Does anyone here touch-type, and if so, it it helpful in coding?
I've been meaning to learn...
Touch typing is quite a good skill to have. You can look at what you're writing as it appears on the screen and consequently fix mistakes (and once you get good you don't even have to look at the screen to know you've fucked up) and it's generally quicker than key hunting. I originally taught myself my own style of touch-typing, then they made me learn the proper way at TAFE, so I combined the two and have my own style again. My WPM count could probably go even higher if I touched type normally instead of my half-bodge way, but I'm too deep set in my ways to change now... :P
quote:Originally posted by Daemin
I don't really touch type, but when i want to type something I can do it without looking, simply for the fact that over the *years* I have taught my fingers where the keys are in relation to each other so now I can just type without looking at the keyboard.I guess practice makes perfect :-)
yeah, that's what I do.. but I always make mistakes..
And rezn0r, If you aren't designing as you are coding you can code alot faster :)
how so? wasn't qwerty established as the standard keyboard because they had some big competition to see which was the fastest and the guy using qwerty beat the pants off the other guy?
(then stole he stole the pants and ran far far away).
Acutally my opinion on this is you'd be faster with whatever you learned to use best... unless the keyboard is totally useless, but even then skill could compensate.
You can find them on the net in lots of places, that is DVORAK layouts etc.
The base premise is that it puts the least often used keys on the bottom row of the keybaord, then the most often used keys under your fingers, and then the second most often used at the top (or could be that most often used at the top etc, I can't remember exactly). And they arrange it in such a fashion that your fingers don't move too much when typing. Just looking at my hand now my fingers are jumping all over the keyboard while typeing, on DVORAK they wouldn't barely move from the "initial position".
I guess the battle between DVORAK and QWERTY is like a battle between 80x86 architectures (common as QWERTY, and just as complicated), and faster RISC machines (simpler, faster, although struggling to be seen). But that's another story altogether.
I personally want to get a fancy keyboard that can switch between QWERTY and DWORAK with the hit of a key, now I just have to get the money for it - and find the site again.
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takes about 2-3 months to switch and get productivity back, but its a lot faster and more comfortable to type than a qwerty
notice all the common letters are in the middle row, and you alternate left/right hands most of the time -- vowels tend to be left, consonants on the right
its an awesome layout
I do, but most programmers I know are shocking typists (none of them will ever be secretaries). There isn't really a need to type 90wpm in code... no ones brain ticks that fast.
So no, I don't think it makes a difference.
Scott.