Stop Typing Fast | Prime Reacts

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  • Опубліковано 29 кві 2023
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    Orginial: • Let's Talk About Typin...
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 421

  • @farqueueman
    @farqueueman Рік тому +1056

    Typing is for suckers, I stare down the compiler until it produces the binary I want.

    • @thealihassan1177
      @thealihassan1177 Рік тому +18

      👌

    • @davititchanturia
      @davititchanturia Рік тому +103

      i just randomize binary until it matches what i want

    • @velho6298
      @velho6298 Рік тому +9

      Chad move

    • @stashladki2594
      @stashladki2594 Рік тому +27

      I keep pressing ctrl+space until copilotGPT reads my mind and writes down precisely what my brilliant mind envisions, sometimes it lasts for hours, sometimes days, years.. but in the end, it's always worth it.

    • @matthiskalble3621
      @matthiskalble3621 Рік тому +4

      ​@@davititchanturia I normally brute force it and use all by products

  • @Mooooov0815
    @Mooooov0815 Рік тому +389

    Also an underrated way of improving: learning a US layout.
    I’m from Germany, we use a QWERTZ ISO Lay-out with our lovely special chars ÖÄÜ. Since they take space, commonly used symbols in programming like (){}[] are all on a shift layer on the num row. This sucks ass for programming as it’s extremely inconvenient and unergonomic. Switching my keyboard layout to an US one was easily one of the biggest quality of life improvements I had last year (and if you have a QMK keyboard you can stop customize beloved ÖÄÜ chars to be reasonably easy to reach).

    • @lordp
      @lordp Рік тому +7

      same for the italian layout

    • @lone_squirrel
      @lone_squirrel Рік тому +6

      I use US-Intl with dead keys removed, so I still have äüö ready (and some other things like €). It's so much better than Ctrl-Alt-7 every time I want to open a bracket

    • @DavidBonelo
      @DavidBonelo Рік тому +23

      same for *Spanish,* I recommend the *US International layout with dead keys,* using this one you can type tildes áéíóú and ñ with alt-gr + vowels/n
      I also recommend changing the language to english because some programs change their shortcuts acording to it, but for this *PLEASE USE ANY OTHER ENGLISH THAN THE US ONE, THAT SHIT USES mm/dd/yyyy FORMAT AND IMPERIAL MEASURES!!*

    • @rolzix
      @rolzix Рік тому +1

      I just did this a couple of days ago and already loving it. Coming from a Finnish layout. I just stopped mid-code thinking I can't take these keybindings anymore. Switching with Windows key + space (switching keyboard layout) to get my öä when needed.

    • @lastrae8129
      @lastrae8129 Рік тому +4

      azerty is actively fighting against you when programming

  • @animanaut
    @animanaut Рік тому +335

    one thing i noticed when doing screenshares or pairprogramming is: if you think speed does not matter, you have not witnessed a slow typer that on top of it uses his mouse and not a single shortcut other than copy pasta. a great exercise in patience, let me tell you. try it. it might change your mind..

    • @dhillaz
      @dhillaz Рік тому +54

      There are few things more painful than watching someone slowly selecting pieces of text with their mouse.

    • @casperes0912
      @casperes0912 Рік тому +14

      ​@@dhillaz Had a colleague once who looked at his keyboard while typing with just his index fingers

    • @lalithrockz
      @lalithrockz Рік тому +2

      ​@@casperes0912lol

    • @victorgabr
      @victorgabr Рік тому +16

      Yeah, I totally understand that pain. And the opposite is amazing, one day a co-worker was blown away watching me using Vim and flying around editing text without touching the mouse. VIM for life..❤

    • @thisurathenuka8362
      @thisurathenuka8362 Рік тому +2

      lmao. I feel you 🙌

  • @tears_falling
    @tears_falling Рік тому +79

    I used to type around 90wpm, but then I had a repetitive stress injury. Couldn't touch the keyboard, couldn't even hold a spoon in my hand for long enough to eat properly. The doctor said I won't be able to get back to programming ever again. I have partially recovered since then, and I've been typing daily for a couple of months. I'm much slower than I've used to be, and it annoyed me a lot at first, but I've learned to work differently. I'm feeling like I can get stuff done in a decent amount of time, even though I'm not a blazingly fast typist. I'd say not to stress about your typing speed, and always pay attention to ergonomics.

    • @spencerwilson-softwaredeve6384
      @spencerwilson-softwaredeve6384 Рік тому +27

      Ergonomics and longevity over speed, typing fast is beneficial but not worth destroying your hands over

    • @banatibor83
      @banatibor83 Рік тому +1

      Get an ergonomic keyboard. First it is terrible to type on them but then it becomes better than on a regular keyboard.

    • @tears_falling
      @tears_falling Рік тому +2

      @@banatibor83 I'm using a Cloud9 ErgoTKL!

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Рік тому +1

      @@banatibor83 u understand that an ergonomic keyboard is not a medicine not magic write
      It’s still bad
      Less worse doesn’t mean good

    • @johanneswelsch
      @johanneswelsch Рік тому +1

      read my comment I left today, you simply need a different keyboard (cherry MX red silent). I also had the same problem, all fingers felt like broken, I had to use my middle finger to use the left mouse button because the index finger hurt so much). Now I do typing tests all day long without a problem.

  • @rewrose2838
    @rewrose2838 Рік тому +66

    Typing fast is part of the whole "fail faster" thing

    • @vadiks20032
      @vadiks20032 Рік тому +8

      as a fast typer i sometimes think of a word, type the word in.... but then i look back at at and see THAT I WROTE THE WRONG WORD
      also sometimes my finger presses the button a bit too weakly so i end up typing stuff lik ths

  • @dhillaz
    @dhillaz Рік тому +18

    If you're not a vim motions person, learn Home, End, Ctrl+Left/Right arrows (and holding shift key while doing so to select) - it will change your life.

    • @hidoryy
      @hidoryy Рік тому +3

      true. also alt or ctrl alt depending on the IDE + arrow up or down will move the line of code up or down, handy if you are the type of person that copies a code block and paste somewhere else just to move it.

    • @ThisDaveAndThatJohn
      @ThisDaveAndThatJohn 11 місяців тому

      basic shit

    • @monochosen
      @monochosen 7 місяців тому +1

      true.

  • @arijanj
    @arijanj Рік тому +87

    Agreed on everything except the monkeytype take, I think monkeytype boosts your speed by a lot because the words are easy to type and as soon as you spend some time on it they start getting ingrained in your muscle memory, making your results even faster. This means that even if you don't fully know and understand the layout in your heart you can get a really good score by typing easy words.

    • @LDFort
      @LDFort Рік тому +9

      agreed, i have 160 on monkeytype 60second but still can’t touch type special characters, the best practice for programming would probably be practicing special characters on monkeytype along with quotes. The 200 word list is more of an ego boost than anything (although majority of words inside sentences are within the 200 word list)

    • @tbqhwyf
      @tbqhwyf Рік тому +6

      Monkeytype doesn't boost your speed by a lot, *because* it only contains the 500 or so most frequent words in the language. If you want to get faster, it's probably better to chat online or use typeracer with quotes from books that also include numbers and punctuation. If you're only good at typing the easier words, or you only play shorter modes such as 10 word or 15 seconds, you'll lose a lot of speed on more difficult words and when you need to type for a little longer

    • @maratisaw
      @maratisaw Рік тому +2

      You can make it more difficult by changing the "language" to English 5k or 10k and get more complicated words

    • @videoguy640
      @videoguy640 Рік тому

      Is there a type testing site that tests typing text that resembles a programming language? Lots of parenthesis, camel or snake case var names, colons, etc could really help

    • @AppleGameification
      @AppleGameification Рік тому +1

      @@tbqhwyf by boosts your speed a lot, the OP means that your WPM on monkeytype is inflated compared to your actual WPM in the real world.

  • @tbqhwyf
    @tbqhwyf Рік тому +14

    You can, in fact, think faster than 100 words per minute. According to what I found on google, the average talking speed is 150-200 words per minute! Stenotypes (used in court to write down everything people say) can effortlessly reach speeds of up to 300 words per minute because a keyboard user won't keep up with the speech or will get tired very fast

  • @richardwilson5769
    @richardwilson5769 Рік тому +15

    Sometime last year I was still looking at the keyboard when I typed. I decided to started practicing proper typing techniques for the very same reasons you mentioned in the video and I've improved from 30+ words per minute to 50+ words per minute. I don't practice as much as I should so I haven't been improving quickly but it makes such a huge difference in focus not having to constantly be distracted to look at the keyboard.

  • @kissmyaft
    @kissmyaft Рік тому +23

    Hey! A couple of weeks ago after watching one of your videos, i just installed neovim (tried it like 12 years ago but eventually switched to "modern" IDEs) and went straight to monkeytype. I'm nearly 40, and been programming since i was like 10, and i NEVER learned proper fast typing. I always thought i was quite fast, like 40 to 50 WPM, except punctuation and special symbols which i always struggled with. Now, after just TWO weeks, i'm confidently typing at 58 WPM with punctuation (still struggling a bit with special symbols but i'm still faster than i ever was), and i'm realizing that i actually AM faster with vim now than i ever was with VS code or whatever. Wow. Again i'm approaching 40 and it should be naturally difficult for me to relearn the old habits, but it literally took just 2 weeks to become more productive than i ever was.

    • @ThePrimeTimeagen
      @ThePrimeTimeagen  Рік тому +14

      This is just one of the coolest things ever. I absolutely love this.

  • @_stevek
    @_stevek Рік тому +30

    The average typing speed is around 40wpm. 60wpm is statistically pretty fast. Idk where he got statistically moderate is 60wpm. I think there is a point where typing speed doesn't matter. In my opinion for programming if you are above that 40wpm I think you should be fine and I haven't seen a huge quality difference in the programmers who type considerably faster than that and who are in the 50wpm category. But it is your job so I think you should be slightly above average when typing.

    • @TurtleKwitty
      @TurtleKwitty Рік тому +17

      Think thats the differenc between "average popluation wide" and "Average person who works using a computer"

    • @morosis82
      @morosis82 Рік тому +1

      I'm about 80wpm doing prose (the quote option on monkeytype) and about 50wpm writing code with symbols and numbers.
      In code that's about as fast as I can go while making sure that what I'm getting down accurately represents my idea anyway.

    • @darukutsu
      @darukutsu Рік тому

      Touchtyping will make your default 50-60. Everything else (looking at keyboard...) is not considered typing.

    • @_stevek
      @_stevek Рік тому +2

      @@darukutsu Not sure where you came up with that number. Touch typing is pretty much the default nowadays and the average is around 40wpm. Idk where you came up with a default of 50-60.

    • @darukutsu
      @darukutsu Рік тому

      @@_stevek i mean everyone in my touchtyping class (around 30 people) were around 50-60. And some of them weren't even computerphils. Just some accountancy guys.

  • @J_CtheEngineer
    @J_CtheEngineer Рік тому +4

    Interesting. I’m a mechanical engineer with a focus on design, but I also explore ideas with my hands, my sketch my thoughts in 3D design software because I’m fast enough to iterate on what I want and I’m not hindered by the software. Just an interesting parallel

  • @PhilippeCarphin
    @PhilippeCarphin Рік тому +4

    One thing touch typing helps for is it frees up brain power for thinking about code. It's not important to type super fast but it is so useful to type *effortlessly* at a decent speed.

  • @tedchirvasiu
    @tedchirvasiu Рік тому +5

    I think it is more about knowing key shortcuts to navigate rather than just typing raw text from your brain.
    Reaching for the mouse is a way bigger time and focus killer in most cases.

  • @AlxFG_
    @AlxFG_ Рік тому +2

    I started learning to touch type around 2 years ago, I learnt it by first making sure that my fingers were in the right place while typing looking down at the keyboard and once I felt comfortable with that, I forced myself to type while only looking at the screen no matter what I was doing. Because I talked a lot on discord I got a lot of practice typing, and because of this even without focused typing practice I've gotten pretty good at typing. On a side note being able to touch type is a godsend if you're trying to copy written notes into digital because you don't even need to think about typing and you just need to focus on the written notes without looking at the screen at all.

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Рік тому

      You can take a pic
      But hey how did you practice it ??

  • @scottb4029
    @scottb4029 Рік тому +10

    Good point , I am by no means fast. Appoximately a 60wpm guy. I figure out so much by getting it on the machine. I think I know what it will do, but there is always something that I learn through getting the original idea coded.

  • @Dimkar3000
    @Dimkar3000 Рік тому +1

    My opinion is that depending on the task you have to implement. A bug where you have to look around code and error states and bounce between the ui and the debugger is a task that typing fast makes no difference. Now a feature where you implement something new and you have to create a lot of code that works as a shell for the idea you implement may be more affected. It probably depends on the nature of what you write and how verbose it is. I found out that in my work I have enough time implement features that it doesn't matter.

  • @tomekhome
    @tomekhome Місяць тому

    I'm not quite in the programming, but Network Engineering and design and what You said about typing fast is totally true. To me this is the most important skill that I've ever picked up. Writing documentation, responding to shit emails, responding on slack, it all just adds up. Same thing in console, it's just invaluable. Typing fast with the least amount of errors is king.

  • @jeezusjr
    @jeezusjr Рік тому +3

    As someone that suffers from severe RSI, I cannot type on a laptop for more than an hour. OpenAPI Whisperer has changed my typing life. All emails and Slack messages are dictated now. Use the Whisper C++ client. It's excellent and it's offline. But Theo is absolutely right about mechanical keyboards. They take more actuation force and after a few years your muscles in your arms become very sore and overused. I'm now using a CharaChorder, which is like having joysticks under my fingers and it's helping a lot with the damage mechanical keyboards have done. But the learning curve is like Emacs learning curve, but it's change or die for me with my programming career.

  • @arthurdent8086
    @arthurdent8086 Рік тому

    I'm somewhere around 100, and if I can't commit what I'm thinking fast enough, i forget before I'm finished. You are spot on!

  • @alextasarov1341
    @alextasarov1341 Рік тому +4

    My biggest problem with typing tests is trying to read what I’m supposed to type while typing. When I am coding it’s like double the speed because I know what I want.
    For me, (I hate reading) my brain just constantly has to go from read-type-read-type and that moment of transition just kills me.

    • @sethikablip8607
      @sethikablip8607 5 місяців тому

      I think using monkeytype solves the issue

  • @freezingcicada6852
    @freezingcicada6852 Рік тому +10

    If its typing long emails or essays, etc. I feel like the biggest hurdle is spelling mistakes. Also, after watching you I tried out the ALT TAB keybind to switch between programs and had much more enjoyment coding with one monitor instead of using two. Two monitors is nice but neck gets swore way to fast and I still use a PDF or online docs for keywords/ examples while fiddling with things. Or re-typing parts of code that was decompiled to see individual chunks

    • @georgehelyar
      @georgehelyar Рік тому +2

      You could try splitting a single monitor if two monitors is too much for you. Use a tiled window manager on Linux, or e.g. fancy zones on Windows (part of power toys).
      Honestly though, 2+ monitors make coding much easier. If you have to move your head too much maybe you're sitting too close, or you could try switching one to vertical.
      Also, if you didn't know, the convention is that alt bindings do windows and ctrl bindings do tabs, so e.g. alt+tab and alt+shift+tab switch windows, while ctrl+tab and ctrl+shift+tab switch tabs within one window.

    • @Sammysapphira
      @Sammysapphira Рік тому +5

      You didn't know about alt tab? Not making fun of you, I'm just impressed. It's probably the 2nd most common shortcut on a PC next to Ctrl C and Ctrl V for copy paste

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Рік тому

      I don’t get it been using switch between app since I was 12 or something
      And still see the benefits of multi-screen setup
      Use Alt Tab can also change apps to other screen as well

  • @lowmagnet
    @lowmagnet Рік тому +1

    I had QD Kinesis Ergo around 1999, 2000 or so. It was really good when it continued to work. The modern ones are really nice and I'm considering one to work along side my ergodox. (what can I say, I'm always a grass is greener person)

  • @CottidaeSEA
    @CottidaeSEA Рік тому +1

    Typing fast to get testable code out faster is worth a lot to me. While a lot of the coding process is just thinking and planning, the faster I can get runnable code, the faster I can see if I'm approaching things correctly. There is absolutely no downside to being able to type fast as long as you're not just making a bunch of mistakes while doing so.

  • @NickSteffen
    @NickSteffen 2 місяці тому

    For me I’ve never had issue typing to keep up with my thoughts. I’ve never measure myself but I’d be surprised if we’re above average in typing. Usually between code snippets, templates, autocomplete and copilot I’m not typing a whole lot all at once anyways.
    Just as a curiosity how good are the LSPs being used in VIM, maybe if they’re not quite as good as some of the other tools. I’m mostly in visual studio and vscode. (C# with a sprinkling of angular when I have a bad day)
    Usually autocomplete up two characters in. I used to be over the opinion that I could type faster than the autocomplete, but one thing I’ve subconsciously picked up is that if autocomplete fails, it’s usually an early indicator something is wrong with your code.

  • @wlockuz4467
    @wlockuz4467 Рік тому +1

    Watching you increase the speed just so the video would end and you could talk was hilarious 🤣🤣

  • @hotrodhunk7389
    @hotrodhunk7389 Рік тому +3

    I can type really fast with normal typing. I just got into coding and man I'm having trouble with typos... I found a definitely helps if I just slow down a bit and double check that there's no typos as I'm typing it which is different from how I would type a regular paper just bang it all out and let autocorrect take care of the few mistakes.

  • @Nathan00at78Uuiu
    @Nathan00at78Uuiu Рік тому +1

    There was a course in college that was a graduate seminar for writing philosophical papers and it had a reputation for being brutal. The professor would rip everyone’s papers to shreds and people had to write many revisions before getting it accepted. That professor said he knew only one person in the world who could write a final draft diet time through. So probably it’s the same with coding. Maybe 10 people ever can code first time through a solution.

  • @lydianlights
    @lydianlights Рік тому +5

    This video inspired me to put black electrical tape on my keys so that I STOP LOOKING AT THEM. I _can_ touch type in theory but I still look out of habit (because I never really learned properly) and it really keeps me from improving. I'm at a BLAZINGLY SLOW speed of 30 WPM after coding professionally for 5 years (and even longer as a hobby)... It's time to improve.

    • @JustSomeAussie1
      @JustSomeAussie1 Рік тому +1

      that's really sad

    • @lydianlights
      @lydianlights Рік тому +2

      @@JustSomeAussie1 for me it's not really sad, just mildly annoying that I've built some bad habits. but luckily it's something that's relatively easy to fix. I've only been at this for like 8 hours so far today and I already feel my brain shifting modes.

    • @svenzverg7321
      @svenzverg7321 Рік тому +1

      Just be aware, that contrary to popular belief one's ability to type is very individual. People who are doing good just tend to be more vocal. Here's my example.
      I started training regularly when i was at 35 WPM. In a couple of months of half-arsed training, 15 min per day, sometimes skipping whole weeks, I was sitting comfortably at 45 WPM full of enthusiasm and myself. And that's when i hit my personal wall. Next two months I had no progress, while increasing the intensity of training. I end up spending half an hour every day, no skipping. Getting to 50 WPM took about 10 months. Now, another year later I just started reaching 60 WPM on good days. Add to that that I spend the rest of the day in front of computer coding and shitposting relentlessly.
      So don't be discouraged by possible subpar results. If you put time in it, the improvement will follow. It just might be really not as great as >100 WPM gang would make you believe.

  • @cathalogrady2331
    @cathalogrady2331 Рік тому +2

    Another thing that people don't mention about typing speed, is that reading text and translating is not what your used to while typing. I notice that I type in general much faster from my thoughts than from reading text.

  • @SimGunther
    @SimGunther Рік тому

    Thinking better and focusing on keyboard shortcut knowledge before typing fast is a major plus

  • @ajmash9745
    @ajmash9745 Рік тому +3

    respect to @ThePrimeTimeagen for not being ass suck and @t3dotgg for being a true elitist in his respected field. This is what a healthy debate looks like gentleman. 🙏

  • @kelvinpina3392
    @kelvinpina3392 Рік тому

    What do you think of software? I mean software that lets do things fast, as for example I'm using helix, previously I was using vim and it's so fast for me to take a note of an idea, project or whatever, that's why I use it as note taking app, the same in my mobile I replaced obsidian for an app that weights less than 1mb. Another thing is that web software is a productivity killer, for example having to wait, the browser to open, then log in etc.

    • @Shadowserpant00
      @Shadowserpant00 11 місяців тому

      You are standing at the apex of editing speed with Helix

  • @JohnDoe-bu3qp
    @JohnDoe-bu3qp 11 місяців тому +1

    I agree with everything you said about good penmanship.
    My writing still sucks though 😆 I did several years of calligraphy and it just didn't help. I had a teacher who would say my writing was the sketching of a map of hell (can't translate it exactly).

  • @bradleyfrueh2761
    @bradleyfrueh2761 Рік тому +1

    I think what was said was anything above 80-90 is faster than you can think, so diminishing returns beyond this threshold.

  • @carborundum72
    @carborundum72 Рік тому +2

    As a slow thinker, I kind of disagree here a bit. Not saying typing speed doesn't matter at all. Thing is, people just work differently. For somebody that thinks really fast, he might feel handicapped by his typing speed more than somebody that is a slow thinker.
    The thing is, with what I struggled in school the most is getting my stuff (like exams) done in time. I had good grades. But I had to adopt to my personal handicaps. I rarely had time to double check my test answers, or have a second try at one of the answers. I learned to have to nail my results first try to improve my grades. Thinking faster isn't really an option if you naturally think slow, because you are out of your comfort zone and just produce garbage at that point.
    Honestly, my pet peeve when I watch somebody type is if they just start typing and erase the same line 3 times to change it, like in fever dream. How was this faster than typing it correctly the first time?
    We have a saying in my country that can be applied to typing, too. It goes like: "If you don't use your brain, you have to use your feet." Because you have to walk twice to the store if you forgot half of the things you needed to buy, for example. Can be applied to your hands, too. 😏

  • @raymanovich3254
    @raymanovich3254 Рік тому

    I'm looking to switch away from qwerty and considering either colemak-dh or programmer's dvorak. Does anyone have any advice or experience to share?

    • @troyf1
      @troyf1 Рік тому

      I went to Dvorak about 10 years ago. I found a gamified typing tutor app and used it for about an hour a day for a week. Then switched. No going back. There is a huge hit. I remember the first day trying to get out an email and being so frustrated that my brain was about a paragraph ahead of my fingers. Had high frustration for a few days. After that, I was able to function normally... about three weeks I was past my prior max typing speed. No regrets.

  • @1Caja
    @1Caja Рік тому

    Switching from ISO-DE to ANSI-US with blank keycaps improved my coding speed by alot.
    Now I'm about to swap to a corne split keyboard and another layout (maybe Dvorak).
    Not looking forward to the frustrations in the first weeks 😅

  •  Рік тому

    I think somewhere in between the quotes and the top 50 english words on Monkeytype is where the real speed is. The time you save not doing proper punctuation more or less adds up to about the same time i waste from writing nonsensical sentences.
    As for the "thinking most of the time" thing. I definitely spend a lot of time thinking while not typing. But right after that comes a ton of typing with very little thinking. I don't think my average typing speed over a day is particularly high, but when you get into the zone, typing fast just makes it much easier to stay on track. And then it also feels nice.

  • @ianmcgaunn7505
    @ianmcgaunn7505 Рік тому +1

    'i'm an okay typer - i get around 150wpm' --- such a crazy flex. Also, none of the best programmers I know are 'one finger types' other than engineers over 70 who started on punch cards or some shit

  • @TurtleKwitty
    @TurtleKwitty Рік тому +2

    Used to be at 140-160 depending on the run in highschool/early college but now ten years later cause of hand issues down to 66 really feel the difference mentally blehh

    • @spencerwilson-softwaredeve6384
      @spencerwilson-softwaredeve6384 Рік тому +1

      Currently 24 years old and able to type upwards of 150 wpm, maintaining that speed for while begins to hurt my hands so I need to force myself to take my time and go 90-100 wpm.

  • @GooseTower
    @GooseTower Рік тому +2

    I never learned to touch type and reckon I could type at ~35 wpm with 5 fingers while staring at the keyboard. Constantly looking up and down and figuring out how to type what I want has started to really hamper my train of thought. I started training a month ago, and now I can touch type at ~60 wpm. Coding is now a much smoother and satisfying experience. The goal is 100 wpm.
    P.S. Have you heard of the corne/crkbd? It's a 42 key, open-source, split ergo keyboard I'll be building this week.

    • @ky3ow
      @ky3ow Рік тому

      good job, keep it up)

  • @jackdanielson1997
    @jackdanielson1997 6 місяців тому

    Most of programming is thinking, planning, discussing, code moving/navigating/reading/revising. Typing speed is definitely not the bottleneck in that whole process, and I agree for people over 80ish, you are most definitely fine

  • @Burgo361
    @Burgo361 5 місяців тому

    The slower I type the longer I have to hold ideas in my head, the longer I hold ideas in my head the more I lose my train of thought, then I have to try to remember my idea or resolve the same thing again. So yeah to me getting ideas out of my head so that I can move my brain forward instead of going in circles is the most important thing.

  • @stephfh
    @stephfh Рік тому

    Back in secondary school, when we learnt touch typing, we had a whole book full of those monkeytype challenges and spent 2 hours per week in a school year doing this, for learning how to touch-type they are actually pretty good, but - as you said - it won't do much for your typing speed in a real situation.
    I get a constant 150wpm at monkeytype as well, but I don't think it does much for real situations, with monkeytype you are just constantly training the same words over and over, you are not writing sentences neither are you writing down your thoughts on some matter you are discussing. If you want to type fast, you have to get fast at translating your thoughts to your hands (digitally or with pen and paper).

  • @magfal
    @magfal 5 місяців тому

    I'm one of those that can explore ideas in my brain, without a screen and keyboard.
    Mostly happens in SQL and through thousands of iterations in a dream.
    Does happen when awake but not quite as often.

  • @BoopyTheFox
    @BoopyTheFox Місяць тому

    I felt the same transitioning from traditional to ergosplit keeb (qwerty)
    First day - "I CANT THINK I CAN'T BE CREATIVE AAAAHHH"
    4th day - Ok i'm back at 69wpm but i still can't think
    Week - Ok we're getting there
    Two weeks - It's time to switch to blanks
    Month - wait, keyboards can be in ONE PIECE as well???

  • @jacobhuiet4217
    @jacobhuiet4217 4 місяці тому

    I used to peck type QWERTY but when I decided to learn home rows I used the chance to try out Dvorak. After I got good at that ergonomics became a factor so I switched to split keyboards. I’m now waiting on a glove 80 and will try home row mods and that might be the final evolution. We shall see

  • @bkucenski
    @bkucenski Рік тому

    I have never been able to get beyond what would look like "hunt and peck" to a casual observer but it's muscle memory and I can type very fast. I learn heavily on my first two fingers and thumb on each hand.
    Muscle memory and being able to not look at your hands and being able to correct your errors without looking down matter a whole lot more than any particular way you type. However your fingers get the keyboard memorized is less important than them having the keyboard memorized.

  • @olafbaeyens8955
    @olafbaeyens8955 Рік тому

    It is what I do, I create multiple code results and remove the ones that are worse so in the end I only get the best code that I can think of.
    And if you have no inspiration how to write the code, by starting to type you get more inspiration and better results.

  • @joshuakb2
    @joshuakb2 Рік тому

    I recently spent some time trying to use VS Code over a slow SSH connection. I could still type as fast as I wanted to, but feedback was very laggy. It significantly reduced my productivity. I ended up having to clone the project and run VS Code locally instead.
    (I know vim would've been better over SSH but I'm not a vim power user yet, and I was making changes in many files)

  • @retrofizz727
    @retrofizz727 4 місяці тому

    I felt that frustration of going fast, then slow, then fast again, when I learnt touch typing with 9 fingers. It's not like I was crazy fast, I was peaking at like 80wpm with 3 fingers, and making a shit ton of mistakes. But the fact that I had to re learn entirely how to type was so hard. It took me like a month to get back to 80 and that was actually painful. I could not even go back to my previous technique when I needed to do something quick, cuz I actually forgot how to type with 3 fingers pretty quickly so I remember being like stuck at 40wpm and couldn't do anything about it.

  • @someoneonetheinternet
    @someoneonetheinternet Рік тому

    When typing fast is important to me is when I have a design in my head and I need to get it into code before I start forgetting details. Once its in code then I can actually evaluate the design to see of its good.

  • @Fanaro
    @Fanaro Рік тому

    Typing wihout looking is what's important, and it's much more important than typing fast.

  • @illegalsmirf
    @illegalsmirf Рік тому +1

    Typing slow is about as useful as having a big bushy moustache - i.e. not at all! 🙂

  • @d4rks1gm39
    @d4rks1gm39 4 місяці тому

    Its been so long since I have had to write something that it is excruciatingly painful to write more than a couple sentences lol

  • @user-ov5nd1fb7s
    @user-ov5nd1fb7s Рік тому +2

    Those things you talk about only matter when you write pedestrian code. If you are working on databases, operating systems, compilers, it doesn't matter even if you are below 80. Most problems are so difficult that you are sitting and thinking most of the time than typing.

    • @hb-robo
      @hb-robo Рік тому

      I was going to say, I don't feel like I relate to much of this, though admittedly I am only around 60wpm and could probably appreciate a speed increase in non-work contexts. I work in database design and most of my time is spent plumbing the problem mentally. I do figure out issues with my ideas while writing code skeletons, so it is good to have that sort of active hands-on thinking process, but I could never in a million years spend half an hour on 500 lines of code and compare multiple ideas like this guy, diving in with manic energy doesn't do anything. It kinda feels like the advice here is "think faster," which, yeah I'll keep that in mind, lol.

  • @anonymous49125
    @anonymous49125 4 місяці тому

    I was getting wrist and arm pain when writing (software engineer for decades, writing for hours each and every day --- like... a lot...)... BIGGEST THING I CAN SAY IS: wrist pads, both for keyboard and mouse. Wrist pain and numbness went away and never came back - and that was like a decade ago now. Not a doctor, but that worked 100% for me.
    Also on the subject - get a good mattress too... really shell out for a great one. Easily best money you can spend.

  • @t3dotgg
    @t3dotgg Рік тому +2

    Hopefully I can afford to employ you by the time my wrists give out

  • @johngagon
    @johngagon Рік тому +1

    I typed fast from playing MUDs. I would crawl a town with memorized sequences to find the perfect NPC to fight. You had to type fast to be able to cast spells, flee, various actions and conversations. Everyone was fast there. I think my peak wpm score was around 120 but if I had a mavis program, it would show top speed around 160 for short stretches. It all depends on the ease of the words on qwerty. I know a dvorak users are always going to be faster.
    I agree with the premise of learning curve for long term efficiency. Do I do that? I'm halfway there. I think being a fast "spotter", visually finding things and recalling where things are and fast searching is just as useful. Walking others who don't do this is paaaaainnnnfulll.

  • @thomassynths
    @thomassynths Рік тому +1

    When Jippity5 comes out, it will have neural interface support. RIP typing.

  • @Crihs95
    @Crihs95 Рік тому

    When Prime shouts he literally sounds exactly like Charlie from Always sunny

  • @j.r.r.tolkien8724
    @j.r.r.tolkien8724 Рік тому

    My problem isn't typing. My problem is what to type.

  • @chebrubin
    @chebrubin Рік тому

    Lol we're you around for the Apple IIc?

  • @anonymous49125
    @anonymous49125 4 місяці тому

    it's not a matter of putting letters on a page, but the order of those letters... and that's the hard part that is the actual bottleneck

  • @ardnys35
    @ardnys35 Рік тому +1

    i am not very fast, like 80-90 in monketype. but i am now more accurate and i write around my thought speed. it really makes a big difference because now very common tasks take very little time. even stuff like googling something, texting or writing a report for a homework. especially those straight typing tasks. it's painful when you always have to look at the keyboard. now i can almost shut my mind off and go wild on the keeb, get it done in little time. it sounds trivial and many people don't care to learn it for a month or so, but the value is huge.

    • @lydianlights
      @lydianlights Рік тому +3

      80-90 is very fast, btw. programmers have a skewed view of what is and isn't fast for typing speed, lol.

    • @NathanHedglin
      @NathanHedglin Рік тому

      80-90 is great. You don't need to be at 150wpm 😂.

  • @ramQi
    @ramQi Рік тому +1

    I usual use typeracer to train my typing speed,I could type 70wpm at typeracer and 80 at monkeytype, I feel typeracer reflect my typing speed more in the real world

  • @meltygear5955
    @meltygear5955 Рік тому

    Great, now I have to improve my typing speed AND penmanship. I always was the kid who held the pen differently than everyone else, and my letters look like Comic Sans if Comic Sans were screaming for help.

  • @NathanHedglin
    @NathanHedglin Рік тому

    I mapped holding Z to CTRL and X to ALT. Absolutely changed my life 😂

  • @charg1nmalaz0r51
    @charg1nmalaz0r51 Рік тому +1

    Whenever i watch people type fast, i witness someone fucking up words and sentences over and over then fix, and fix and fix and fix. Then they get the three words they were trying to type. Overall it takes longer lol. I have witnessed this guy do the same thing in his videos when he writes code lol.

  • @Oswee
    @Oswee Рік тому +2

    When typing is a pain, you will avoid iteration. You will be afraid to break things. And you will learn much more less because you will feel constant background foggy frustration on every step you make. Touch typing will make you to love taking notes, research, surf the internet, refactor, move code around, flex on others, try this, try that... it is 100000% the very very very first skill you should learn before making any progress in real programming.
    Most ironic thing is, that I can't name the Colemak layout off of my head, but I can type on it. :D I really need to think, which key is which when I do look at my blank key caps keyboard.

    • @ycombinator765
      @ycombinator765 4 місяці тому

      I looked for this kind of comment for like last 8 to 10 mins. You are absolutely correct

  • @caoutchouc-cc
    @caoutchouc-cc 6 місяців тому

    I'm a software dev for 8 years now and type 18 w/min. Ill start my training now!

  • @progste
    @progste 5 місяців тому

    Is it worth it to try Dvorak?

  • @nothinleader
    @nothinleader 4 місяці тому

    The original video is talking about diminishing returns though, there's a big difference between a peck typer and someone typing 70+ wpm which most people can attain easily. Going above that may take significant effort which in most cases isn't worth it

  • @Kabelman
    @Kabelman Рік тому +1

    If you can type 300 lines of code in a short amount of time that is defined by your typing speed, your problem is not difficult and it's not worth the time of very good devs.

  • @HyperionStudiosDE
    @HyperionStudiosDE 6 місяців тому +1

    In order to type fast you also have to type correctly. If you restart your test until you have a good one the result is meaningless.
    Also by default Monkeytype only uses the most common English words without upper case letters or symbols. It's not very representative of real text or code.

  • @fatmeatm8878
    @fatmeatm8878 Рік тому +1

    other things to take into consideration, typing test are not your coding speed. personally if i code i hit 110 wpm but with typing test as i read word not in my native language i hit 60 wpm

  • @qm3ster
    @qm3ster Рік тому +1

    Wait, what keyboard is that? 🤔

  • @casperes0912
    @casperes0912 Рік тому +2

    OK; Yes. Typing speed matters. But fo you agree with Theo that there is a point beyond which it no longer matters? I mean I assume theoretically yes, a billion words per minutes probably isn't helpful cause the mind can keep up, but an achievable upper bound? Theo claims 80 is the point where improvement no longer matters that much. Do you agree with that? 90? 100? 140? Is there a point where you are basically satisfied and feel the bottleneck is solidly enough elsewhere to where it's not worth trying to improve it any further? I have very bad eyesight so my bottleneck when doing the online tests is changing which parts of the text I am reading. I read code a lot faster than that because I can adjust my editor fully and the flow of code is more predictable so where you lay your eyes and such is faster to navigate. But the difference between going from thought to text vs. reading and writing what I'm reading is pretty big to me. But on an online test I just took now I reached 70WPM. And every line break I had to pause completely because the page I used moved the text around on line breaks and I was never sure if it wanted me to hit space or enter at the end of lines so I imagine I'm somewhere in 80+ if it's from thought to text instead of reading->text.

  • @MenkoDany
    @MenkoDany 9 місяців тому

    The thing about Dvorak is that as soon as you have to use a qwerty keyboard again it's like you're a beginner again

  • @zyriab5797
    @zyriab5797 8 місяців тому

    I used to type at 120wpm on AZERTY, using 3 + 2 fingers. Jumped on Colemak-Dh and learned to actually touch type 9 months ago and I'm at 70-80 max, although I don't ever practice speed anymore, only programming.

  • @the_jawker
    @the_jawker 2 місяці тому

    I was thinking, hot dang Theo talks faster than usual. But that's because I was listening 2x and you did 1.5x

  • @tomasruzicka9835
    @tomasruzicka9835 Рік тому

    you can type fast enough with looking at the keyboard, it's the slowness while not looking at the keyboard that is painfull

  • @E8A590
    @E8A590 Рік тому +12

    Hi Prime, I agree with you its important skills, however it doesnt mean you are a better programmer. I type 60 WPM and I dont actually code that fast. I rethink my ideas and stop a lot to think about a solution.

  • @delofon
    @delofon Рік тому

    10:01 I actually feel like it's vice versa for me. I get idk like 120 words on average on monkeytype but I also have a constant feeling that I'm artificially speeding up to get a higher score so I think I have somewhere about 100-110 words when I usually type. I've never tested this though.

  • @EmperorFool
    @EmperorFool Рік тому +2

    If you didn't have to worry about RSI pain, would you have made the jump to Dvorak? Are you faster now seven years later?

  • @m4rt_
    @m4rt_ Рік тому

    I used to type 90wpm but now I only type ca 50-60 after trying to learn touch typing and getting a split keyboard... im working my way back up again, but it is taking some time.

  • @peculiar-coding-endeavours
    @peculiar-coding-endeavours Рік тому

    I live in the few parts of the world where everybody uses an AZERTY keyboard. Still type mostly in English, and it's a bit harder apparently. It's all what you're used to I guess. I always sit around 100wpm on monkeytype, which is more than enough for programming.

  • @YannMetalhead
    @YannMetalhead Рік тому

    As someone that reached 80 WPM a few weeks ago, is kind funny seeing it be considered the minimal speed acceptable XD

  • @adventuresinbytes
    @adventuresinbytes 7 місяців тому

    Typing on my laptop on the couch has given me terrible RSI.
    Just say no kids.

  • @jonathanduck5333
    @jonathanduck5333 Рік тому +1

    I achieved 405 WPM once, but it probably does not count. I wrote a small script that webscraped the site to get the correct words and controlled the keyboard to input them😂

  • @cyberneticbutterfly8506
    @cyberneticbutterfly8506 6 місяців тому

    When people say they spend time thinking what they mean *isn't* necessarily that they stop typing the code while thinking through things in a very theoretical way for a long time.
    It's that when they code they have lots of small pauses so they can't type at blazing speed.

  • @Rakkoonn
    @Rakkoonn Рік тому

    Even if it wouldn't make much of a difference, learning to type decently fast is only a small time commitment for a skill you'll use for the rest of your life.

  • @key7644
    @key7644 Рік тому +1

    2 fingers and a thumb, 20-25 wpm, and watching the keyboard while typing is good enough for doing the job. been doing it for 15 years now !

    • @GooseTower
      @GooseTower Рік тому +1

      Sure, typing at 20 wpm is good enough, but typing at 40 is twice as good and not even difficult. Choosing to hunt and peck with 2 fingers instead of touch typing with 10 is like choosing an old gutenberg printing press over a modern printer. They can both print a book, but a modern printer will do it automatically, quickly, and effortlessly. Practice 15-30 mins a day for two weeks, and you can type automatically, quickly, and effortlessly for life. It's so worth it.

    • @key7644
      @key7644 Рік тому

      @@GooseTower ok, I will do it 20 min a day for a month and let you know my progress. thank you .

    • @GooseTower
      @GooseTower Рік тому

      @@key7644 how's typing going?

  • @demolazer
    @demolazer Рік тому +1

    IMO knowing your IDE inside out and switching with keyboard shortcuts as naturally as breathing, is far more important than raw typing speed.

  • @yannick5099
    @yannick5099 Рік тому +1

    Typing speed doesn't matter. It doesn't speed up all that meetings and those DevOps pipelines that need several minutes to run tests and deploy for a simple hello world project. Then you have to change a single config option because (of course) the examples from the official docs don't work. Run again. NoneType doesn't have method xyz. Oh, internal errors in the tools. Change config. Run again. Pipeline runs into timeout. Run again. Gotta love modern development and all those productivity tools.
    On a more serious note, fast typing makes many things outside of programming much easier as well. Writing emails, chat messages, notes in meetings, reports, whitepapers, rants on UA-cam and so on.

  • @TetrisMaster512
    @TetrisMaster512 Рік тому

    Ugh the typing speed hit when switching away from QWERTY to something like dvorak is miserable. I went from like 40-50wpm all the way down to about 10 when I switched to dvorak and it took like 3mo to climb back to my old typing speed. That feeling of an extreme bottleneck from thought to keyboard input is something you just have to experience to fully understand. Glad I stuck with it because it taught me how to touch type and now I can get like 70-90wpm depending on the text but it's not an experience I'm keen on repeating, even if there are good arguments that colemak or workman are better layouts.

  • @triplea657aaa
    @triplea657aaa Рік тому

    I agree it doesn't really matter to be able to type faster than you can think, but I frequently get bogged down with my ~140 wpm when I'm developing quickly and I start to lose track of things in my head because I'm developing in my head faster than I can type. Copilot has helped a bit, but if I could type ~180-200 wpm it would help for those rare instances where I can just develop
    90% of the time copilot makes me fast enough though, but I'm also stupid and slow.

  • @PhAlovechallenge
    @PhAlovechallenge 9 місяців тому

    i love Kinetics Advantage keyboard

  • @InkFPS
    @InkFPS Рік тому

    4-finger typed on QWERTY w/ no homerow structure AT ALL and was typing at ~160wpm. Learnt Colemak, 10 fingers, homerow structured. Was stuck at 10 wpm for a couple of days, then rose to 50 wpm, then 90wpm, then got back to 160wpm, then hit 200wpm. When I attempted to code on Colemak, same story. All of this to say that anyone who thinks typing speed doesn't matter, should try and switch their keyboard layout and feel the struggle until they return to their previous wpm. If you can feel frustrated, slow, and inadequate at your 50wpm, 100wpm, and 130wpm, imagine how inadequate your current wpm would be compared to 200wpm.