Hello all,
Today I decided to see if I could produce some sort of visual representation to show the difference between Colemak and Qwerty. I took the image of the Colemak layout from the Colemak homepage and brought it into Photoshop in order to make frequency diagrams for both Colemak and Qwerty.
Here are the results (click for larger image):
As you can see from the diagrams, the majority of the keystrokes for Colemak are clustered around the home row, whereas the keystrokes in Qwerty are more or less randomly positioned throughout the keyboard. The diagram also shows Qwerty's strong left hand bias.
==Methodology==
I took the following letter frequencies from the Wikipedia entry:
e 12.702%
t 9.056%
a 8.167%
o 7.507%
i 6.966%
n 6.749%
s 6.327%
h 6.094%
r 5.987%
d 4.253%
l 4.025%
c 2.782%
u 2.758%
m 2.406%
w 2.360%
f 2.228%
g 2.015%
y 1.974%
p 1.929%
b 1.492%
v 0.978%
k 0.772%
j 0.153%
x 0.150%
q 0.095%
z 0.074%
I took the frequency for the most frequently occurring letter (e - 12.702%), divided all the other frequencies by that number, and multiplied by 100, in order to get a number from 1 to 100 that represented the relative frequency of each letter. Those relative frequencies are:
e 100
t 71
a 64
o 59
i 54
n 53
s 49
h 47
r 47
d 33
l 31
c 21
u 21
m 18
w 18
f 17
g 15
y 15
p 15
b 11
v 7
k 6
j 1
x 1
q 0
z 0
The Greyscale slider is a tool in Photoshop that represents colour on a continuum from 1 to 100, with 1 being pure white and 100 being pure black. I then used the Paintbucket tool in Photoshop to fill in each key on the diagram, setting the Greyscale slider value to the calculated relative frequency number of the letter. The result is that each key is darkened according to its relative frequency in the English language.
I was hoping that these diagrams might help people to visualize just how much of a difference exists between Colemak and Qwerty.
Comments?