What I'm trying to say is this: speed matters. When you're a fast, efficient typist, you spend less time between thinking that thought and expressing it in code. Which means, if you're me at least, that you might actually get some of your ideas committed to screen before you completely lose your train of thought. Again.
I can't understand why professional programmers out there allow themselves to have a career without teaching themselves to type. It doesn't make any sense. It's like being, I dunno, an actor without knowing how to put your clothes on.
| Name | WPM | Accuracy |
|---|---|---|
| user871724 | 208.61 on Mad hatter |
97.1% |
| secretly_asian | 189.56 on Rito Ocampo |
100% |
| hiramisu | 160.03 on Danny Schmidt |
100% |
| d3mn8 | 155.12 on Martin Luther King Jr. |
100% |
| efficient | 143.83 on Haifaa Al Mansour |
99.5% |
| vmlm | 143.48 on Elizabeth Gilbert |
97.0% |
| fanny1989 | 143.13 on Luis Sepulveda |
100% |
| dante-didit | 143.09 on Cassandra Clare |
100% |
| ellirmichelsen | 142.44 on Brandon Sanderson |
100% |
| procrastinating | 141.97 on 2wenty |
100% |
| reallocmb | 137.42 on Erich Kästner |
100% |
| soociesoocie | 135.51 on Diana Flores |
100% |
| space_cadet | 135.48 on Jenny K. |
98.8% |
| dougyfresh | 134.71 on Ayn Rand |
100% |
| strikeemblem | 133.71 on Mike Espy, Former USDA Secretary |
98.3% |