So I really wanted colemak to work... I gave it a partial college try.
First off, I'm a pretty advanced qwerty typist. I can do 80wpm on a bad day. I have been touch typing for 20 years, and I type hours a day. I also code professionally, and I have been typing semicolons more frequently than even the most dedicated essayist.
So I spent about a week of heavy re-training. I did the colemak master key training, and ultimately passed all of them and ended up with a 30 wpm colemak typing ability. I am on Mac, so I just did the built-in SW solution. I also have stickers on my keyboard as well, they can help a bit.
So I got up to 30 wpm, I could type without constantly looking at my keyboard, but I found myself still mistyping a lot of keys. So my WPM might have been 30, but my error rate was probably as high as 10%. Even slowing down being deliberate meant that I had to think a lot about where I plant my fingers. I also have my own unique style that isnt pure touch typist. For example I hit "p" with my ring finger, not my pinky. I also dont use caps lock (remapped to ctrl) either. So I have really good spatial sense of where the keys are... which is important.
But like I said, I type some words so frequently and they arent handled by training AT ALL:
- ls
- pwd
- cd
- ^X^S
And a few more.
But what was the critical junction? Well frankly I can type as fast as I can think, or faster. I literally dont even think about typing anymore. But with colemak they typing was like a slow car on a freeway, but instead of slowing down my thoughts, the thoughts all piled up in a million-car wreck. Literally learning colemak... made me dumber. Or at least I felt it did.
At this juncture I can't take that kind of hit. So bye colemak.
BTW I was wondering why the iPhone doesnt have colemak, nor dvorak. And I realized it is because all the auto-correct data would need to be redone. So it wont be showing up anytime soon.