Im about to enter the work force and don't know how to touch type. Is this a bad thing, even though im pretty fast in my own methods?
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closed as not programming related by DR, chaos, Joel Coehoorn, David Basarab, Andrew Hare Jul 13 at 18:50 |
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It depends on your job... If you're a programmer that's better to ne able to type fast, but when I look at what I'm doing right now (I'm a developer), I don't type that much. It's mostly thinking. But being able to type fast is, in my opinion, very important. You often have to send emails, write documentation, reports, quotes... Whether you can touch type or not is not the most important. It's mostly a matter of how many words per second you can type and if you don't do too many typos. Also if you're a programmer and you have to spend 10 seconds to find some keys, it would be really weird. |
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No, fast typing is not going to get you a better chance at a job. But you will annoy less your colleagues if you learn it. There are many free tools that can help you here, but the most important is to take your eyes off your keyboard and try it :) If you're already pretty fast at typing, you should be touch typing within a few days... |
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I started out hunting and pecking too. I spent a few hours with "mavis beacon teaches typing", and still hunted and pecked. But after a while, I will started touch typing because it is easier than having to look at the keyboard when you are sending emails. A lot of communication is through through email so the faster one can get it done the better. Bottom line, you might hunt and peck now, you will touch type in the future. It is inevitable. Also if you hunt and peck, your coworkers (programmers) will look at you funny. ;) |
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My $0.02 worth is that it's not that big a deal if you don't touch type. You may better off in a couple of ways:
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I don't believe you specifically need to be able to touch type, but you obviously be quick enough to type code, documents, etc. such that the typing isn't slowing you down. Plus the keys we use are more than Mavis Beacon teaches you .. I don't think she includes Ctrl-V or Ctrl-Alt-Del :) |
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Hasn't hurt me in 38 years in programming, EXCEPT in those "ergonomics" keyboards! |
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Have you ever witnessed a good programmer/touch typist code in Vim? It's astounding. It'll make you want to learn. |
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If you do pair programming, your likely inferior typing skills will drive your partner mad. Try Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing or look into a typing course at your local community college. |
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I did an experiment: by my "own" methods, i.e. two-fingered hunt-and-peck, I maxed out around 25-30 words per minute. With touch typing, I've gotten as high as 80-90 (with about the same error rate). I could not imagine trying to program without touch typing. |
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You may be fast in your own methods, but you'll be even faster with proper touch typing. Every programmer should be a touch typist. http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2008/09/programmings-dirtiest-little-secret.html |
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Generally speaking, as a programmer, your time-spent-thinking-to-time-spent-typing ratio should be something like 10:1 anyway. So No. |
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If your fast enough, its ok. I know several people that do not type correctly (as correctly in 10-finger-system). I do use all 10 fingers while typing, though I do not follow the typing like it is learned. Good and fast typing makes your work easier, but does not make you a better programmer. |
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It is. Learn to touch type. If my own experience is a guide, you may not end up strictly touch-typing, instead hybridizing the technique with your own home-grown habits, but it will make you considerably faster. |
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How fast is "fast in your own methods?" I can't imagine it is possible to hunt and peck as fast as someone can type. You don't need to type fast to write lines of code, but you definitely could use the skill when writing documentation, answering emails, or posting questions & answers on StackOverflow :) I would recommend starting to learn how to type. The skill will be useful for the rest of your life. |
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