The ministry of education of Japan defines 1945 kanji to be learnt by the end of the compulsory education. Although I used up all the possible T-code strokes with the extension described in the previous page, about 700 out of the 1945 are still unable to be typed directly. Can a lazy man bear converting 700 kanji? Of course not. So I decided to go into the world of three strokes.
As I have already mastered about 1500 most frequent characters, I let easiness of memorising have priority over smoothness of finger movement, i.e. my three stroke method is associative. It has two simple strategies shown below.
Following the policy above, I settled the assignments of three strokes (in a different format). The tables contain all the 1945 kanji and some others, and are still evolving.
At first, I chose the backslash key as the first stroke. Now the space key, which is much easier to hit, is used for that purpose. Two consecutive hits of the space key produce a space character itself.