Leszek said:I am new to touch typing but I really wonder how it is possible - the WPM scores.
My hunt-and-peck on querty was 170 cpm. Few weeks touch typing on Dvorak now and 130 cpm - feels ok, no transposition problems.
70 wpm = ~ 70*5 cpm = 350 cpm - I just cannot drum so fast my fingers!
Hmm....Try this. How many times can you simply strum all 8 fingers on a table (starting from pinky and ending at index) in one second? The average person can do it 3-4 times per second, or 25-30 finger hits per second. If we assume that each time a finger hit the table, it registered as a character, then that would mean roughly 1500-1800cpm = 300-360wpm. Of course, it would be impossible to type anywhere close to that rate due to a bunch of factors, but anyway, I was able to go above 500cpm on dvorak for short periods of time. My sustained limit on dvorak was 450-475 before i decided to switch, which might not have been a wise decision as you will see when I update the thread with my results soon.
Leszek said:However I do agree that I love the 'th', 'ch' rolls - maybe the Colemac rolls would be benefit to me.
See your experience, please update :)
I have come to the conclusion that I prefer 2-3 letter rolls before switching over to the other hand and that I do not prefer using the same hand for 4+ letter rolls as that seems to slow me down considerably. On the other hand, high hand swapping has the same effect at high speeds due to letter-swap errors. A layout that keeps the bulk of typing in the 2-3 letter range before switching hands will probably be ideal for me... somewhere between Dvorak and Colemak.
So make sure you figure out what you prefer before switching over because dvorak might be a better fit for you.
Also, I always felt that there were some problems with the placement of the A and R rows. (I really hate the uncomfortable "middle-pinky-middle" and "pinky-middle-pinky" type transitions.) So after looking through all my timing data from the past 80 days, my suspicions were confirmed - there is considerable slowdown in my typing when I'm doing that type of finger transition. However, there isn't really a better way to map these keys without completely changing the layout so I'll just have to live with it, unless i decide to switch back to dvorak, that is... :)
Leszek said:Could you show your modified layout?
I've mirrored the layout so it would be close to dvorak layout. I rotated the VGP block clockwise to make better use of my alternate-fingering. (Also, for my staggered keyboard, I shifted the left side of the bottom row by one key and placed the semicolon in the colemak-B position.) I also moved the "dash", "slash" and "square bracket" keys around to fit my typing.
' Y U L J V G F W Q
O I E N H D T S R A
, . M K ; B P C X Z
And the "general" fingering for the left hand is (i use different fingering for specific words and phrases):
Left Pinky: ' O
Left Ring: Y I ,
Left Middle: U E .
Left Index: L J N M H K ;
Right hand is "generally" the same as standard fingering.
And keep on practising. You'll be up to 350cpm in no time! :)
I think that's the baseline that everyone can and should try to achieve. Beyond that requires familiarity with whole words and phrases that only comes with a lot of repetition and drilling.
And last but not least.... my current speed after 80 days... HAS SLOWED DOWN TO 70WPM again. It's mainly due to the higher-than-average error rate I've started to exhibit.
I know it's from lack of practise (unless, maybe all the QWERTY keyboards lying around has affected me on a subconscious level...hahaha), but I never had this happen when I learnt dvorak. In fact, I feel like I need to concentrate a lot more with colemak than I ever had to do with dvorak.
I'll be updating in a week or so...or when I hit my 90 days.
Until then, cheers everyone!
(EDIT: oops, forgot to include the L for the left hand fingering)
Last edited by makdaddyrak (03-Aug-2008 17:14:54)