I had cause to deliver a report on five articles Ive been commissioned to write.
Everything | Word2003 | VBA | |
554 | 667 | 682 | Diesel-Electrics |
499 | 497 | 497 | Riding on the Footplate from Southern Cross to Ghooli and Back |
330 | 539 | 559 | The Longest Wheat-Bin in the Southern Hemisphere |
2,851 | 2,765 | 2,802 | Three Times a Year to and from School in Perth on the Kalgoorlie Express |
4,234 | 4,468 | 4,540 | 4,387 |
0.965 | 1.018 | 1.034 |
I measured "word-count" in three ways:-
(1) By including the Word-Count in column labels in Everything: Right-click the column-heading bar, Document, Content, Word-count.
(2) By inspecting within Word2003 (File, Properties, Statistics)
(3) By a cute bit of VBA code that calculates readability statistics on a document.
The sums of word counts average out to 4,387 words and vary between 0.965 of the average and 1.034 of the average.
The VBA methods are always worth investigating, as are methods for calculating sentence-counts. If a sentence is defined as "terminated by a period", then “Dr.”, “Mr.”, “Mrs.” and "etc." affect the sentence count. Likewise for words: Are words delimited by spaces (usually ‘yes’), by hyphens (maybe not), and so on. The programmer makes a decision and lives with it.
I thought to post this in case anyone starts questioning Everything’s means of calculating Word-Count, or worse, stakes the company’s future on Word-Counts(grin!).
Cheers, Chris