Line ka order is a way of reading the record chart by the sequence in which digit-groups, or “lines,” take their turn to appear. Many chart students divide the ank family (0–9) into simple lines — for example a first line of 1-2-3, a middle line of 4-5-6, and a last line of 7-8-9-0 — and then watch the order in which these lines dominate the results from week to week. The theory is that a market seldom stays fixed on one line; it tends to rotate, and spotting the rotation early is what this method is all about.
To track line ka order neatly, players often mark each result with the line it belongs to and then look for the repeating march:
When the order looks orderly, some players use it to decide which line to focus their study on next; when it looks scattered, they simply wait and keep logging. Either way this is a tool for organising history, not foreseeing the future. A chart can break its pattern at any moment. Stake only what you can afford to lose, avoid borrowing to play, and never forget that matka is a game of chance for entertainment purposes only.