▲ | iepathos 13 hours ago | |
I have a charachorder. It's similar to music theory where you can hit individual notes to make up a chord. With chording you hit multiple keys usually that are part of a larger word and it outputs the associated word. This means instead of having to hit every individual key in sequence to type out a phrase one character at a time, you hit multiple keys at once to output words at a time. In the time it takes to output a single character on a keyboard someone on a charachorder did the entire word already. The longer the word the more speed is gained from this. It takes a lot of time to learn though, like a solid month of practice just to get near speeds I have with normal keyboard. Significantly helps with hand strain from typing all day due to requiring far less hand movement. | ||
▲ | sanderjd 31 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |
Thanks for the explanation! I always wondered how stenographers do this. I still find it pretty humorous that I can't really find any of that information on how this works on these websites. There must be an intro somewhere that they could link to! | ||
▲ | ano-ther 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Is that language specific then? I would imagine that programming languages need another vocabulary and you will also need to deal with LongVariableNames, delimiters, tabs etc. |