There’s no place like home row, am I right? “ASDF" and "JKL:” aren’t
just the keys our fingers rest upon, they’re our friends. Fine, that may
be a bit much, but we have all undoubtedly come a long way from typing
our very first letters. In my earliest days of typing, the keyboard
setup was confusing and random despite all the fun games on my Typing Instructor CD-ROM.
Eventually, navigating the layout became second nature, and here I am today, typing at reckless speeds without so much as needing to look down. Seven-year-old Devin would be quite impressed. It’s probably safe to say that many of us don’t know much about what lies beyond the standard QWERTY keyboard. But there’s so much more. So much.
Let’s take a look at some popular and regional keyboard layouts. They probably won’t have you switching anytime soon, but it’s worth a peek. The more you know, and all that.
Don’t go looking for "Dvorak" spelled out on the layout like I did -
it’s the name of the guy who patented it in 1936, August Dvorak. He felt
that QWERTY was a pain to use and developed his layout to be more
efficient. Studies seem to agree and maybe that’s because when using Dvorak,
70 percent of strokes are on home row (vs. 32 percent when using
QWERTY.) When using Dvorak, you’ll notice that more than half of your
strokes are with the right hand. Dvorak did this on purpose, based on
the fact that most people are right handed. Interesting note (at least
to nerdy writers): All the vowels are in home row.
Colemak could be considered
QWERTY-lite. There are only 17 differences in key layout between the
two, plus a second backspace key replacing the Caps Lock key. Colemak is
a combination of Coleman (the last name of the creator) and Dvorak. The
layout clearly isn’t just a revamp of Dvorak, though, it’s an attempt
to fix issues with Dvorak while not intimidating QWERTY users. Looking
at the Colemak layout as a QWERTY typist, it’s easier to imagine
switching over than if you were looking at Dvorak.
Once you go down the rabbit hole of keyboard layouts, it becomes
pretty clear that QWERTY has a strong hold on a lot of the world. For
example, QWERTZ
is a slight adaptation commonly used in central Europe (Germany,
Austria, the Czech Republic, and other nearby nations.) The Z and Y keys
are switched for two reasons. First, because Z is used much more than Y
in German. Second, T and Z are used together so much it makes sense for
T and Z to be side-by-side. You can also find umlauted vowels (ä, ö, ü)
on this layout and there’s an Alt Gr key to access a third level of key
assignation.
Here’s another example of an almost-QWERTY layout. This one is used in French-speaking countries, although not everyone likes it.
Q swaps with A and W with Z in the top row. The semicolon is switched
for the M key. If I were to sit down at an AZERTY keyboard, the biggest
change would be that the number row function is changed. If I want to
type 2, I’d have to hold down the shift key, but if I want the @ symbol,
I just hit the key.
Now let’s visit a galaxy far, far away from QWERTY. The Maltron
keyboard looks uh.. unusual, but it’s designed with ergonomics in mind –
so it might ease your aching hands and sore wrists. The keyboard is
separated in chunks, with the numbers in the middle. The left-hand
square of letters has ANISF for home row, and the right-hand square’s
home row is DTHOR. The company behind this unusual keyboard, PCD
Maltron, started in 1977 as a response to issues with the QWERTY layout
and has found some fervent supporters.
So what about countries where the alphabet is completely different
from the Latin-based English alphabet? In Russia, the Cyrillic alphabet
is used, and since 1917 (when Russia reformed its alphabet to remove some letters), JCUKEN has served as the default keyboard layout.
Let’s look at another French keyboard. The BÉPO
layout is designed to ease programming and boost efficiency (similar to
Dvorak.) This particular arrangement is based on statistical study of
the French language. People say typing with BÉPO is easier because the
keys used most often are on the home row. BÉPO has a lot of other characters that are missing from the AZERTY layout, including:
Looking up this keyboard layout lead me to the most interesting (and the first) article I’ve ever read about Turkish typewriters.
QWERTY keyboards are very common in Turkey, but in 1955, the Turkish
F-keyboard was invented to make typing the local language more
efficient. Think about it this way: “Just look at Scrabble: every
language carefully assigns a different value to each letter,
and puts a certain number of each tiles in the bag. Playing Scrabble in
Romania with English tiles wouldn’t make a lot of sense, and yet
throughout most of Europe we still use typewriters based on how English
works.”
Let’s look at one more keyboard layout for French-speakers, shall we? It’s in the news because the government is getting some pressure
to change the long-standing default, AZERTY. This layout came around in
2003 and is a keyboard built for those who speak Breton, a language
spoken in parts of northwestern France. When comparing this layout with
AZERTY, the A switches with the Breton letter C’H (similar in sound to
the German ‘ch’) and Z swaps with W.
Is this what the future looks like? The Optimus Popularis
is a ridiculously expensive, vaporware-esque, ultra-customizable
keyboard. Will it be the next QWERTY? Maybe. Probably not today, though.
Who can shell out $1,500 for a keyboard? Unless you type in multiple
languages and regularly use unusual characters (calling mathematicians
or musicians) it doesn't make sense. But it does exist, and it could
point to the future with Razer also offering programmable buttons on one
of their gaming keyboard and rumors of the MacBook pros getting OLED
touch screens too.
Some say QWERTY is lagging behind - and in non-English speaking countries, it's hard to ignore that QWERTY doesn't make the most sense -- but most people are too busy typing on whatever layout they're comfortable with to bother thinking about it.
Eventually, navigating the layout became second nature, and here I am today, typing at reckless speeds without so much as needing to look down. Seven-year-old Devin would be quite impressed. It’s probably safe to say that many of us don’t know much about what lies beyond the standard QWERTY keyboard. But there’s so much more. So much.
Let’s take a look at some popular and regional keyboard layouts. They probably won’t have you switching anytime soon, but it’s worth a peek. The more you know, and all that.
Dvorak
Colemak
QWERTZ
AZERTY
Maltron
JCUKEN
BÉPO
- those of all the official languages of the European Union based on the Latin alphabet;
- those of Esperanto; Welsh; Turkish and Azeri; the Icelandic; the Greek letters;
- the figures ¹²³⁴⁵ exhibitors and clues ₆₇₈₉₀;
- some mathematical symbols, most currency symbols;
- more than 500 characters diacritic through a system of twenty dead keys.
Turkish F-Keyboard
C'HWERTY - Breton
The "any layout" keyboard
Some say QWERTY is lagging behind - and in non-English speaking countries, it's hard to ignore that QWERTY doesn't make the most sense -- but most people are too busy typing on whatever layout they're comfortable with to bother thinking about it.
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