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Re: Dvorak (& Lojban)
On Thu, 23 Oct 1997, Lee Sau Dan ~{@nJX6X~} wrote:
> Now, when a friend asks me how to type a certain character, I'll first
> imagine that I had to type that character. Then from the intended
> movements of my fingers, I can tell my friend which keys he should
> press in order to type that character. To specify the keys to press,
> I use the corresponding letters on a QWERTY keyboard (unless he is
> also a Chanjie typist, in which case I tell him the Chanjie radicals)
> It is a translation from the key positions into English letters
> (according to QWERTY positions).
Does this mean that there are only as many keys on a Chanjie keyboard as
there are on a QWERTY keyboard? Because if so, that's pretty impressive,
considering how many characters there are in Chinese.
> HACKER> I'm not surprised, because Dvorak is intuitive; QWERTY
>
> Well... what IS "intuitive"?
>
> QWERTY was designed in such a way so as to avoid the jamming of
> adjacent types in a typewritter when one types rapidly. (If you have
> a mechanical typewritter, try pressing the keys for 2 adjacent types
> simultaneously, and you'll find that the types jam together.)
Of course. I already said this in the bit you snipped out.
>Isn't
> that intuitive (from the aspect of mechanical engineering)?
I'm not talking about what's intuitive from the aspect of mechanical
engineering, but what's intuitive from the aspect of USING the keyboard.
>
> Dvorak was designed to minimize hand/finger movement. In this sense,
> it is ALSO intuitive (from the aspect of the typist, esp. on
> non-mechanical devices).
Which is the most useful sense for this discussion.
>
> So, whether something is "intuitive" depends on the aspect from which
> you view it. It is a very subjective judgement, and is highly
> cultural dependent.
That's obvious. But it doesn't stop some things from being intuitive from
whatever perspective and other things not being so. Dvorak is intuitive from a
user's perspective and QWERTY isn't. Which is the whole reason why Dvorak
is easier to learn as a second keyboard design than QWERTY is. That's the
whole point!
Geoff
> >
>
>
> --
> Lee Sau Dan 'u&u40(Big5) ~{@nJX6X~}(HZ)
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