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Keyboard questions! Can you type without looking at the keys? Do you have a preferred format or make of keyboard?

I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too :D

61 comments
  • Yes, my keyboard has no markings to indicate letters save for the standard two raised small bars on f and j so I can feel for orientation as per standard keyboard fare.

    I use the QWERTY layout on a firmware flashed zsa voyager split ortholinear keyboard.

  • I can type without looking if I'm on my keyboard, but when I made a typo I take a quick look to see where I'm wrong. I still have to look it for key combination.

    Edit: but I only type with four fingers. I don't know why.

  • In theory I should be able to touch type, but my fingertips are girthy, so I make a lot of typos. I think RedDragon made one with 1.2x keys which seems perfect for me, but they are sold out.

  • Yes, I touch type on a normal US keyboard (US international layout). As i lost some feeling in my finger tips due to age, I made my own dimples on the F and J keys, and some additional ones on the 3 and 8 keys for when I can't use the numeric keypad (which I can touch type too).

  • I look to get my bearings before I start but then most of the time I'm looking at what I'm typing on the screen rather than down at my hands.

    Only when I keep hitting the same wrong key(s) over and over between hits of backspace, do I then, with intense frustration, look back at the keys. I think I might be expecting the key I'm trying to hit to have run off to some other part of the keyboard.

    A lot of what I type is wrongly autocompleted by muscle memory ("why" for "what" in this sentence for example, and "we-" before correcting to "wr-" for wrong, both there and here), so I'd be utterly lost without backspace.

    My action is very much not correct touch-typing (for example, the first letter of this sentence was typed with left hand on M and right hand on right Shift), but it works for me. ISO layout's tiny left shift key probably has quite a lot to do with that.

    As for that, I still prefer ISO (UK QWERTY) as they're far more common here. I have used ANSI (US QWERTY) in the past, which means I occasionally reach for double quote and @ in the wrong places, but that's increasingly rare these days. (Even more rarely I'll reach for where characters were on the Commodore 64. That usually affects parentheses more than anything, but I do so many parentheticals in online comments that I've all but broken that habit!).

  • I can; but, while we had Mario Teaches Typing in school, I absolutely hated the cognitive effort and preferred to Hunt and Peck.

    I love computers, though, so my brain eventually memorized the keyboard just from constant use; now I generally type without looking (with a pretty average 44 WpM) but primarily just use my index fingers to do so.

    • Is 44wpm average? I thought more like 60-80 was average, but maybe my impression is off because of being somewhat active in mechanical keyboard groups

      • Heh, it might; granted, I'd just done a cursory glance since I was at work, at the time, but, taking a further look, it seems that 40 WpM is average with 50s and 60s being above average.

        Granted, that include people who aren't touch typists so that might bring the numbers down.

        I also tried retaking a typing test again as, the first time, I'd done one that was only a minute (again, being at work); I did another random one and got 66 WpM and another one that was 5 minutes and got 61 WpM. So I also seemed to undersell myself in that first comment, it looks like.

  • 120 wpm peak; comfortably 100 with high accuracy. Playing online games with no mic had me typing fast. Then I got a heavy data entry job. Not winning competitions, but I'm pretty happy considering I don't follow the formal method.

    I have a specific old Dell membrane keyboard I prefer over anything I've tried. Not a fan of mechanical keyboards. Tried blues and browns.

  • Yes, QWERTY at 110wpm with standard left hand and only using index and middle fingers on my right hand, on a normal ISO layout on my Wooting 80HE.

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