TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

I charted my progress learning DVORAK every day for a year

7 pointsby ZaneClaesover 10 years ago

2 comments

voidzover 10 years ago
As someone who has used the Dvorak layout for over 15 years, and loves it, it&#x27;s my impression that the biggest reason people don&#x27;t learn it, is because they don&#x27;t know what they are missing. But dvorak is so much nicer, it was well worth the annoying first couple of weeks.<p>Another common misconception is that people fear that they will for some reason &quot;unlearn&quot; Qwerty, which is not the case at all. In fact, after this many years, for me it is easy to look at a qwerty layout, with the actual layout on the OS set to Dvorak, even while typing.<p>The best thing about learning dvorak is how it taught me things about how the brain learns concepts, autonomously. For example, I remember how, after an hour of practice, I went to do something unrelated, and every now and then I became conscious of how my brain was still processing the previous hour of practice. So I would see images in my mind&#x27;s eye of pressing letters on the dvorak layout.<p>I also noticed how smoothly I started to type dvorak in the beginning of a practicing session, and, after a while, seemed to become more frustrated because the number of mistakes increased as time progressed. That made me realise that I should stop practicing when that moment of frustration would hit me, and then &quot;let my brain take over from here&quot;. Then, once I stopped, there came the images, letting me know that the brain was still processing what I was trying to teach it.<p>It took me about a month of practice and the better I became, the more natural dvorak started to feel. Now I can type on both qwerty and dvorak, although qwerty does make me realise every single time, how bad that layout really is, in comparison. But what&#x27;s also fun is that the brain seems to associate layouts with the actual computer -- if I was typing on a school computer, I&#x27;d start typing in qwerty without even realising it. Then, when I came home and continued behind my own PC, I continued in dvorak.<p>So for me, the most important thing that made me continue practicing it, was that this experience of learning dvorak in itself was already a lot of fun. It taught me how awesome the brain is, especially if you don&#x27;t force it to do what you want with a timeframe in mind - learning dvorak at a speed that was good for me, and letting the brain carry on without &quot;me&quot; forcing it to become better, is how I learned more about how the brain is able to program itself with newly introduced concepts.
评论 #8706561 未加载
评论 #8705585 未加载
mellingover 10 years ago
At least for programming, it seems like predictive typing, Intellisense, templates, etc, negate the advantages a given keyboard might provide compared to a regular typist. Emacs or vi bindings contribute a lot to keystrokes type.
评论 #8706054 未加载