I'm quite new to steno, but I'm considering putting together my own theory. 

I take some influences from Jackdaw and Dothan Shelton 
(https://patents.google.com/patent/US3970185). The thing I find interesting 
in the patent is that he not only put forward rules on how chords are 
formed, he actually tabulated (some of) all combos available with each 
hands fingers.

What I wonder is if using rules are required at all? Or if it's feasible to 
use such tables instead and assign finger combos to fragments (without 
relying on rules).

What I mean by rules is that a chord has meaning derived from the values of 
each key in the chord (including assignment assignments to combos to 
achieve letters not present on the keyboard).

Example from plover theory is SKP- producing "and" which doesn't make any 
sense actually, but rather is a key pattern that the user have learnt to 
use to produce "and".

My thinking is that with training the chords becomes just pattern that 
correspond to output that you've learnt to use without anymore thinking 
about the rules that explained the mapping in the first place.

I

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