I look to get my bearings before I start but then most of the time I’m looking at what I’m typing on the screen rather than down at my hands.
Only when I keep hitting the same wrong key(s) over and over between hits of backspace, do I then, with intense frustration, look back at the keys. I think I might be expecting the key I’m trying to hit to have run off to some other part of the keyboard.
A lot of what I type is wrongly autocompleted by muscle memory (“why” for “what” in this sentence for example, and “we-” before correcting to “wr-” for wrong, both there and here), so I’d be utterly lost without backspace.
My action is very much not correct touch-typing (for example, the first letter of this sentence was typed with left hand on M and right hand on right Shift), but it works for me. ISO layout’s tiny left shift key probably has quite a lot to do with that.
As for that, I still prefer ISO (UK QWERTY) as they’re far more common here. I have used ANSI (US QWERTY) in the past, which means I occasionally reach for double quote and @ in the wrong places, but that’s increasingly rare these days. (Even more rarely I’ll reach for where characters were on the Commodore 64. That usually affects parentheses more than anything, but I do so many parentheticals in online comments that I’ve all but broken that habit!).
I look to get my bearings before I start but then most of the time I’m looking at what I’m typing on the screen rather than down at my hands.
Only when I keep hitting the same wrong key(s) over and over between hits of backspace, do I then, with intense frustration, look back at the keys. I think I might be expecting the key I’m trying to hit to have run off to some other part of the keyboard.
A lot of what I type is wrongly autocompleted by muscle memory (“why” for “what” in this sentence for example, and “we-” before correcting to “wr-” for wrong, both there and here), so I’d be utterly lost without backspace.
My action is very much not correct touch-typing (for example, the first letter of this sentence was typed with left hand on M and right hand on right Shift), but it works for me. ISO layout’s tiny left shift key probably has quite a lot to do with that.
As for that, I still prefer ISO (UK QWERTY) as they’re far more common here. I have used ANSI (US QWERTY) in the past, which means I occasionally reach for double quote and @ in the wrong places, but that’s increasingly rare these days. (Even more rarely I’ll reach for where characters were on the Commodore 64. That usually affects parentheses more than anything, but I do so many parentheticals in online comments that I’ve all but broken that habit!).