If by "actual writer" you mean you want to use a stenotype machine with 
Typey Type, you can connect your stenotype machine, install and enable the 
Plover software by following the beginner's guide 
<https://plover.wiki/index.php/Beginner's_Guide>, and then you can type 
everywhere you normally type on the computer, including on Typey Type 
<https://didoesdigital.com/typey-type/>.


On Monday, February 26, 2024 at 11:08:32 AM UTC+10 [email protected] wrote:

> do you have a method for using an actual writer with Typey Type.  It's a 
> great app by the way!  Great idea. 
>
> On Tuesday, December 31, 2019 at 5:41:47 AM UTC-5 Di wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> After sharing Typey Type exactly 2 years ago today, I have now 
>> released the code for it on GitHub: 
>> https://github.com/didoesdigital/typey-type  
>> <https://github.com/didoesdigital/typey-type>
>>
>> If you ever wanted to change how Typey Type works, now's your chance!
>>
>> Happy New Year, everyone! 🎉
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Di
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sunday, December 31, 2017 at 10:58:55 PM UTC+11, Di wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi all, 
>>>
>>> I built an app to help steno students learn steno faster: 
>>>
>>> Typey type for stenographers <https://didoesdigital.com/typey-type/> <
>>> https://didoesdigital.com/typey-type/>
>>>
>>> Typey type follows a simple, elegant model of tracking words you’ve seen 
>>> and how many times you’ve successfully typed them. A word or phrase is 
>>> considered successfully "met" if you’ve typed it accurately without 
>>> misstrokes and without showing stroke hints (the raw steno brief).
>>>
>>> To *discover* new words, you can explore a vocabulary list of the words 
>>> you want to prioritise learning. For example, you might choose the top 
>>> 10000 English words lesson for popular words, or the single-stroke briefs 
>>> lesson to get the most bang for your buck. You'll see only words you 
>>> haven't typed before on Typey type. 
>>>
>>> You can *revise* words by practicing only words you've seen already 
>>> starting from the words you've successfully typed the fewest number of 
>>> times, which means either new words or words you misstroke a lot.
>>>
>>> You can *drill* words by seeing words you've already seen entirely at 
>>> random. The aim is to build up your muscle memory and test your skills 
>>> by writing as fast and furiously as you can, aiming for a high WPM score.
>>>
>>> Then you can *practice* words in real sentences with stories.
>>>
>>> This has helped me improve my speeds and typing accuracy. I hope it can 
>>> help someone else too.
>>>
>>> Happy new year!
>>>
>>> -Di
>>>
>>>
>>>

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