Abstract
Keystroke statistics were collected on editing systems while people performed their normal work. Knowledge workers used an experimental editor, and secretaries used a word processor. Results show a consistent picture of free use patterns in both settings. Of the total number of keystrokes, text entry accounted for approximately 1/2, cursor movement for about 1/4, deletion for about 1/8, and all other functions for the remaining 1/8. Analysis of keystroke transitions and editing states is also presented. Implications for past research, editor design, keyboard layout, and benchmark tests are discussed.
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CITATION STYLE
Whiteside, J., Archer, N., Wixon, D., & Good, M. (1982). How do people really use text editors? In Proceedings of the SIGOA Conference on Office Information Systems (pp. 29–40). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/800210.806474
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