3/27/2023 0 Comments Typing fingers gifsIt’s crazy! After only three weeks of deliberate practice I’m already typing as fast as I was with my old method. I’m already typing as fast as I was before I started. Week three down and I’ve finally covered the entire keyboard. I still hadn’t had enough practice typing on all the keys, especially symbol keys which are used all the time in programming. Typing in the real world was still too slow. With touch typing, you use the right shift to capitalize the left hand keys, and the left shift key to capitalize the right hand keys. Week 2Īfter the second week, I had covered all of the alphabet and some numbers.īut it was interesting: the shift key on the right side of the keyboard was totally foreign to me and I’d never used it before. Needless to say couldn’t use my touch typing skills in the real world yet. This made everything I did super unproductive and frustrating. Not only was I slow, but I was incredibly inaccurate. Typing felt pretty good and it was relatively easy.īut attempting to use my newly acquired typing skills in the real world was a total disaster. Progression feels quick as you learn knew keys - after an hour or so of practice, I already had three quarters of the alphabet under my belt. I started off learning one key at a time. It hasn’t exactly been smooth sailing, but it hasn’t exactly been hard either. My code coverage of the keyboard has gotten better, too. My stats taken from Īs you can see, I only started on the 31st of July, and my speed (wpm - orange line) has been steadily increasing over time.Īfter only one month, my typing speed has already improved by 10wpm. It’s been nearly a month since I started, and have put 14 hours and 44 minutes of practice into it. It’s free and has a nice interface, so I went with that. I did a Google search for learning to touch type, and the first website that came up was TypingClub. So, at the ripe old age of 29, I decided it was about time I taught myself how to touch type. What was the harm in attempting to type with all ten fingers for a month and seeing how it went? I could always revert back if I didn’t see any improvements. Especially for numbers, symbols, and punctuation (commas, full stops, etc). I instinctively knew where they alphabetic keys on the keyboard were, but would still need to look down every now and then. Over the years, I had developed a pretty sketchy style where I used four fingers - my two index and middle fingers. I could even mostly type without looking at the keyboard. I was typing at around 40 words per minute, which is apparently right around the average (although I couldn’t find any definitive sources). Jim Carrey typing as God in the film Bruce Almighty Assessing my skillsĭon’t get me wrong, my typing speed wasn’t horrible. After all, over the course of my career, I plan to be writing tens (if not hundreds) of thousands of lines of code. But, all things being equal, I’d still rather type faster so I can get on to the next problem as quickly as possible. You should spend most of your time thinking about a given problem/solution, as opposed to actually typing. Now, I’ve heard the argument made that, as a programmer, typing speed isn’t so important. You’ll always be bottlenecked by your typing speed. Therefore, if you are a slow typer, it won’t matter how great your IDE is, or how great your text editor is, or how productive you think your workflow is. I recently read an article that said, in it’s simplest form, that programming is just pressing keys on a keyboard.įundamentally, programmers are typists! We just happen to press the keys in a specific order that allows compilers to read the combinations of characters, and convert them into machine code. By Matthew Burfield I learned to touch type at the ripe old age of 29.
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