If you mean by professional teaching on how to type with the right hand on the right home keys J, K, L and ; everything right of T and G, sometimes including these is used by the right hand. V and 5 are pressed by the left hand and B and 6 by the right. Depending on your ambidexterity (if that is the proper word), the space bar is often pressed by the predominant hand unless strictly taught to do otherwise.
With the keys, hope this helped.
An Eb on an alto sax is commonly played with the right hand pinky finger. Most saxes have a set of keys that the right hand pinky rests on. It is fingered like a D, plus the top key of the set of keys. A Bb on an alto sax is commonly played by the right hand palm. Most saxes have three keys in a line that rest below the right hand palm. The last of these keys is pressed when playing Bb, along with the fingering for A (first two keys of left hand). Press the key with the area between the pointer finger and thumb.
hold down your pointer middle and ring finger on your left hand and your pointer and your middle finger on your left hand
In touch typing, each finger is designated to specific keys to ensure efficient typing. The left hand typically covers the keys from A to T, with the pinky on A, the ring finger on S, the middle finger on D, the index finger on F and G, and the thumb for the spacebar. The right hand handles the keys from H to ;, with the index finger on H and J, the middle finger on K, the ring finger on L, and the pinky on the semicolon key. This finger arrangement allows for a fluid typing motion and minimizes finger movement.
what do you do when the keys on the keyboard are pressed and the computer displays repeated characters
Position the finger of both hands on the right keys on the keyboard
If your fingers are in the right place, push down the pointer, middle and ring finger on the upper set of keys, or left hand keys. Also on the left hand, add the pinky finger on the top set of pinky keys.
The "k" key on a keyboard is typically struck using the right middle finger. In touch typing, each finger is assigned specific keys to improve typing efficiency, and the middle finger is responsible for the keys in the middle row, including "k."
The home keys for the left hand are A, S, D, F, and the pinky rests on the letter A, while the index finger rests on F. For the right hand, the home keys are J, K, L, and ; (semicolon), with the index finger on J. These keys serve as the starting position for touch typing, allowing the fingers to reach other keys easily from this base position.
The "i" key is typically struck by the right middle finger, while the "r" key is struck by the left index finger. This finger placement is part of the standard touch typing technique, where each finger is responsible for specific keys on the keyboard. Proper finger placement helps improve typing speed and accuracy.
Lowest - Left hand - thumb(1st finger), 2nd finger, 3rd finger and 4th finger Right Hand - 2nd finger, 3rd finger and 4th finger (no pinky) Middle - LH - thumb, 3rd finger, 4th finger RH - 2nd finger, 3rd finger and 4th finger (no pinky) Top - LH - thumb, 3rd finger and 4th finger RH - none
The four keys on the left hand side ASDF and the four keys on the right hand side JKL; are the home keys. These are the resting places over which the four fingers of the left and right hands respectively must remain, except when it is necessary to remove a finger in order to strike a key in another row. After this has been done, the finger must be returned immediately to its correct position