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- Path: sparky!uunet!zephyr.ens.tek.com!uw-beaver!news.u.washington.edu!news
- From: goldly@u.washington.edu (Lloyd P. Goldwasser)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.system
- Subject: Variation on DVORAK
- Message-ID: <1992Jul23.235912.8548@u.washington.edu>
- Date: 23 Jul 92 23:59:12 GMT
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Washington
- Lines: 40
-
- I'll second the previous postings about the advantages of the Dvorak keyboard
- layout. The statistics on key frequencies only start to indicate how much
- nicer it is to use than QWERTY.
-
- After several years of using the Dvorak layout, I decided that it wasn't
- *perfect* and made a few alterations of my own. After some experimentation I
- came up with the following, which I recommend to present and potential Dvorak
- users:
-
-
- ' , . Y J F G C R L
-
- A O E I U D H T N S /
-
- ; X Z P K B M W Q V
-
-
- These alterations can be characterized as follows:
-
- 1. Switch the I and the U: the former is much more common than the latter, and
- putting it under a resting position is an out-and-out improvement.
-
- 2. Move the Y over so that it is still close to the I, and closer to the other
- vowels in general.
-
- 3. Bring P down so that it is still conveniently hit by the left index finger.
-
- 4. Put Q onto the right side, to make the inevitable sequence QU[aoei] easy
- rather than tricky.
-
- 5. The rest of the alterations are just a matter of taste. I put V where Z had
- been, to make room for Q; K where X had been, to keep it in the same
- neighborhood, and X where it combines well with P and most vowels (and where
- it was in the qwerty layout!).
-
-
- I'd be curious to hear what other DVORAKers think about it ...
-
- Lloyd Goldwasser
- goldly@u.washington.edu
-