Remember the position of each key to speed up typing.

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Keystroke method

If you want to improve your typing speed through training, you should keep your eyes on the screen while typing, not on the keyboard. It is very likely that some fingers, such as the ring finger, will not be flexible enough to type the keys at the beginning and will be a bit awkward, but as long as you keep practicing, you will be able to learn it well.
Place the index finger, middle finger, ring finger and pinky finger of the left hand on the F, D, S and A keys, respectively, with the left thumb naturally bent toward the palm; place the index finger, middle finger, ring finger and pinky finger of the right hand on the J, K, L and; keys, respectively, and lightly place the right thumb on the space bar.
The wrist is flat, the finger form from the wrist to the fingertip is curved, and the first joint of the finger end is at a vertical angle to the keyboard.
Fingernails must be flattened before typing, not touching the keys with fingernails.

What is keystroke practice?

Keystroke practice helps you learn the physical position of each key on the keyboard. Instead of focusing only on WPM, it trains finger placement, key memory, hand coordination, and touch typing confidence. This is especially useful for beginners and for anyone correcting inefficient keyboard habits.

How to use keystroke practice

Look at the on-screen keyboard and follow the highlighted key prompts. Try to press keys with the correct finger while keeping your eyes on the screen instead of the physical keyboard. Practice slowly first, then increase rhythm as your hands remember the key positions.

How to understand keystroke practice progress

Keystroke practice is about building keyboard familiarity and reducing hesitation. Progress can be understood by fewer pauses, better finger placement, fewer wrong keys, and a smoother rhythm. These improvements support higher WPM and better accuracy in timed typing tests and typing games.