The Style Analysis analyzes the surface characteristics of the
writing style of a document. It prints various readability grades and length
of words, sentences, and paragraphs. It can, also, further locate sentences with
certain characteristics.Numbers are counted as
one-syllable words. A sentence is a sequence of words that start
with capitalized words and end with a full stop, double colon, question
mark, or exclamation mark. A single letter followed by a dot is considered
an abbreviation, so it does not end a sentence. Various multi-letter
abbreviations are recognized so that they are not confused with the end of
a sentence.
The end of a paragraph is identified wherever the <Enter> key has been pressed
in Microsoft Word.
The Kincaid Formula has
been developed for Navy training manuals, that ranged in difficulty from 5.5
to 16.3. It is probably best applied to technical documents because it is
based on adult training manuals rather than school book text. Dialogs (often
found in fictional texts) are usually a series of short sentences, which
lowers the score. On the other hand, scientific texts with many long
scientific terms are rated higher, although they are not necessarily harder
to read for people who are familiar with those terms.
The Kincaid
formula
(AVSY*11.8) +
(AVW*.39) – 15.59
AVSY = The
average number of syllables per word and
AVW = the
average number of words in sentences
The Automated Readability
Index is typically higher than Kincaid and Coleman-Liau, but lower than
Flesch.
The Automated Readability
Index (Auto) formula
(AVL*4.71) + (AVW*.5) – 21.43
AVL = the average number of
letters per word and
AVW = the average number of
words in sentences
The Coleman-Liau Formula
usually gives a lower grade than Kincaid, Automated Readability Index, and
Flesch (when applied to technical documents).
The Coleman-Liau formula
(AVL * 5.89) – (ADJS * .3) –
15.8
AVL = the average number of
letters per word and
ADJS = (100 * Number of
sentences) / Number of Words in the Composition
The Flesch reading easy formula was developed by Flesch in
1948, and it is based on school texts covering grade 3 to 12. It is wide
spread, especially in the USA, because of good results and simple
computation. The index is usually between 0 (hard) and 100 (easy); standard
English documents average approximately 60 to 70.
The Flesch
formulae
206.835 – (AVSY
* 84.6) - (AVW * 1.015)
where:
AVSY = The
average number of syllables per word and
AVW = the
average number of words in sentences
and, based
upon that number (findex), the number outside of the parentheses (fgrad)
is calculated as:
if(findex <
30)
fgrad =
17
else
if(findex > 100)
fgrad = 4
else
if(findex > 70)
fgrad=(100-findex)/10 +5
else
if(findex > 60.)
fgrad =(70-findex)/10+8
else
if(findex >50)
fgrad=(60-findex)/5+10
else
fgrad=(50-findex)/6.66 +13
Adapted to WWB 8.0 from: Cherry, L.L.; Vesterman, W.: Writing Tools
The STYLE and DICTION programs, Computer Science Technical Report 91,
Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, N.J. (1981), republished as part of the
4.4BSD User's Supplementary Documents by O'Reilly.
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Last modified
09/12/03. |