Editing
QWERTY
(section)
From Deskthority Wiki
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==History== ===Prehistory=== The ''Printing Telegraph'', invented in 1846 had a keyboard similar to a piano with two rows of letters in alphabetical order offset 1/2 key from one-another. David Edward Hughes' improved models from the 1860's onwards tended to have 28 keys with letters in alphabetical order from left to right on the top row and from right to left on the bottom row. Digits and punctuation were entered on the top row together with a shifting mechanism. Each shifted symbol was printed above the key's unshifted symbol.<ref name="davidedwardhughestelegraph4"/> Christopher Latham Sholes is the man most credited (or blamed) for having created QWERTY. Besides being an inventor, he was a newspaper man and politician in 1860's Milwaukee, USA. In 1868 he had together with Carlos Glidden, William SoulΓ© and Frank Haven Hall manufactured and marketed a desktop "Type-Writer" with a piano-like keyboard similar to Hughes' telegraph's. It was sold to companies with telegraphists who received American Morse code and needed to type it quickly. The mechanism did not have any Shifting-mechanism and could type only upper-case letters. A machine with digits on the left hand side may have been manufactured for a time. Sholes parted ways with the others and continued to develop the machine with a new keyboard, backed by financier James Densmore. In 1870, Sholes produced a keyboard with four rows with digits and more symbols. The keyboards have been lost before they could be drawn or photographed but some details of the layout are known from correspondence with early adopters. It was most likely inspired also by John Pratt's earlier type-writing machine, the ''Pterograph'' that Sholes had read about in Scientific American. Digits were on a separate top row, mimicking earlier keyboards without the need for a shifting mechanism. Like Pratt's pterotype, the letters I and O were used for digits 1 and 0 - a cost-saving measure which persisted among some manufacturers until the 1970's. The second row from the top had vowels and symbols. Consonants were on the two bottom rows but still in alphabetical order as before. Around this time, the [[Space bar]] was introduced and '''W''' was moved to the top row because it was a semi-vowel. It is known that feedback from several early customers and beta-testers further influenced the layout, although not all detail are known. ''Harrington and Craig Telegraph Works'' in New York even demanded several changes as a condition for purchase of type-writers. It is unknown which those were but it has been speculated that the reason why '''Z''', '''S''' and '''E''' are close together is because the Morse code for 'Z' is close to the code sequence for "SE" and they wanted to minimize hand movement<ref name="yasuoka11"/>. The August 10 1872 issue of ''Scientific American'' (Volume 27, issue 6) features a copperplate picture of the "Type-Writer" on the first page. It is the first image of a proto-QWERTY keyboard ("QWE.TY") in print. <gallery widths=300> File:Printingtelegraph-layout.png|Typical layout of a Printing Telegraph keyboard like those made by Hughes from 1867 until the 1930's. Digits were accessed through a shifting mechanism. The blank key on the left is the [[Space bar|Space]] key. File:Pterotype-layout.png|Layout of John Pratt's Pterotype machines produced from 1864. Prototypes and patents had various different layouts. File:Protoqwerty1870-layout.png|Presumed layout of Sholes' 1870 machine used by early adopters. File:Sciam1872-layout.png|Keyboard layout on the cover of Scientific American volume 27, issue 6 (August 10 1872) </gallery> ===1874: The first QWERTY=== [[File:Qwerty1874.png|300px|thumb|right|''Sholes and Glidden Type-Writer'' layout (1874)]] ''E. Remington & Sons'' in New York bought rights to the Type-Writer in 1873 and they chose to call the design ''Sholes and Glidden Type-Writer''. Several more changes to the layout were made by Sholes and by Remington's experienced engineers Jefferson Clough and William Jenne. Most notably was swapping '''.''' and '''R''', thus creating the first "QWERTY" layout. The machine had the '''β''' (tricolon) symbol which was a convention used for telegraphing newspaper articles to indicate a paragraph break. The first machine was delivered in April 1874. Sholes' and Glidden's patent for the machine, showing the layout was filed in 1875 and granted in 1878. Here Sholes' influence at Remington ended, engineering taken over by Clough and Jenne who made improvements in later revisions, the last revision also sold as the ''Remington Type-Writer No. 1''.<ref name="twmsgp"/> ===1878: Lowercase=== In 1878, Remington released the ''Remington No. 2'': the first QWERTY typewriter with both upper and lower-case as well as symbols on shifted numeric keys. The mode was set with a lever: up for upper case and down for lower case. The mode could be overridden temporarily using an '''Upper Case''' key in the lower left corner or a '''Lower Case''' key in the upper right corner. Other types of customers than telegraph companies started to buy machines and sales skyrocketed. The number of keys had been reduced and the numeric row was shifted one step to the right. Some symbols such as '''.''' (period) that had their own keys on the previous machine were however still on the upper-case layer as before. Many shifted symbols on the numeric row are somewhat similar to how they are now. ===1882: Remington Standard QWERTY=== [[File:RemingtonStandard2-layout.png|thumb|300px|right|''Remington Standard Type-Writer No. 2'' layout]] In 1882, Remington released the ''Remington Standard Type-Writer No. 2'' with a slightly changed QWERTY layout so that they could avoid having to pay royalties to Sholes and his partners. The letters '''X''' and '''C''' were swapped and the '''M''' key was moved down a row - resulting in the letter layout that still persists today. Remington produced several variations with different symbols on shifted keys. On later revisions, the [[shift key]]s were labeled "SHIFT KEY". <ref name="typewriterorg1889remstd2"/> ===1878 onwards: Promoting QWERTY=== The first typing schools for QWERTY arrived in the 1878's, the first with William Wyckoff's six-finger method for the Remington No. 2, followed by Elizabeth Longley's eight-finger method for the Remington Standard. Wyckoff's school entered into a partnership with Remington - one of many to follow between typing schools and typewriter manufacturers. Those early methods were however somewhat different to the [[touch typing]] method used today: for instance, both had the left hand's "columns" slanting the other way. Following these, Remington did divide the keyboard into left- and right-hand keys (with '''6''' on the right side) in the typewriters' documentation<ref name="typewriterorg1889remstd2"/>. In 1893, Remington, Smith Premier, Densmore, Yost and Caligraph formed a trust (cartel) to promote and control the sales of typewriters from the five respective companies. They decided on using Remington's "Standard" QWERTY layout as standard. ===Myths and legends=== There are several legends about the origin of the QWERTY that are difficult to verify. Stephen Jay Gould had popularized the idea that Clough and Jenne had swapped '''R''' and '''.''' so that Remington's salesmen could type "TYPEWRITER" using only the letters on one row. However, the official name was then still "TYPE-WRITER" and the hyphen was not on that row. It has often been said that the QWERTY layout had been arranged from the alphabetical layout to minimize the risk of type-bars colliding and thereby jamming the machine. Some have claimed that the purpose had been to slow typists down to avoid jamming, others that it had been to avoid jamming while typing fast. What is proven though is that the layout was originally intended for telegraphists who needed to be able to type at the speed at which they received American Morse code - and code at the time could have been transmitted at over 30 words per minute. One story tells that Densmore's brother Amos who was an educator would have provided Sholes with an ordered list of the most common digraphs (two-letter combinations) in the English language and that Sholes would have relocated letters in those diagrams to place their type-arms further apart. However, that ''could'' have happened after the formation of QWERTY. Sholes continued to invent improvements to his typewriter for the rest of his life. In 1889, he filed a patent with a layout which (like [[Dvorak]] 47 years later) had the vowels on one-hand side on the home row. It was awarded first after his death in 1890.<ref name="uspo568630"/>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Deskthority Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Project:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Navigation menu
Page actions
Page
Discussion
Read
Edit
Edit source
History
Page actions
Page
Discussion
More
Tools
Personal tools
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Navigation
Main page
Deskthority forum
Support Deskthority
Search
Main categories
Guides
Keyboards
Keyboard switches
Keycaps
Keyboard modding
Pointing devices
Brands & companies
Group buys
Other topics
Wiki info & links
Recent changes
Random page
All pages
Deskthority wiki help
MediaWiki help
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information