Typing
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How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ? How did you learn typing ? How many fingers are you using ? I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills, but I didn't find any good tool/app to do so. Any recommendation ? Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate...
Two to three. My boss once said that if I could touch type, I'd be a real terror.
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Last time I checked, I had about 97% accuracy.
It's time for a new sig. Seriously.
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Is the word "a" ?
viaducting wrote:
Is the word "a" ?
More complex than that - take the test yourself[^].
It's time for a new sig. Seriously.
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Last time I checked, I had about 97% accuracy.
It's time for a new sig. Seriously.
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Did you look at the Dvorak keyboard? Aparently the typing speed record is held by someone using a Dvorak. There are drivers available for the programmer Dvorak layout here[^] and just this morning I ordered a couple of sets of Programmer Dvorak keyboard stickers here[^]. The first link has a link to a basic course in Dvorak. I might be harping on a bit about this now, since I haven't used a Dvorak keyboard myself yet, so i'm just going to leave it at that. :-D
Pete
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I went to a typing class and did the first exam in about 3 months. It went very well and I scored first class, and then went for the second round and scored first as well. Somehow, it was my thing. I remember participating on a thread on this some time back in the past: http://www.codeproject.com/Messages/2025708/I-did-a-hundred.aspx[^] (the screenshot I uploaded is gone now though).
It's time for a new sig. Seriously.
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I went to a typing class and did the first exam in about 3 months. It went very well and I scored first class, and then went for the second round and scored first as well. Somehow, it was my thing. I remember participating on a thread on this some time back in the past: http://www.codeproject.com/Messages/2025708/I-did-a-hundred.aspx[^] (the screenshot I uploaded is gone now though).
It's time for a new sig. Seriously.
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How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ? How did you learn typing ? How many fingers are you using ? I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills, but I didn't find any good tool/app to do so. Any recommendation ? Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate...
I use both hands. never learned typing though. Try using both hands, start with two fingers of left hand for left sight keyboard two fingers of right hand for right sight keyboard use any thumb for space bar. this will help a lot while typing. you can just go to that level after some time, without learning any sort of typing. And it is very fast way.
Ravi S Coding is my birth-right and bugs are part of feature my code has! _________________________________________ Me Facebook Twitter
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viaducting wrote:
Is the word "a" ?
More complex than that - take the test yourself[^].
It's time for a new sig. Seriously.
I can now sustain 85 WPM with ~97% accuracy (this is from a different program that I downloaded a while ago). I can't even touch type. ;P
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Wow, Pete, you are the first real person I see who really wants to give Dvorak a try. Good luck !
There was at least one developer using a Dvorak keyboard in the last place I worked. I didn't follow up on it then, but i'm thinking i'll download the driver tonight to see if it works on my laptop at home. I do like the idea of all the brackets and operators on the number keys without the need for the shift key as i tend to find those a bit awkward. I'll let you know how i get on.
Pete
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Rage wrote:
How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ?
Very fast and accurate when playing Half Life 2 deathmatch :) reaonable fast the rest of the time though. Accuracy us my probvlem - I use lot s of different keyboards and the accuracy foes down depending one hwic one i use and how lng for!
Rage wrote:
How did you learn typing ?
i have ben using computers since 1977 so it sort of comes with the territory. I have taught myself to touch type (more or less) by simply looking at which fingers you are meant to use, then using them while looking at the screen, and starting off slowly. It is frustrating at first as you make lots of mistakes - but if you keep it up in everyday typing, it soon becomes natural. (although I don't tend to touch type when coding - too many shifts required - why hasn't someone done a coders keyboard where teh freuqently used programming keys are unshifted? Didn't the BBC computer keyboard do that?
Rage wrote:
How many fingers are you using ?
8 fingers, two thumbs although when coding, probably six fingers and the thumbs.
Rage wrote:
. Any recommendation ?
There used to be a "mavis Beacon teaches typing" that we used at work for the staff - they liked it apparently - I never used it.
Rage wrote:
Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate... Quote Selected Text
or dragon Naturally speaking?
___________________________________________ .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
_Maxxx_ wrote:
why hasn't someone done a coders keyboard where teh freuqently used programming keys are unshifted?
Programmers Dvorak[^] ok, i'm harping on now, that's it.
Pete
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How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ? How did you learn typing ? How many fingers are you using ? I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills, but I didn't find any good tool/app to do so. Any recommendation ? Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate...
Rage wrote:
How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ?
I type 90 WPM with errors factored in (and full touch typing.)
Rage wrote:
How did you learn typing ?
I learned at home, but had a formal class in high school. It wasn't a mandatory class, but highly suggested. My youngest daughter has been typing over 60 wpm since she was ten or so. She's probably up to 70 or 80 wpm now. Last time we measured, my oldest son typed at 60-70 wpm, though his error rate is higher than his sisters. The other two kids type about 50-60. We all type faster than my wife, which annoys her. (On the other hand, my wife can ten-key like the wind--she worked in a bank clearing house early in our marriage and got very good.)
Rage wrote:
I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills,
Practice, practice, practice. Mavis Beacon Typing is still around. Don't know if it's any good.
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Rage wrote:
How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ?
I type 90 WPM with errors factored in (and full touch typing.)
Rage wrote:
How did you learn typing ?
I learned at home, but had a formal class in high school. It wasn't a mandatory class, but highly suggested. My youngest daughter has been typing over 60 wpm since she was ten or so. She's probably up to 70 or 80 wpm now. Last time we measured, my oldest son typed at 60-70 wpm, though his error rate is higher than his sisters. The other two kids type about 50-60. We all type faster than my wife, which annoys her. (On the other hand, my wife can ten-key like the wind--she worked in a bank clearing house early in our marriage and got very good.)
Rage wrote:
I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills,
Practice, practice, practice. Mavis Beacon Typing is still around. Don't know if it's any good.
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Joe Woodbury wrote:
my wife can ten-key
I presume this means using the num keypad ? I am also quite good at it, having had in multiple occasion to enter a lot of figures in Excel...
Rage wrote:
I presume this means using the num keypad ?
Yes.
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Easy: 01 10 11 Using 10 fingers you can count from 0 to 1023
:laugh: :laugh: i HAVE to steal this one.
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How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ? How did you learn typing ? How many fingers are you using ? I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills, but I didn't find any good tool/app to do so. Any recommendation ? Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate...
I started learning to type on a non-electric Smith-Corona portable typewriter when I was about ten years old. My father was a self-trained fast typist and I learned at his feet and from books checked out of the library on the subject. I had to pound pretty hard on the keys all the way through college. I don't think I ever got beyond 60 WPM. Practice, if you will, is the key. Body memory helps to get to the automated response. I thought it was pointless typing "fff jjj" over and over but it helped to get the neurons firing without conscious thought.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
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Did you look at the Dvorak keyboard? Aparently the typing speed record is held by someone using a Dvorak. There are drivers available for the programmer Dvorak layout here[^] and just this morning I ordered a couple of sets of Programmer Dvorak keyboard stickers here[^]. The first link has a link to a basic course in Dvorak. I might be harping on a bit about this now, since I haven't used a Dvorak keyboard myself yet, so i'm just going to leave it at that. :-D
Pete
I've been trying to find a break to learn a Dvorak keyboard (programming). Got the stickers, and built a keyboard layout for Windows (if anyone is interested, I'm willing to share the layout). Now if only I could slow down for a couple of weeks to learn it - only tried it for a couple hours so far. It is easier on the fingers though... Best way to learn to type - type alot. Type whatever comes into your head as fast as you can - looking at a paper or trying to type something specific will only slow you down - and for programming you are rarely re-typing what someone else wrote.
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How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ? How did you learn typing ? How many fingers are you using ? I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills, but I didn't find any good tool/app to do so. Any recommendation ? Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate...
I average about 70-80wpm and peak out at 90wpm... I type using 9 fingers, because when I learned to touch type (back in the 80's) we were taught to hit the space bar with our right thumb only... Not sure why - maybe something to do with the left hand moving off the keys to push the carriage return bar to move the drum back to the right... I was the only bloke in the class, and took it because my mum suggested I do it "because I like computers". We used old manual typewriters, and after 2.5 years of typing, I could type about 23wpm, not even fast enough to qualify for a typing certificate (min was 25wpm). The way my typing increased was to get hooked on IRC back in my uni days (internet relay chat), where if you typed fast you kept up, otherwise you fell behind... Learning to type was one of the best things I ever did as far as overall value goes...
I don't have ADHD, I have ADOS... Attention Deficit oooh SHINY!! If you like cars, check out the Booger Mobile blog | If you feel generous - make a donation to Camp Quality!!
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How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ? How did you learn typing ? How many fingers are you using ? I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills, but I didn't find any good tool/app to do so. Any recommendation ? Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate...
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How fast and how accurate are you at striking your keyboards ? How did you learn typing ? How many fingers are you using ? I am an average typist, and would like to improve my skills, but I didn't find any good tool/app to do so. Any recommendation ? Maybe the first step would be to switch to Das Keayboard Ultimate...
It took me one month (30 minutes every day) to become full touch typist using "Typing Tutor 6" (old, but gold) Nowdays http://app.typrx.com/[^] says I'm doing 70 WPM. And BTW Das Keyboard is worth every cent :)