the same fingers you use to type all the other keys
There is no way to correctly type but the fastest way for you They say it's shoulders straight with you sitting back in your chair and your fingers on the home keys. I don't follow it because I find it uncomfortable.
They are keys with specific functions which are not used to type letters, symbols and numbers but are used to manipulate data in a document
All 10
Right click on "My computer" and choose properties. At the bottom right corner of the first tab should be listed your CPU type & speed.
If the keys are different, then it is asymmetrical. If it is the same key used twice to encode and decode; then it is symmetrical.
Home keys.
You do not have to use the keys, they just make it easier for touch typists to locate letters without looking at the keyboard. Many people type with just their index fingers and a thumb, but using all of your fingers and learning how to touch type make typing much faster.
These bumps show you where your "Home Keys" are by touch. If you type in the correct way, your pointer fingers should rest over the "F" and the "J". These bumps allow you to find these keys by touch so you do not have to glance down at the keyboard to know where your fingers are. There are many products to enhance or act as visual aids. Example. www.keyboardbumps.com
The proper way to type is to keep your hands on the home row and to try not to watch your fingers so that you can memorize the keys and you will also get faster this way.
The bumps or nipples found on the F and J keys on the keyboard helps users correctly position their left and right hand on the keyboard without having to look at it. For example, without looking at the keyboard you can easily position your left index finger on the F and the right index finger on the J, which then positions all the remainder of your fingers in the correct position.
You put your fingers on the keys and press down until a letter appears on the screen.
The main home row keys are ASDF JKL;. By extension, the other keys on that row are also part of the home row. They are called that because that is where you put your fingers when at rest. The dominant thumb stays on the spacebar (or below the spacebar if you prefer or it is too sensitive). There are often small protrusions on the F and J keys to make it easy to find where your index fingers stay and to avoid confusion with the G and H keys. Some keyboards lose the bumps after extreme use.
touch typing using the bumps on the F and J keys to tell where to put your index fingers.
It is the line of keys that you place your fingers on when typing. This is a way that most people type fastly.
In my younger days,we had row houses.They were all in a row and all looked the same. as in mill hill houses.The mills would build houses and rent them to the mill workers.There is an old saying "I owe my soul to the company store" this also came from the mill hill villages where the mills owned the houses,stores,everything!! ADDED: As a Transatlantic difference, if these what I think they are - all joined into a long, single building - in the UK they are called "terraced" houses. Although an 18C concept they did become particularly associated with 19C industrial (not just mill) towns, but a lot of modern housing developments now are of terraced form. The "company store" ethos was used in Britain too, but its inherent unfairness led to its legal abolishment under a 19C law I think called the "Truck Acts".
Not if you want to type quickly - looking at the keys slows you down.If you type a lot, learning touch typing (without looking) is well worth the trouble.
rosy fingers