My father gave me a computer in 1992 when I was 4 (why?) so I began typing long before I knew there was a proper way. Neither of my parents were ever good at typing, and still use hunt-and-peck even today.<p>I remember when I was young, maybe 6 or 7 showing my uncle that I could type without having to look at the keys, and while I use all 10 fingers, my hand position is nowhere near the typical touch-typing one.<p>Usually my left hand comes at the keyboard perpendicular and my right one comes in at a 45 degree angle, so my hands are like:<p><pre><code> | \
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on the keys. My left hand stays mostly stationary, occasionally extending the first digit, while my right hand moves left and right slightly as I go.<p>So considering this, which option on the above poll should I be pressing? I use all 10 fingers, and don't look at the keyboard to calibrate myself, so I technically do touch type, but I have never used the JF nibs to get my position and certainly don't maintain the traditional touch typing posture. (the fingers on the home row thing)
I have a weird, hybrid way of typing. I don't have to look at the keys to know where to type, but I don't fully use all ten of my fingers. I type without using my pinky fingers, except to use them to press the shift keys.
I type with 6 fingers (thumbs, middle and index fingers) and my average typing speed is 262 characters per minute with an error rate of 5% (as measured by a web based type speed test a couple of years ago, I don't remember the URL). It works for me. I do try to learn 10 finger typing every couple of years but I usually give up pretty quickly. Since I type so fast even with just 6 fingers, there just isn't enough incentive for me to learn 10 finger typing.
Would be interesting to hear what the average typing speeds are. I would guess somewhere around 80 wpm?<p><i>Edit</i>: <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2366900" rel="nofollow">http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2366900</a>
Yes I can, but only in the past few months did I learn. I used to use all of my fingers but my hands sort of danced around the keyboard and I would have to look down to check alignment every so often. I learned to touch type qwerty for 3 months, then switched to programmer dvorak a month ago. I wish I had stuck with touch typing when I first learned it in middle school.
When I first started programming, I used the hunt and peck method. Life was tedious.<p>Then I took a class called "One Hour to Touch Type" from the University of Washington's Experimental College. I actually learned the entire keyboard in about an hour. I practiced about 20 minutes per day for a month to become proficient.
My parents gave me a copy of typing tutor and said "For one hour of video games you need to do 10 minutes of typing." I was a comfortable touch-typest in weeks.<p>I didn't learn to really hammer out the words until I started dialing into the local collage modem pool to play muds.
Keyboarding was by far the most useful class I ever took in high school, even more valuable than all of my 8 AP classes together. Nothing has proven more useful on a day-to-day basis.