Today's the 2nd of May, and I started learning Colemak on the 19th of February. So it's been 2½ months already. When I last checked my typing speed (using www.typingtest.com (typinghero has been recommended but doesn't seem to work with Android.)) it was only around 45 wpm, as compared with my previous speed on qwerty which I believe was somewhere in the environs of 50–60 wpm. Not moving along all that quickly, are we?... But in my case progress has been hampered by two re-mapping bouts that occurred on the way: First, one month after starting, I remapped no less than 10 keys, following the recommendations for DreymaR's Curl Mod (4 keys) and adding a few of my own (6 keys). Then, three weeks ago, I followed DreymaR's advice and re-remapped 4 of my own remappings, bringing three of them back to their previous positions and one to the standard Curl position. (I've posted images of some of the layouts I've been through in another thread: User contributions» Re-mapping BACK-SPACE to an index finger key) Consequently, I've been working with my present layout for much less than 2½ months, making it hard to gauge precisely the actual rate of progress.
Tweaking the layout underways did, at first, make me lose some of my fear of messing around with key positions, as I could see how quickly the mind was able to pick up and remember the changes. In no long time I was able to type e-mails etc. with the new key positions, and it didn't seem like such a big deal. But then, over time, it became clear that to progress from that initial state of sort-of-remembering the new positions to the state of being so thoroughly familiar with them that I can just type away without giving it a second thought takes a loooong time. That, in turn, put the fear of God right back in my previously over-confident heart! So now I'm done—at least for a long time to come—with any more re-mappings of letters and am solemnly resolved to solely concentrate on perfecting my familiarity with what I've got at this point.
I'm not sure how many of the people who read these posts are newbies. To those who are old hands I can only apologize if, in the observations below, I'm only stating the all-to-obvious and/or what's been articulated with more clarity elsewhere in this forum. The thing is I've been contemplating the learning process and thought I'd share it with whoever might find it interesting and not obvious. As I see it, the process of mastering touch-typing, or any other skill, can be divided into three stages:
1) THE INTELLECTUAL STAGE is where one first learns the new positions so that one may type without looking at the keyboard and without making (too many) mistakes. This, at least for someone with previous touch-typing experience, can be achieved surprisingly quickly: Within a few hours to a day for the whole Colemak layout. When that happens it's easy to get overly confident. At this stage one has to rely on reasoning and rational thinking.
2) THE INTUITIVE STAGE is where one develops an intuitive sense, a so-called "muscle memory" for the new positionings, so that one can type with some fluency, mostly relying on a felt sense and without having to think much. This takes a lot of time, weeks or months, to develop.
... and lastly,
3) THE AUTOMATIC STAGE, which is the culmination of one's efforts. At this stage one doesn't have to think at all, and there's no doubt, no hesitation, as to how each letter is to be typed. The letter E can, so far as the fingers are concerned, only be typed by pressing one finger in one certain way. There's no wavering, and lack of concentration has minimal detrimental effect. This is the stage of blind, unquestioning faith! To get to this point really takes a lot of work. The automatic sense is the first to go when remappings occur. Suddenly there's more than one option: Let's see, K, that's typed by extending the right index finger directly to the left, or was it left and down? Hmm... One is thrown into that limbo realm where blind faith can no longer be relied upon and one has to again resort to thinking and memory and trial and error.
Intellectual understanding is the quickest to achieve and the slowest to perform; automatic "knowledge" is the slowest to achieve and the quickest to perform.
At this point, I've penetrated comfortably deep into the intuitive stage but am still far from the automaton's happy state of blind faith. To tell the truth, I'm a little bit unhappy with how long it's all taken, but since that is, to a large degree/mostly, the result of my own remapping antics, I will not complain.
So more re-mapping for me again, ever? Well, not exactly. I'm still re-mapping symbols and numbers as the spirit moves me. That's a totally different kettle of fish from re-mapping letters. Having to stop and think for a millisecond before typing a paranthesis has nowhere the same detrimental impact on typing speed and general fluency as having to do the same with a letter.
Regarding the modifications that I've made so far, I can't, based on my own experience, say for sure how much of an improvement the Curl Mod (Dreymar Edition) is compared to the standard Colemak layout. But I do BELIEVE it's better and will probably be able to feel this more directly as my typing gets better. On the other hand, there are three other modifications that I already clearly experience as conducive to a more comfortable and/or efficient typing experience. They are:
1) DreymaR's advice to move the letters on the bottom left hand row—ZXCVB (or ZXCVD, if you follow the Curl Mod *(ed DreymaR))—one key to the left. This is only fully possible on an *ISO keyboard, which has an extra key between Shift and qwerty-Z. At a stroke, this makes a normal keyboard vastly more ergonomical in that it allows the left hand to type in an angle that's almost the mirror image of the right one, and not, as it otherwise would, with an unhealthy inward twist at the wrist. I can only chime in with DreymaR on this one and advice everyone to do this right away! It can be done even if one decides to stick with the overall qwerty layout.
2) The other simple and clearly beneficial change was stevep99's advice to re-map the Caps key as an Alt key and then use it to enable typing numbers and symbols using the right hand. This modification, to my mind, can hardly be praised enough, and it doesn't interfere with anything of substance. The way I've done it is to map the numbers 1–2–3–4–5 to qwerty-<H>–<J>–<K>–<L>–<;>, and 6–7–8–9–0 to qwerty-<N>–<M>–<,>–<.>–</>, respectively. It truly works wonders: With this placement, not only are the numbers supremely easy to reach, it's also very intuitive— 1 & 2 for index finger, 3 for middle finger, etc. After only a few minutes, I was quicker and surer when typing numbers this way than when using the top row, even though I had been using the latter for thirty years!! Now I've almost completely stopped using the top, numerical row. For the remaining right-hand keys, I've mapped my most used symbols, such as " ' ( ) , to them.
3) Re-mapping Backspace to qwerty-Y (=Colemak-J; J, which is an extremely uncommon letter anyway, has been moved to qwerty-P/Colemak-<;>). This is my own personal contribution, and only a sense of proper decorum and personal humility prevents me from saying how much I like it :) It allows me to use my strong right-hand index finger to press a button that often requires a lot of repeated pressing (as opposed to using my weakest finger—the left pinkie—as per the original Colemak layout), and I can do so without having to move the hand away from home position.
So. All in all, do I consider the change to Colemak worth all the hassles? Well, I think so. If nothing else, the standard qwerty layout is just so incredibly hopeless and such an affront to all ergonomic reason that, looking back, it's almost hard to fathom that I was able to put up with it for so many years. Yes, I'm glad to be rid of it!
That's it for now. Sorry if this post got a bit on the long side, and thanks for reading so far ... if anyone did. I may try to post again at a later point to inform about further progress...
Last edited by Bee Jay (06-May-2016 08:25:26)