sentences with short
words in them were easier to read that long ones full of long ones.
He's probably right. The index is a way of expressing that quality.
There are others, one called the Muddy River, or Clear Water, or
something like that. The resulting figure is usually stated
as years of education. A corrolary of the theory is that people are
most comfortable reading about two levels below their number of
years of education.
I ran some of my stuff through one of these formulas and got a good
grade, but I don't think a lot about it. Still, in any organized
system of thought and communication there are bound to be places
where long Latinate words are needed to express exactly what is
meant. Technical jargon is no crime when used to talk to another
member of the cult. On the other hand, why not be clear? I guess
I think these theories are interesting toys without much practical
value.
|
588.3 | Enquiring Minds Want to KNOW! | SKIVT::ROGERS | But Otto, what about our relationship? | Wed Nov 30 1988 14:56 | 8 |
| re. .0:
Hey Derek, could you give us a pointer to the program? I'd like to play with
it.
Thanks,
Larry
|
588.4 | Useful for some situations | UCOUNT::BAILEY | Corporate Sleuth | Wed Nov 30 1988 20:06 | 16 |
| I guess I'd have to argue the value of these systems, at least in
theory. Dredging back to the distant past, I once took some teaching
of reading classes for teaching public school classes. These systems
are useful to get at least some feeling for the suitability of the
text for the reader. Also useful for copywriting of advertising
and marketing materials, particularly direct mail. If you want
people to read a sales pitch for something they don't know they
want :^), you have to make it as effortless as possible to get the
message. A lot of scientific and technical publications that are
dry as dust might benefit from the systems, also, although interesting
authors and non-pedantic editors might be more helpful!
Anyway, they do have uses, and they are fairly well supported.
Sherry
|
588.5 | .exe for sale, free. | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Prussiking up the rope of life! | Wed Nov 30 1988 23:21 | 20 |
| G'day,
Re -.a couple.. Hi Larry,
I believe it was in toolshed library or somesuch... I got it back in
March, so the memory fades ... :-( (but I will try and find
it again)
However, I've the .exe available. If anyone wants it, drop a line...
I certainly kind of find it useful to compare documents usingthe
program. It gives a kind of neat measure. Foe example, as mentioned
earlier, for good sales letters, there should be no more than seventeen
words in a sentence, _they_ (whoever _they are_) say. Words should
have as few syllables as possible. The program prints out all the
3 or more syllabic words - which can be sort merged with no duplicates
for the definitive list - . Makes for interesting comparisons too
between engineering documents and marketing ones...
derek
|
588.6 | FOUND IT.. | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Prussiking up the rope of life! | Thu Dec 01 1988 00:09 | 37 |
| G'day again,
FOUND IT..... phew ! (took an hour!)
in SUBWAY::SWSHARE
Hope Barry Dysert will not mind my extracting his note..
<<< SUBWAY::DISK$D1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SWSHARE.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Software/SHARED >-
================================================================================
Note 102.3 Tool that counts words in document. 3 of 5
DYO780::DYSERT "Barry Dysert" 14 lines 19-FEB-1988 11:41
-< here's one that works >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Feel free to copy:
DYO780::DISK$USER04:[DYSERT.PUBLIC]FLESCH.EXE
It's a program I came across a long time ago that counts words, plus it
does a whole lot more. It works on standard text files, though, so
you'll have to extract your WPS file to something normal.
Invoke it via:
$ FLESCH:=$FLESCH ! must be invoked via foreign command
$ FLESCH input,output ! "output" can be sys$output
Enjoy!
___________________________________________________________________
Its written in PL/I (or appears to be) very unforgiving in the command
line.
derek
|
588.7 | My login.com is at grade level 7.4. :-) | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Thu Dec 01 1988 18:32 | 40 |
| Neat! Example follows. One mistake that it made was with
"NODENAME" -- it only has two syllables.
Dan
$ flesch login.com,z.z
$ type z.z
WORDS IN TEXT WITH 3 OR MORE SYLLABLES
******************************************
deramo
NODENAME
INTERACTIVE
terminal
terminal
application_keypad
DERAMO
logicals
gnu_emacs
DERAMO
BELINI
LISPUTIL
LISPUTIL
noverify
deramo
executed
conference
EDIT_MODE
SUMMARY STATISTICS OF ALL PARAGRAPHS
***************************************
NUMBER OF SENTENCES = 46.0
NUMBER OF WORDS = 176.0
NUMBER OF SYLLABLES = 274.0
AVERAGE SENTENCE LENGTH = 3.8
AVG. SYLLABLES PER WORD = 1.5
FLESCH INDEX = 76.0
GRADE LEVEL EQUIVALENT = 7.4
|
588.8 | I once plowed through the whole Flesch book. I forget why | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Dec 01 1988 20:11 | 28 |
| If that's the same program we used in my old writing group -- and
the part about PL/I errors in the command line makes me think that
it probably is -- it gives a falsely high score for passages that
contain sentences joining clauses with "and." The Flesch system
counts each such clause as a separate sentence, while the program
counts everything up to the period.
If it's the same program, it counts words such as "joining" as two
syllables when for readability purposes it's one, "join," with a
verb ending. Verb endings don't affect readability.
The Flesch readability theory doesn't say that you should never
use long words, Latinate words, or long and complex sentences,
only that your writing will be better understood if on the average
the sentences are about 20 words long and average a bit under two
syllables a word. The idea is that if you are faced with
unavoidable complexity, you should do your best to avoid the
complexities you can avoid. If you must use words the average
person probably isn't familiar with, you can help the reader's
comprehension by avoiding other unfamiliar words that aren't
essential to your presentation.
Or, in other words, if you have to use big words to get your
idea across, make sure your sentences are simple and your other
words are concise and clear. Otherwise, you'll be forcing
the reader to deal with a lot of extraenous garbage...
--bonnie
|
588.9 | Fog index | RTOISB::TINIUS | Be alert! America needs more lerts! | Thu Dec 01 1988 22:17 | 4 |
| I heard about the idea from my father about 20 years ago, only he
called it a "fog index".
Stephen
|
588.10 | fantasmagorical! | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Thu Dec 01 1988 23:18 | 9 |
| Neat! I just tried this with the following sentence ...
This is a supercalifragilisticexpialidocious sample.
It had a flesch index of -52, but a grade equivalent of 28.3 !
At long last someone who appreciates all my years of education!!!
stuart
|
588.11 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Fri Dec 02 1988 09:24 | 7 |
| Re: .10
That's the best laugh I've had all day.
Thank you,
twe
|
588.12 | In words of one syllable... | SKIVT::ROGERS | But Otto, what about our relationship? | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:46 | 12 |
| Here we go with another digression...
The Fleschmann index doesn't really deal with word length per se, but rather
with the number of syllables in the word. This started me thinking about long
single syllable words. With a little thought, I came up with "brougham"
(pronounced "brome", - a closed carriage with an open driver's seat) which is
an eight-letter monosyllable.
Anybody got any longer English language words of one syllable? Any other
eight-letter words?
Larry
|
588.13 | Nine letters, one syllable | SSGBPM::KENAH | Lifeblood, weeping from my eyes | Fri Dec 02 1988 19:01 | 7 |
|
strengths
andrew
|
588.14 | It's all in the aspiration | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Fri Dec 02 1988 22:35 | 12 |
| re .12
But Brougham is only pronounced "brome" in some areas ...
where I came from it was "brogum" with a a long o and an aspirated
g rather than a gutteral g (more like an aspirated h but not quite).
other places it is "bro-am"
so single syllable is moot.
stuart
|
588.15 | Just a few more | CAM::MAZUR | | Fri Dec 02 1988 23:26 | 2 |
| 8 letters : schmaltz,schnapps,schmooze,squawked,thoughts
9 letters : squelched,stretched
|
588.16 | strengths | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Fri Dec 02 1988 23:43 | 2 |
| Note that "strengths", mentioned in a previous note, also has the
highest ratio of consonants to vowels.
|
588.17 | syllablised! | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Sat Dec 03 1988 00:16 | 6 |
| Sorry, but like my earlier comment on brougham, I don't by the
idea that words like stretched are only one syllable.
sure, the e goes silent, but that doesn't remove the written syllable.
stuart
|
588.18 | one syllable, forty letters | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Sun Dec 04 1988 05:25 | 1 |
| Aaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrgggggggggghhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!
|
588.19 | ex | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Mon Dec 05 1988 15:04 | 3 |
| Isn't that called Stretching the Agony ?
|
588.20 | Computer probably thinks "brougham" has 2 syllables | SUPER::MATTHEWS | | Mon Dec 05 1988 22:46 | 19 |
| An automated Flesch tester, assuming "brougham" to follow the same
rules as most other English words, would probably figure it to have
two syllables.
If we think "brougham" is as readable as the average two-syllable word,
then that's the right behavior.
Now, would the tester calculate one syllable or two for words like
"stretched"? Depends on how smart the algorithm is. I wrote a little
Flesch tester once (in VAXTPU; it's in EVETPU::TPU_PROCS) that figures
out whether a final "ed" is a separate syllable. (Like any algorithm
for counting syllables, it's not perfect.)
The techniques of Flesch, Gunning (originator of the Fog Index) et. al.
were designed to be easy to use in the days before anyone heard of word
processing -- it's fairly easy to count up the syllables in a piece of
prose by hand.
Val
|
588.21 | no need to use whole book | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:57 | 6 |
| You don't need to run your whole document through a Flesch
test to measure its level, either. Just pick a typical passage
of 3 to 5 paragraphs from three to five random locations in
your book and do a quick count by hand.
--bonnie
|
588.22 | wot no computer?? | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Prussiking up the rope of life! | Tue Dec 06 1988 23:05 | 8 |
| G'day,
Being born lazy and only able to count to 1023 on my fingers, its
quicker to use the program! and I get a printable record that I
can compare with other documents' figures ....
derek
|
588.23 | | TKOV51::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Thu Apr 19 1990 11:03 | 13 |
| Huh? How's anyone supposed to understand the "flesch" program?
Look at all this gobbledegook in its output!
SUMMARY
STATISTICS (virtually unpronounceable)
(er, uh, I mean, yuh can hardly pronounce it)
PARAGRAPHS
SENTENCES
SYLLABLES
AVERAGE
SYLLABLES
EQUIVALENT (4OUR sllables, count 'em)
-------- ((notice, only 2 sllables in _this_ word)
|
588.24 | | TKOV51::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Thu Apr 19 1990 11:06 | 6 |
| re .12
> With a little thought, I came up with "brougham"
> Anybody got any longer English language words of one syllable?
Obviously, "broughammed".
|
588.25 | Meanwhile Back at the Ranch ... | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Have You Fropped Your Digit Today? | Thu Apr 19 1990 17:07 | 46 |
| Readability formulas are a controversial area in writing
research. They were originally developed to come up with an
"objective" and easy way to measure the simplicity of text.
Here are some of the better known ones:
o Flesch RE = 206.835 - .846 WL - 1.015 SL
RE -- value between 0 and 100
WL -- word length
SL -- sentence length
o Gunning Fog Index RGL = .4 (ASL = %PW)
RGL -- reading grade level
ASL -- average sentence length
%PW -- percentage of words of 3 or more syllables
Others include Dale-Chall, Coleman, Kincaid-Flesch, FORCAST,
RIDE, and Cloze.
Readability formulas have the following problems:
o Short sentences and short words do not good text make. They
may be correlative with good text, but this is by no means
necessarily the case. Gibberish, text entered in backwards,
etc. can get quite good results (Lewis Carrol's "Jabberwocky"
gets 90+ on the Flesch scale). Further, readability
formulas say nothing about discourse, context, audience ...
o There is little research on how well good RF scores correlate
with actual readabilty -- and, thus, can predict readability.
Further, there is little agreement among the formulas themselves
as to predicted grade levels for the same text.
o RFs fail miserably as prescriptions. RFs are indicative of
bad writing. When they are used as prescriptions (i.e., run
your stuff through an RF program, get a bad score, shorten your
sentences and use shorter words, run it again, get a good score),
they tend not to improve readability. In fact, the more they are
emphasized, the less improvement. One researcher called this
phenomenon lighting a match under the thermostat in order to
warm up the room. Making text readable is a difficult, time-
consuming task -- relying on RFs to make something "readable"
is the easy way out.
-- Cliff
|
588.26 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Apr 19 1990 20:20 | 5 |
| Re: .12 and .24
strengths
It also has the highest ratio of consonants to vowels of any word.
|
588.27 | Use a Mac and lower your index. | SKIVT::ROGERS | Damnadorum Multitudo | Thu Apr 19 1990 21:04 | 26 |
| Apropos of readability scoring, this article from todays Vogon News* is
interesting:
> Apple - "Is the MAC Making Applesauce of Student Prose?"
> {Business Week, 23-Apr-90, p. 120C}
> {Contributed by John Ellenburger}
> The Apple Macintosh, with its easy-to-use graphics style, may represent a
> victory of form over substance. That appears to be the finding of research
> conducted at the University of Delaware. Marcia Peoples Halio, assistant
> director of the English Dept.'s writing program, assigned the same five
> teaching assistants to 10 freshman English classes. One student group used
> Macs, the others used IBM PCs or IBM clones.
> The instructors said the Mac's large type and graphics seemed to lead to
> "sloppier writing and fluffier topics." A writing analysis program of a random
> sampling of papers found that 30% of the Mac writers used complex sentences,
> compared with 50% of IBM-clone writers. Sentence length averaged 16.3 words
> for the Mac essays and 22.6 for those written on PCs. And the Kincaid Scale, a
> measure of readability, showed Mac users writing at the 8th grade level, vs.
> 12th grade for the IBM-clone group. Her article "Student Writing: Can the
> Machine Maim the Message?" concludes that the Mac's format seems to "encourage
> a simple sentence structure and childish vocabulary."
>
* As per usual, reprinted without permisision from Vogon News Service, edition
#2046
|
588.28 | elastic - you can stretch it so it must be longest word | UILA::WHORLOW | new math: 2 + 2 = 5; for large 2 | Fri Apr 20 1990 00:54 | 14 |
| G'day,
in a lighter vein...
re long words
Smiles
because
Its a mile between the esses [or is that ss or 's's or....;-) ]
derek
|
588.29 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Have You Fropped Your Digit Today? | Fri Apr 20 1990 15:34 | 5 |
| Well, now that this note has totally detiorated ... The
longest word in existence is the one that comes after "and
now a word from our sponsors."
-- Cliff
|
588.30 | ... is a very long word .. spell it ... | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Fri Apr 20 1990 18:55 | 18 |
| >
> Well, now that this note has totally detiorated ... The
> longest word in existence is the one that comes after "and
> now a word from our sponsors."
>
I've never heard an ad mention antidisestablishmentarianism ...
mind you I think most ad writers would think that the dissolution of the
monestaries was some chemical property of money!
Stuart
(Mind you, seeing what has been happening around the company these days, I
think the term could be applied to DEC workers ... I certainly feel
antidisestablishmentarianistic as I see some management type decisions
that seem to be blowing away some of the company lore.)
|