andrewducker: (running lego man)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2008-09-13 04:53 pm

The Right Tools

Spent an hour this morning sorting out the bit of "garden" front of the flat with some thin garden gloves and some awful cheap shears.

Then went to B&Q, got a decent pruner and some thick gloves, and got the rest done twice as fast, and with a much better result.

Note To Self: you don't buy cheap computer components, don't buy cheap DIY stuff.

I then read this article about how important fast-typing speed is as a coder, went here and tried out their typing-speed test. Which was a bastard, as it's full of non-standard spellings. but I got 62WPM and only one mistake (on word 4), so I feel quite good about that.

[identity profile] rahaeli.livejournal.com 2008-09-13 04:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Goodness, that article was .. strident.

I touch-type test between 105 and 120wpm, depending on the source text and how badly they penalize you for errors (ie, whether or not I actually care enough to backspace and correct them). (I cannot, *cannot* make myself double-space after a period, and most online typing tests still try to enforce that; many will call everything after that miss an off-by-one error.) I've also had months where I was reduced to typing one-handed (or, in one particularly fun instance, two-fingers-on-one-handed), at which I am, oh, about 30 wpm. The difference is annoying, but I wouldn't call it crippling. If programming is anything like writing, you spend a lot of time staring at the wall and thinking anyway. What he's talking about with the whole "non-touch-typing programmers don't work enough!!" is not non-touch-typing programmers, I bet, it's lazy programmers; someone who really wanted to would find their own workarounds....

http://www.typingtest.com has a better speed-test, including letting you pick the text you want to use.