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 !
I became "tired" after typing only a few quotes. Then, I carefully examined: exactly which part of me is "tired"? And I found that it is not the eyes (the receiving device), nor the fingers (the transmitting device) but the brain (the processing device). It's all in the head. Not enough blood is pumping into the head. They say that in order to achieve anything, you must first "imagine (visualize)" it in your head vividly how the "achieved state" is like. Well, that principle is not only applicable to "hopes and dreams" on the scale of a lifetime, but also on a word-by-word basis. At the "tired" state, my head is no longer clearly imagining how a word is typed, but it has delegated the task entirely to the eyes and fingers, which seek to resort to "luck" and attempt to accomplish the task (the typing of a word) through tries and errors. So once again, in short, "it's all in the head".
My tip to improve your typing speed is to...never give you up. Never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry Never gonna say goodbye
We've known each other for so long Your heart's been aching, but you're too shy to say it Inside, we both know what's been going on We know the game, and we're gonna play it Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
And if you ask me how I'm feeling Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up Never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry Never gonna say goodbye Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you Never gonna give you up Never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry Never gonna say goodbye Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
When my fingers hurt after too much time on the keyboard, I simply take a pause, and have a deep breathe to calm myself and look at the things that might be if I keep on practicing my typing speed.
I can't answer that because it would then cease to be a secret. But there are many keyboards, including laser-projected ones. There isn't any real limit. However, I prefer white keyboards because it makes it easier to confirm that I am indeed black.
Thank you for your advice, #venerated. I started SEVEN(7) years ago, 50WPM at that time. I completed more than seven thousand (7,000) tests at keyboard-racing dot com and more than eight thousand (8,000) tests here. As of now, I can hardly get to 90WPM, which is pretty... sad. Only recently, did I have a good guess why. It is because in my head there are too many chatters, noises, little voices, haha. I have "unfinished business" elsewhere, out there somewhere... in other worlds... where there are ghosts that are constantly calling to me "where have you gone... come here... come back... take me..." Yes, I think so... something like that... that is the reason.
What really helped me improve my typing speed is... Typing each and every day really improved my typing speed so cheers team .... keep going to attain greatness .........
What really helped me improve my typing speed is... learning where all of the keys are on the keyboard. While I still need to look down every once and a while, I have seen a really good improvement from when I first started typing. Also, getting a new keyboard with a shift key that actually worked...
What really helped me improve my typing speed is... That I'm used to typing on typing club so I can just keep typing and it will bock the errors but in this I have to click back space and my average speed on Typing Club is 93 wpm.
m_i_n doesn't understand that words are shapes. they're literally last place. to type fast, you have to input the shape of the word, not each individual letter. unlike m_i_n here.
When my fingers hurt after too much time on the keyboard, I try to relax them for a couple of minutes and stretches them a little. stop for a while and go for once again. Remember with immense practice you need adequate breaks sessions after sessions. happy typing. :)
I love this keyboard of mine. It's a mechanical keyboard with clicky switches. They're not Cherry's but, I have to say they are very nice and comfortable. What I enjoy most about now having a mechanical keyboard is that now I don't have to press all the way down on the key to register the letter. It's like squishing a pillow! Or maybe a cloud. A rather crunchy cloud at that.
When my fingers hurt after too much time on the keyboard, I... try to relax. Because it means i take the exercise to much serious. Then it takes the tension out of my Hands and it feels much better after when i continue typing.
When my fingers hurt after too much time on the keyboard, I...keep pushing just a bit more. With pain comes talent. Nothing in life is easy... sometimes you just have to keep pushing onward.
What really helped me improve my typing speed is... focusing on accuracy rather than speed. I started focusing on being more accurate and my wpm went from 60 to 70-75.