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The Dvorak Simplified Keyboard is a keyboard layout designed by Drs. August Dvorak and William Dealey in the 1920s and 1930s as an alternative to the still-popular QWERTY layout. It has also been called the Simplified Keyboard or American Simplified Keyboard, but is commonly known as the Dvorak keyboard.
OverviewDvorak and Dealey studied letter frequency and the physiology of the hand and created the layout to adhere to these principles:
The layout was completed in 1932 and was granted U.S. Patent No. 2,040,248 (http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=/netahtml/srchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=2,040,248.WKU.&OS=PN/2,040,248&RS=PN/2,040,248) in 1936. It was designated an alternate standard keyboard layout by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) in 1982. In 1984 the Dvorak keyboard had an estimated 100,000 users. Resistance to changeEven though many feel that the principles on which the Dvorak keyboard is based make it superior to the older QWERTY, attempts to universally convert to the Dvorak have been met with resistance. Typists who are already proficient with the QWERTY layout do not want to have to relearn on a new keyboard. In fact, a discussion of the Dvorak Keyboard is sometimes used as an exercise by management consultants to illustrate the difficulties of change. In addition to the time required for a QWERTY typist to learn the Dvorak layout and become efficient when using it, keyboard shortcuts and applications requiring key position layout will be different in the Dvorak layout and may require further training. For example, the vi editor assumes that the keys H, J, K, and L are on the home row – although J and K stay together and the space-bar can be used instead of L. Some computer games may be more difficult to play, especially those that assume relative positions of the keys used for motion — for example A for left, W for up, S for down and D for right (though many games allow users to remap key assignments). Dvorak then may be better suited for situations where block-typing is done. However, the design has made some headway, with Dvorak layouts now available on most major computer operating systems. It is also possible to learn how to use Dvorak only for touch typing while retaining the ability to use QWERTY when looking at the keyboard. Further improvementsDvorak also proposed an alternative ordering of the digits on the numbers row, 7-5-3-1-9-0-2-4-6-8, believing this arrangement to be more efficient. However, few who use the keyboard employ this rearrangement, and indeed the ANSI standard calls for the usual numerical order. There are also Dvorak arrangements designed for one-handed typing that are useful for the disabled or for simultaneously controlling a mouse. One arrangement is designed for right-hand typing, while the other is for left-handed typing. The single-handed typing appeared in two James Bond movies: Tomorrow Never Dies by an information age tycoon, and GoldenEye by a Russian computer cracker. In addition, Dvorak-based keyboard layouts have been created for languages other than English. An implementation for Swedish, known as Svorak, places the three extra Swedish vowels on the leftmost three keys of the upper row, which correspond to punctuation symbols on the English Dvorak layout. These punctuation symbols are then juggled with other keys, and the Alt-Gr key is required to access some of them. There is considerable variation between implementations in the placement of punctuation on the English layout. See alsoExternal links
Controversy
af:Dvorak sleutelbord de:Dvorak-Tastaturdesign eo:Klavaro Dvorak fr:DVORAK nl:Dvorak-toetsenbord pl:Klawiatura_dvoraka zh:德沃夏克鍵盤 |
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