Methods
Number methods
Each method shows which letters it counts, how text is read, and where the rule comes from before you use a number in readings or matches.
- Choose by text
- Latin, Hebrew, Greek, or Arabic
- Use in readings
- Proof first, reading second
Modern 26-letter Latin A1-Z26 calculator with accent folding.
- Best for
- English names and Latin letters
- Reads
- Left to right
- Rule basis
- Theonyma launch rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Latin-script text directly
Modern 26-letter Latin reduction cycle where A/J/S = 1 through I/R/Z = 9.
- Best for
- English names and Latin letters
- Reads
- Left to right
- Rule basis
- Theonyma launch rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Latin-script text directly
Classical 23-letter Latin ordinal table with I/J and U/V merged; W is not counted.
- Best for
- English names and Latin letters
- Reads
- Left to right
- Rule basis
- Theonyma launch rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Latin-script text directly
Modern 26-letter Latin reverse table where Z = 1 through A = 26.
- Best for
- English names and Latin letters
- Reads
- Left to right
- Rule basis
- Theonyma launch rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Latin-script text directly
Reverse Latin ordinal values reduced through the 1-9 cycle.
- Best for
- English names and Latin letters
- Reads
- Left to right
- Rule basis
- Theonyma launch rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Latin-script text directly
Mispar Hechrechi: Hebrew values 1-400, with final forms equal to base letters.
- Best for
- Hebrew words and names
- Reads
- Right to left
- Rule basis
- Reference-backed rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Hebrew text directly
Mispar Gadol-style final-letter policy: final kaf through final tsadi are 500-900.
- Best for
- Hebrew words and names
- Reads
- Right to left
- Rule basis
- Reference-backed rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Hebrew text directly
Mispar Siduri: Hebrew alphabet-order values 1-22, with final forms equal to their base letters.
- Best for
- Hebrew words and names
- Reads
- Right to left
- Rule basis
- Traditional Hebrew rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Hebrew text directly
Mispar Katan: Hebrew standard values reduced to a single digit by digit sum, with final forms equal to base letters.
- Best for
- Hebrew words and names
- Reads
- Right to left
- Rule basis
- Traditional Hebrew rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Hebrew text directly
Hebrew Atbash substitution values: alef takes tav value, bet takes shin value, and so on.
- Best for
- Hebrew words and names
- Reads
- Right to left
- Rule basis
- Traditional Hebrew rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Hebrew text directly
Milesian Greek letter values: alpha through omega plus stigma/digamma, koppa, sampi.
- Best for
- Greek words and names
- Reads
- Left to right
- Rule basis
- Greek numeral references
- Native coverage
- Counts Greek text directly
Greek alphabet-order values alpha through omega plus stigma/digamma, koppa, and sampi ordinal positions.
- Best for
- Greek words and names
- Reads
- Left to right
- Rule basis
- Theonyma launch rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Greek text directly
Standard Arabic Abjad values over the 28-letter abjad order, with documented orthographic folds.
- Best for
- Arabic words and names
- Reads
- Right to left
- Rule basis
- Documented rule
- Native coverage
- Counts Arabic text directly