I'm an engineer and I've always typed very poorly since I was young. My parents tried everything to get me to learn properly when it became apparent that I was predisposed to spending a lot of my life doing it, but it was already too late. I can still hear the lizard from Mavis Beacon eating the letters as I typed them.
Now that I'm getting a little older, my hands don't appreciate this very much. In particular my right index is objecting to having to smash the spacebar every word (yes, I'm that bad).
Does anyone have any tips on how to approach a transition to typing properly (or better) in ones mid-thirties please?
Thanks HN!
https://www.etsy.com/market/gregg_typing_manual
Put your hands on asdf and jkl; and just start typing random combinations of those letters without looking until you know what letters/fingers to use. Then you gradually expand, first to g and h, then to nearby letters in the row above and below, then to numbers and symbols.
Some other tips:
- don't smash the keys; practice using as little force as necessary, because the impact at the bottom of the key travel is going to cause finger strain
- use right ring finger for the backspace by twisting your wrist slightly. Don't use pinky because you either have to stretch it or move your arm. I use left ring finger for tab for the same reason, although it's closer and pinky is not horrible
- don't worry about keeping all your fingers on the home row when reaching for numbers. It's better to move your hand a bit, for example, to press 1, rather than stretch your fingers. Or you can curl your fingers and move your hand up. If you feel your fingers stretching/straining, it will cause fatigue and/or carpal tunnel.
- you just have to commit to spending time to learn to touch type. You can start by using your thumb for the spacebar, not your right index finger!
Also you might consider to start some music playing for developing your fingers. For me playing vertical piano was kind of another step in mastering my keyboard skill because it involves all 10 fingers and vertical piano is significantly harder to press than grand piano or (especially) a synthesizer.
Your ring index issue looks very strange for me. I have noticed that nowadays nobody press a door bell button with ring finger anymore, probably because of smartphones.
add: If this is not obvious from my comment, I want this to be obvious: download any keyboard training software or use this kind of website. Requirement is an ability to start from 4 letters.