When I was in high school, Dad
suggested I take a typing class. The reward for the class was a manual
typewriter, what we used in first-year typing. Then I decided that a second
year of “college prep typing” wouldn’t hurt and of course for that class we switched
to electric typewriters. So it cost Dad an electric at the end of that year.
I’m glad I took typing. Not
only did I learn the proper format for formal school reports, I learned the
various letter formats (since there were only 3 college prep typing students we
were stuck in with the pre-secretary typists). I never broke the habit of
looking at my hands, but I did get up to roughly 40 words per minute.
My wife was typing 100+ wpm
when we got married.
It takes 3-5 seconds to take
your hands off the keyboard and use a mouse to do a command. That’s the time it
takes a typist to type 3-7 characters.
There are a half-dozen commands
you should learn that will really save you time that are common to virtually
every program.
Of course that assumes you can
type. If you can’t, it’s never too late to take a keyboarding class (what they
call
Typing now). You are destined to spend more and more
time typing.
What commands? I suggest a
couple of formatting commands, one selection command, and three copy and paste
commands:
Ctrl-B to start or end bold
Ctrl-U to start or end underline
Ctrl-A to select all everything in a document
Ctrl-C to copy the selected text/file to the clipboard
Ctrl-X to cut (copy the selected text/file to the
clipboard then delete it)
Ctrl-V to paste the clipboard where the cursor is
Learn to type (you will be
doing more and more with your computer) and a few commands. You’ll have more
time for advanced productivity software like solitaire (where I don’t use any
keyboard commands).