thumb|Keyboard of a Chinese mobile phone, showing roles of the numbers 1–5 in the Wubihua method
thumb|T9 keypad of a Chinese mobile phone, showing roles of the numbers 1–5 in the Wubihua method
thumb|Decomposition of some characters by their basic strokes. Some implementations of this input method assign the keys "h", "s", "p", "n" and z", which are the first letter of the pinyin of the name of the basic stroke they correspond to
The Stroke Count Method (), Wubihua method, Stroke input method or Bihua IME ( or ) (lit. 5-stroke input method) is a relatively simple Chinese input method for writing text on a computer or a mobile phone. It is based on the stroke order of a word, not pronunciation. It uses five or six buttons, and is often placed on a numerical keypad. Although it is possible to input Traditional Chinese characters with this method, this method is often associated with Simplified Chinese characters. The Wubihua method should not be confused with the Wubi method.
Each of the five keys from 1 to 5 are assigned a certain type of stroke (resembling the Eight Principles of Yong; these five are sometimes called with each character of this phrase being a one-syllable description of the respective five strokes:
- A horizontal stroke from left to right ()
- A vertical stroke from top to bottom ()
- A long diagonal stroke downward from right to left ()
- A very short dash stroke downward from left to right ()
- A horizontal stroke from left to right, ending with a downwards hook to the left ()
To input any character, the user simply presses the keys corresponding to the strokes of a character then select from a list of matching characters. The list of suggestions to choose from becomes more and more specific as more digits of the code are entered.
