With skimming the article it seems like another anecdotal report of speaking for people learning to type better.
Does it provide any systematic evidence for the claim?
My Skeptics stackexchange question about the issue of programmer productivity due to typing is open for a long time without anyone providing real evidence for the claim.
As far as I understand the big tech companies don’t believe that it’s predictive of programmer quality to the extend that the test typing speed at interviews either.
Typing speed of course is not predictive of programming talent, that’s a remarkably stupid idea.
The right way to think about it is in terms of bottlenecks. When, say, you write code, what slows you down? If your fingers lag behind your mind, you should try to type faster. If they don’t, you’re good and should focus on improving something else.
With skimming the article it seems like another anecdotal report of speaking for people learning to type better. Does it provide any systematic evidence for the claim?
My Skeptics stackexchange question about the issue of programmer productivity due to typing is open for a long time without anyone providing real evidence for the claim.
As far as I understand the big tech companies don’t believe that it’s predictive of programmer quality to the extend that the test typing speed at interviews either.
Typing speed of course is not predictive of programming talent, that’s a remarkably stupid idea.
The right way to think about it is in terms of bottlenecks. When, say, you write code, what slows you down? If your fingers lag behind your mind, you should try to type faster. If they don’t, you’re good and should focus on improving something else.