@Dreymar: comparison of Juli16, Dvorak, Colemak and Qwerty; using Dutch text and English text. Take the Patorjk's results for what they are (I know they don't account for good rolls. Colemak and Juli16 are designed with both rolls and alternation in mind. So, that being said, the results:
DUTCH
Rank + score (higher = better)
1. Juli16 70.18
2. Simplified Dvorak 67.16
3. Colemak 65.35
4. QWERTY 50.11
Distances (less = better)
1. Juli16 88,481.1
2. Colemak 91,814.9
3. Simplified Dvorak 105,692.4
4. QWERTY 170,998.2
Finger use The distance (!) each finger travels. total travel of all fingers = 100%. Thismeasure is more precise than number of keystrokes, because it takes in account that for instance Colemak D and H are further away than T and N, thus more taxing.
Consecutive Hand and Thumb Use - How often the same hand was used to type a key as was used to type the previous key (thumbs are grouped as a separate entity). An example of this would be typing "af" on QWERTY. When looking at "f", the program notes that the left hand was also previously used to type "a". Lower = more alternation. The optimum is subjective - Dvorak wants lots of alternation, Colemak wants less alternation but more rolls. Juli16 sits sort of in between these two. So here we go:
Consecutive Hand and Thumb Use
1.Simplified Dvorak 11,073
2.Juli16 14,329
3.Colemak 18,539
4.QWERTY 20,667
ENGLISH
Rank + score (higher = better)
1. Juli16 65.32
2. Simplified Dvorak 64.79
3. Colemak 64.51
4. QWERTY 50.11
Distances (less = better)
1. Colemak 105,369.5
2 Juli16 109,852.9
3. Simplified Dvorak 110,764.0
4. QWERTY 182,733.2
Finger use The distance (!) each finger travels. total travel of all fingers = 100%.
Consecutive Hand and Thumb Use Lower = more alternation.
1. Simplified Dvorak 13,234
2. Juli16 15,700
3. Colemak 18,559
4. QWERTY 19,795
CONCLUSIONS - part A
- Again, based on the not-too-sophisticated Patorjk-statistics!
- I tested here only Dutch and English, due to time constraints, real life stuff
- In English and Spanish the layouts Balance12 and HIEAMTSRN score even better than Juli16; for Dutch and several other languages Juli16 is the "king" ;-)
- don't take all this too serious, shall we? messing with keyboard layouts is an utterly irrelevant micro-optimization hobby for a subset of geeks. Do we all agree? ;-) So it's not win or lose :-) But - Juli16 is the King of course ;-)
- all layouts score much better than Qwerty. If you are in doubt, any of these fine layouts (Colemak, Dvorak and my own Juli16) will give you a way nicer typing experience. Colemak and Dvorak have the advantage of being often pre-installed and have way more support. In a way we are nitpicking here. Am I overoptimizing? Could well be ! On the other hand, if I must learn a new keyboard layout, why not go for the optimum ? There is a lot to say both for 'satisficing', that is, pick a reasonably good layout (i.e. either Colemak or Dvorak, try both and pick the one that feels best) and live with it; but... there is also a lot to say for optimizing! OK. Enough of philosophy, let's get down to the naked facts :)
- In terms of hand alternation, Juli16 sits in between Colemak (less alternating) and Dvorak (more alternating). Whether or not this is good, is subjective.
- in terms of pure distance, Colemak scores best in English text, whereas Juli16 is the number 1 in Dutch. Both outcomes were to be expected.
- in terms of how the travel is distributed over fingers, Juli16 scores best, in both languages. But the difference is larger in Dutch, where Colemak and to a lesser extent Dvorak don't do so well. The reason is in the letter frequencies.
Dutch order
enati rodsl gvhkm ubpwj zcfxy q
etaoi nshrd lcumw fgypb vkjxq z
English order
You see that in Dutch, the letters that are typed with the index fingers are more frequent: g l v k b p j. This means that these relatively hard to reach letters get typed quite often, which loads the index fingers. In other words: these letters are in too bad spots for Dutch, while letters such as c, q, y, f and u, are in "too easy" spots. For Dvorak, roughly the same holds true. If in Dvorak I swap D-H, and U-I, the results are better.
CONCLUSIONS - part B
- Juli16 versus Dvorak: In English the difference is marginal. If I typed mainly English and were to chose between Dvorak and Juli16, I'd chose Dvorak. But for Dutch there is a clear difference. For Dutch I would definately chose Juli16.
- Juli16 versus Colemak : Juli16 ranks higher than both Dvorak and Colemak in English, but to be honest these differences are small. In reality it is safe to say that Colemak, Dvorak and Juli16 are equals for the English language. For English, I'd choose Colemak (or Dvorak), for practical reasons. Pick the one that feels best. For Dutch, the difference is larger. Juli16 is better than Colemak for Dutch.
Last edited by pieter (22-Jul-2014 23:10:44)