Conseil de dactylographie, comment faire moins d'erreur
1) Précision
J'avais essayé d'améliorer ma vitesse pendant des mois et je n'ai pas vu beaucoup d'amélioration. Une fois, j'ai ralenti et j'ai commencé à être plus précis au lieu d'essayer de taper plus vite j'ai commencé à voir une augmentation de ma vitesse de frappe. Je me sens plus en contrôle. J'ai encore du chemin à parcourir pour mon but, mais je suis heureux.
Apprendre à être précis en premier, puis augmenter la vitesse ensuite.Chaque fois que vous faites backspace, ça prend plus de temps que si vous ralentissez un peu mais avec une meilleur précision. J'ai toujours fait beaucoup de fautes, mais je me rends compte quand je ralentis pour être précis, j'ai effectivement tendance à taper un peu plus vite.
2) Rythme
Ce qui est important est l'élaboration d'un rythme, de ne pas se presser. Etre précis est la première priorité. La vitesse vient naturellement avec la pratique et le temps. En conclusion, on doit apprendre à ne saisir que ce que l'on voit/lit!
* Mettez les index sur les touches qui ont un relief (petit point ou barre)
* A chaque touche il y a un doigt assigné. Une touche doit toujours être tapée par le même doigt.
* Ne regardez pas le clavier, les yeux doivent toujours être sur l'écran
* Entrainez-vous !
@maria4mare: Um, nowhere do I say that I've been typing for 20 years. I've been typing since around 1983...so 38 years. Not really sure why you felt the need to post this comment, to be honest...
When my fingers hurt after too much time on the keyboard, I... have a habit of working through the pain instead of stopping. That way I know what I can truly do.
For the short time that I've been here, I have only stumbled upon contemptuous comments from you. Maybe it's just out of chance or something but it's understandable that some people may take offense to those comments especially if it's directed towards them. Other than that I honestly quite like this website and I'm interested to hear what people have to say. How about maybe forgetting about all the toxicity and raise the wholesomeness a little since after all it's only a typing website even though it's more like a stress relief/meditative hobby for me :)
When my fingers hurt after too much time on the keyboard, I... Slather myself in butter and bask in the cholesterol until I've the strength to go on typing.
Many of the tips for typing are also applicable to playing the piano. My biggest tips are to keep your fingers low so that the distance they need to travel is shorter. Use your wrist to slightly rotate your hands for many letter combinations and think of creating one motion rather than individual key strokes. Keep your whole body relaxed. Stiff fingers will not have smooth or efficient movements.
Practice! Honestly, it's just about repeating, repeating, and repeating something over and over again until you get it right... that's at least how I learned to type.
Ok, good idea to edit quotes. I do prefer dvorak over qwerty, not because I can type faster (80 wpm with qwerty 90 wpm with dvorak), but because it's much more comfortable and I get less hand strain. Search up dvorak on google. And on most operating systems it's easy to switch back and forth between qwerty and dvorak.
What really helped me improve my typing speed is not focusing on the content of the quote. No matter what you do, do not think about what you are writing, it will distract you. It's happening right now isn't it? you are messing up aren't you? Well try not to let it happen again and you should be fine.
i am doing good at keyhero.com (average 60 wpm) but when i go to mastertyping software which is used in our exam skill tests there my speed get down as 45 to 50
In order to make a change, besides the inevitable risks involved in every type of change (that is, you don't know whether it'd be better or worse after the change), two things, two old habits need to break also. Firstly, I never buy a new thing unless the old thing is totally and unmistakeably broken. Secondly... oops I forgot what is the second bad habit.
But then... this is not a scientific study. It is only my experience, some thought, and perception, not enough even to convince myself to scrap the old keyboard and buy a new one of a new type. After all, the one I am using right now, the bad one, is more expensive than all the other keyboards I ever touched in my whole life, combined.