Modest musings on muscle memory: moving from a TKL to a battleship.
Posted: 23 Nov 2017, 03:32
I've been using IBM Model M keyboards continuously since 1992. Full size since then, and mostly SSKs for the last nine years. A month ago, I switched to a battleship (an M122... which I replaced with an F122 as soon as it arrived).
Replacing a keyboard with another one sporting a new, different physical layout always implies a period of adjustment, as one has to retrain himself; muscle memory can interfere and has to be consciously taken aside, at least for a while. I expected this to be the case when I swapped the TKL out, but the details of the adaptation process were a bit surprising. I've listed those adjustments I had to make here, sorted from easiest to adapt to hardest. Obviously, YMMV.
1) Whoa, the numpad is back! Then again, I functioned with a numpad on my full-size keyboards for many years. Its presence is natural; not even having the mouse further out again has been bothersome at all.
2) I remapped Esc to be on LHS EF2. Instead of moving my annular finger to above the BACKQUOTE key, I now simply move it a bit to the left and Esc is there. I am very happy with my remapping choice here.
3) I expected to have a bit of difficulty with the F1-F12 keys, as they are shifted to the left (above 1..= instead of 2..Backspace) and clumpled together instead of in groups of four. I've gotten used to their positions pretty quickly, actually.
4) PrintScreen and Pause are at F23 and F24. Not much of a problem, as I use them lightly. What helps me remember their positions is F22, which I've mapped to be Alt-PrintScreen, and which I do use a lot. While we're at it, Num Lock is mapped at F21, but I practically never use it (and I'd fully get rid of it, if it were for me).
5) The numpad now sports "two" extra keys: 2u PAD_PLUS becomes 1u PAD_PLUS (above) and 1u PAD_COMMA (below), finally giving me the comma I had wanted for decades to have on the numpad, and which I am already using frequently. Num Lock (Esc on the battleship's primitive layout, actually) is now PAD_EQUALS, something that I conceptually like, but I'm still barely getting the hang of.
6) Cross-shaped cursor keys instead of the inverted T: not easy, but not as difficult as I expected. It does help that I mapped Scroll Lock to the center "Rule" key, and Windows' annoying beep when I press it by mistake helps me correct myself immediately. I find that I'm hearing that beep less and less as days go by.
(and yes, I do have a good reason for putting Scroll Lock there)
On an inverted T, the fingers I use are index on left, middle on down and up, annular on right; the first and third rest on the keycap, while the second moves up and down as needed. On the cross, instead, my thumb rests on the down key, while the other three fingers rest above left, up and right, respectively. The pinky finger, meanwhile, keeps a respectful silence.
7) Left Ctrl ("Reset") has been, surprisingly, the hardest change (or "non-change") to adapt to. Why? Because I kept hitting LHS EF9 instead... my muscle memory mapped "bottommost leftmost key" to be Ctrl, which isn't the case on a battleship. I had initially mapped EF9 and EF10 to be, respectively, the Windows and Menu keys, but it was so bad that I moved them to EF1 and EF3. EF10 is now mapped to be Alt+Ctrl, while EF9 is unassigned and will continue to be so until I stop hitting it all the time.
I still have to learn how to use a bit more the LHS EFn keys — I'm still barely using EF5 (AltGr+Shift) and EF6 (AltGr), which I definitely need to use more frequently, and EF4 (Shift Tab), which I haven't had the chance to use much yet. EF7 and EF8 are reserved, for now, until I figure out what kinds of layers I want to use (besides the "hexpad" that I've already talked about).
Replacing a keyboard with another one sporting a new, different physical layout always implies a period of adjustment, as one has to retrain himself; muscle memory can interfere and has to be consciously taken aside, at least for a while. I expected this to be the case when I swapped the TKL out, but the details of the adaptation process were a bit surprising. I've listed those adjustments I had to make here, sorted from easiest to adapt to hardest. Obviously, YMMV.
1) Whoa, the numpad is back! Then again, I functioned with a numpad on my full-size keyboards for many years. Its presence is natural; not even having the mouse further out again has been bothersome at all.
2) I remapped Esc to be on LHS EF2. Instead of moving my annular finger to above the BACKQUOTE key, I now simply move it a bit to the left and Esc is there. I am very happy with my remapping choice here.
3) I expected to have a bit of difficulty with the F1-F12 keys, as they are shifted to the left (above 1..= instead of 2..Backspace) and clumpled together instead of in groups of four. I've gotten used to their positions pretty quickly, actually.
4) PrintScreen and Pause are at F23 and F24. Not much of a problem, as I use them lightly. What helps me remember their positions is F22, which I've mapped to be Alt-PrintScreen, and which I do use a lot. While we're at it, Num Lock is mapped at F21, but I practically never use it (and I'd fully get rid of it, if it were for me).
5) The numpad now sports "two" extra keys: 2u PAD_PLUS becomes 1u PAD_PLUS (above) and 1u PAD_COMMA (below), finally giving me the comma I had wanted for decades to have on the numpad, and which I am already using frequently. Num Lock (Esc on the battleship's primitive layout, actually) is now PAD_EQUALS, something that I conceptually like, but I'm still barely getting the hang of.
6) Cross-shaped cursor keys instead of the inverted T: not easy, but not as difficult as I expected. It does help that I mapped Scroll Lock to the center "Rule" key, and Windows' annoying beep when I press it by mistake helps me correct myself immediately. I find that I'm hearing that beep less and less as days go by.
(and yes, I do have a good reason for putting Scroll Lock there)
On an inverted T, the fingers I use are index on left, middle on down and up, annular on right; the first and third rest on the keycap, while the second moves up and down as needed. On the cross, instead, my thumb rests on the down key, while the other three fingers rest above left, up and right, respectively. The pinky finger, meanwhile, keeps a respectful silence.
7) Left Ctrl ("Reset") has been, surprisingly, the hardest change (or "non-change") to adapt to. Why? Because I kept hitting LHS EF9 instead... my muscle memory mapped "bottommost leftmost key" to be Ctrl, which isn't the case on a battleship. I had initially mapped EF9 and EF10 to be, respectively, the Windows and Menu keys, but it was so bad that I moved them to EF1 and EF3. EF10 is now mapped to be Alt+Ctrl, while EF9 is unassigned and will continue to be so until I stop hitting it all the time.
I still have to learn how to use a bit more the LHS EFn keys — I'm still barely using EF5 (AltGr+Shift) and EF6 (AltGr), which I definitely need to use more frequently, and EF4 (Shift Tab), which I haven't had the chance to use much yet. EF7 and EF8 are reserved, for now, until I figure out what kinds of layers I want to use (besides the "hexpad" that I've already talked about).