I've been using Dvorak for over a year now, and I'm getting around 120wpm
with it.  Best of all, the pain in my hands died down a lot when I started 
using
it.

It isn't that much faster (I got about a 20% improvement), but the improved
comfort of typing in Dvorak is definitely worth it.

I've got some great xmodmap that I've tweaked over, because most of the
ones that you find around are broken in various subtle ways.

I have attached both of them.  Note that the dvorak.xmodmap switches around
Escape and Caps Lock (I 'vi' a lot!), and the dvorak2qwerty.xmodmap switches
that back - so if you don't want that, remove the last four lines.

With these you can toggle back and forth between xmodmap sessions easily;
running a typical qwerty xmodmap after switching to dvorak will break things,
and you'll need to restart X - not with these, though.

Enjoy!

- Nick Reinking







austad at marketwatch.com, on 05/01/2001 10:58:07 AM
To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org @ PMDF
cc:  
Subject: [TCLUG] Dvorak

So last night, I decided to try and learn dvorak.  It's going to take a
couple of days to get up to speed, but after only 2 hours on ICQ with it,
I'm up to about 20wpm.  

If you're interested in learning, I found the best way is to save your
current keymap to a file using:
xmodmap -pke > keyboard.default

Then grab http://www.signal15.com/keyboard.dvorak and type "xmodmap
keyboard.dvorak".  Then print out http://www.signal15.com/dvorak.gif and
tape it to the top of your monitor.  Then just start chatting on IRC or ICQ,
or type up some emails.  Only look at the map on your monitor if you forget
where a key is.  After about two hours or so of solid typing, you should be
able to type without even looking at the map.  

I tried a couple of typing tutor programs, but they sucked compared to this
method.  To switch back to the qwerty, just type "xmodmap keyboard.default".


Unfortunately, I haven't switched over at work yet because 20wpm isn't fast
enough.  And supposedly, you're supposed to only use Dvorak when you're
learning or it'll take much longer, but I guess I'll take my chances.

Someone posted this link on Slashdot in a comment yesterday, which was what
convinced me to try to learn it:
http://www.acm.vt.edu/~jmaxwell/dvorak/keyboard.html  (must have java
working)

Another interesting thing I found was the one-handed dvorak layouts.
Apparently, using these keymaps, some people can get 80wpm using only one
hand.  It would be nice to be able to put one hand on the keyboard and keep
the other on the trackball.  :)

Jay

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