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* Style & readability
A simple way to analyse the writing style, word use and readability of prose in Emacs.
It can be used by calling =smog-check-buffer=
The analysis is produced via the command line tool =style=. It performs several [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Readability][readability]] tests on the text including; [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flesch%E2%80%93Kincaid_readability_tests][Flesch-Kincaid readability tests]], [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automated_readability_index][Automated Readability Index]] (aka “ARI”), [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coleman%E2%80%93Liau_index][Coleman-Liau Index]], [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunning_fog_index][Gunning fog index]] (aka "Fog Index"), and [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMOG][SMOG Index]] (aka "SMOG-Grading", “Simple Measure Of Gobbledygook“). It also summarises word usage and provides information about sentence and paragraph structure. The output is presented as a summary, so if you are looking for more specific, or continuous feedback on style and/or grammar then using =flycheck= with [[http://proselint.com/][proselint]] might be more suitable.
** Install
The textual analysis requires [[http://wiki.christophchamp.com/index.php?title=Style_and_Diction][style]] to be installed. The tools =style= and =diction= are part of the GNU project and should be available for most unix-like systems.
To install on Debian
#+BEGIN_SRC bash
apt install diction
#+END_SRC
To install on macOS
#+BEGIN_SRC bash
brew install style
#+END_SRC
** Configure
The package can be installed from [[https://melpa.org/][MELPA]] or manually via [[https://github.com/zzkt/smog][github]].
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package smog)
#+END_SRC
To configure language or output options, =setq= or customize the =readability-command= variable.
Tthe default language is set to =en= (English) and can be changed to =de= for German or =nl= for Dutch. Details for the various output options can be found via =style -h= or =man style= in your shell of choice.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package smog
:config (setq smog-command "style -L en"))
#+END_SRC
e.g. to analyse a text in German and show sentences longer than 23 words…
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package smog
:config (setq smog-command "style -L de -l 23"))
#+END_SRC
** Analyse surface detail
=M-x smog-check-buffer=
** Further
- [[https://wiki.christophchamp.com/index.php?title=Style_and_Diction][style]] is written by Michael Haardt with contributions from Jason Petrone, Uschi Stegemeier and Hans Lodder
- [[https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED506404.pdf][The Classic Readability Studies]]. William H.DuBay, Editor
- [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asemic_writing][Asemic writing]]

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;;; smog.el --- Analyse the writing style, word use and readability of prose -*- coding: utf-8; lexical-binding: t -*-
;; Copyright FoAM 2020
;;
;; Author: nik gaffney <nik@fo.am>
;; Created: 2020-02-02
;; Version: 0.1
;; Keywords: tools, style, readability, prose
;; URL: https://github.com/zzkt/smog
;; This file is not part of GNU Emacs.
;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
;; any later version.
;;
;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;;
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
;; Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
;;; Commentary:
;; A simple tool to analyse the writing style, word use and readability of prose.
;;
;; The analysis is produced by the command line tool 'style'. It performs
;; several readability tests on the text including; Flesch-Kincaid readability
;; tests, Automated readability index (aka “ARI”), Coleman-Liau Index, Gunning
;; fog index (aka "Fog Index"), and SMOG Index (aka "SMOG-Grading", “Simple
;; Measure Of Gobbledygook“). It also summarises word usage and provides
;; information about sentence and paragraph structure.
;;
;; M-x smog-check-buffer
;;; Code:
(defgroup smog nil
"Analyse writing style, word use and readability."
:group 'wp)
(defcustom smog-command "style -L en"
"The command to use to run style including any flags (see 'style -h' for details)."
:type '(string)
:group 'smog)
(defcustom smog-reference "* Reference
** Kincaid formula
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.
*Kincaid* = 11.8*syllables/wds+0.39*wds/sentences-15.59
** Automated Readability Index
The Automated Readability Index is typically higher than Kincaid and Cole- man-Liau, but lower than Flesch.
*ARI* = 4.71*chars/wds+0.5*wds/sentences-21.43
** Coleman-Liau Formula
The Coleman-Liau Formula usually gives a lower grade than Kincaid, ARI and Flesch when applied to technical documents.
*Coleman-Liau* = 5.88*chars/wds-29.5*sent/wds-15.8
** Flesch reading easy formula
Flesch Reading Ease Formula has been developed by Flesch in 1948 and it is based on school text 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 averages approximately 60 to 70. Applying it to German documents does not deliver good results because of the different language structure.
*Flesch Index* = 206.835-84.6*syll/wds-1.015*wds/sent
** Fog Index
The Fog index has been developed by Robert Gunning. Its value is a school grade. The ideal Fog Index level is 7 or 8. A level above 12 indicates the writing sample is too hard for most people to read. Only use it on texts of at least hundred words to get meaningful results. Note that a correct implementation would not count words of three or more syllables that are proper names, combinations of easy words, or made three syllables by suffixes such as -ed, -es, or -ing.
*Fog Index* = 0.4*(wds/sent+100*((wds >= 3 syll)/wds))
** Lix formula
The Lix formula developed by Bjornsson from Sweden is very simple and employs a mapping table as well:
*Lix* = wds/sent+100*(wds >= 6 char)/wds
| Index | 34 | 38 | 41 | 44 | 48 | 51 | 54 | 57 |
| School year | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | |
** SMOG-Grading
The SMOG-Grading for English texts has been developed by McLaughlin in 1969. Its result is aschool grade.
*SMOG-Grading* = square root of (((wds >= 3 syll)/sent)*30) + 3
It has been adapted to German by Bamberger & Vanecek in 1984, who changed the constant +3 to -2.
** Word usage
The word usage counts are intended to help identify excessive use of particular parts of speech.
*Verb Phrases*
The category of verbs labeled to be identifies phrases using the passive voice. Use the passive voice sparingly, in favor of more direct verb forms. The flag -p causes style to list all occurrences of the passive voice.
The verb category aux measures the use of modal auxiliary verbs, such as can, could, and should. Modal auxiliary verbs modify the mood of a verb.
*Conjunctions*
The conjunctions counted by style are coordinating and subordinating. Coordinating conjunctions join grammatically equal sentence fragments, such as a noun with a noun, a phrase with a phrase, or a clause to a clause. Coordinating conjunctions are and, but, or, yet, and nor.
Subordinating conjunctions connect clauses of unequal status. A subordinating conjunction links a subordinate clause, which is unable to stand alone, to an independent clause. Examples of subordinating conjunctions are because, although, and even if.
*Pronouns*
Pronouns are contextual references to nouns and noun phrases. Documents with few pronouns generally lack cohesiveness and fluidity. Too many pronouns may indicate ambiguity.
*Nominalizations*
Nominalizations are verbs that are changed to nouns. Style recognizes words that end in ment, ance, ence, or ion as nominalizations. Examples are endowment, admittance, and nominalization. Too much nominalization in a document can sound abstract and be difficult to understand.
Further details can be found in the =style(1)= man page.\n"
"Short descriptions of readability and word use analysis."
:type '(string)
:group 'smog)
(defun smog--style-installed-p ()
"Is the style command installed?"
(if (eq 0 (condition-case nil
(call-process "style")
(error (message "The program 'style' isn't installed or can't be found."))))
t nil))
;;;###autoload
(defun smog-check-buffer ()
"Analyse the surface characteristics of a buffer."
(interactive)
(when (smog--style-installed-p)
(let ((smog-buffer (current-buffer))
(smog-output (get-buffer-create "*Readability*"))
(smog-target (buffer-file-name (current-buffer))))
;; run the shell command. synchronously.
(shell-command
(format "%s %s" smog-command smog-target) smog-output)
;; output the results and add references (in org-mode if it's available)
(with-current-buffer smog-output
(goto-char (point-min))
(insert (format "\n*Style analysis* of \[\[%s\]\[%s\]\] \n\n" smog-target smog-buffer))
(goto-char (point-max))
(insert smog-reference)
(when (fboundp 'org-mode)
(org-mode))))))
(provide 'smog)
;;; smog.el ends here