Design for people want to memorize words and practice typings.
We have deployed QWERTY Learner on many platforms. You can try QWERTY Learner in following ways.
- Vercel: https://qwerty.kaiyi.cool/, or https://qwerty-learner.vercel.app/.
- GitHub Pages: https://kaiyiwing.github.io/qwerty-learner/.
- Gitee Pages (recommended for people in mainland China): https://kaiyiwing.gitee.io/qwerty-learner/.
QWERTY Learner also has a Visual Studio Code plugin. With a single click and you will be able to practice anytime.
- Plugin: VSCode Plugin Market
- Project: GitHub
QWERTY Learner is designed for people who type English in their daily work and English is not their mother tongue. It is common for them to type faster in their native language than in English. This is mainly because they have built a strong muscle memory in their years of experience of typing in native languages. Their muscle memory of English words and phrases is relatively weak. Therefore, people tend to “forget the words” when typing in English.
In order to consolidate English typing skills, you have to keep memorizing words. QWERTY Learner combines vocabulary memorization with typing practice, so you can consolidate muscle memory while reciting words.
To avoid forming incorrect muscle memory, the software requires people to re-enter the entire word if they made any mistakes. This ensures that people form a correct muscle memory.
QWERTY Learner is very useful for people who are going to take computer-based English tests , for example, TOEFL, GRE, and so on.
QWERTY Learner is also helpful for developers. It has built-in dictionaries of words and phrases which are common in code and documentations. We believe these dictionaries will improve developers’ typing speed. Besides, It also has built-in API dictionaries of many languages, which helps developers quickly familiarize with common APIs. More and more APIs are coming soon.
QWERTY Learner has many built-in dictionaries (word banks) for different purposes (examination, learning, and grading). Besides, it also provides dictionaries for developers learning APIs and common words and phrases used by programming languages and libraries.
Our goal is to be the best solution for word memorization and typing practice. Therefore, contribution of more dictionaries is welcome.
While typing, QWERTY Learner shows the IPA of current word and reads the word. This helps people memorize pronunciation and spelling together.
After people finish a chapter, QWERTY Learner will ask if people are willing to dictate the chapter. This is intended to consolidate words learned in the chapter.
QWERTY Learner counts how many strokes people have typed and shows the speed and accuracy in real time. By doing so, people can acknowledge how much they have improved.
- GitHub global trending projects
- V2EX daily trending posts
- Gitee trending projects
- Recommended by sspai
- CET-4
- CET-6
- GMAT
- GRE
- IELTS
- SAT
- TOEFL
- TEM-4
- TEM-8
- Common words and phrases for developers
- Chinese National College Entrance Examination
There are also many other unlisted vocabularies. If you need more vocabularies, please come up with new issues according to our contribution guide.
- JavaScript API. Thanks to @sdu-gyf.
- Node.js API. Thanks to @chrysalis1215.
- Java API. Thanks to @darkSheep.
- Linux Command. Thanks to @Riddler.
- C# List API. Thanks to @nidbCN.
If you want to contribute your own API thesaurus, please have a look at issue #40 and PR #67 in order to learn how to contribute.
The project is still in the early stages of development. We are adding new features progressively. If you have any ideas and suggestions for the software, please feel free to ask in issues. We are glad to hear.
The current progress and future plans are described in this issue. The issue also contains comments on suggestions and developing features. If you are interested in the future of QWERTY Learner, feel free to join the discussion.
If you like the idea of QWERTY Learner, please feel free to submit PRs. We would be grateful for your contributions.
If you are interested in and willing to improve the project. We encourage you to contribute directly. We will help as much as we could.
Before contribution, we recommend you to read issue #42 in order to understand our current iteration plan. We encourage you to undertake planned tasks or any issues labeled with “Help Wanted”. Of course, we are also very willing to accept completely new features and ideas, but that may takes more time.
If you have decided the task you are willing to accomplish. Please create a draft PR after you make any progress. By doing so, you, us, and other contributors can discuss in the draft PR.
After all, thanks for your contribution! 🎉
Currently, QWERTY Learner is mainly maintained by three people in their spare time. In the future, we hope to purchase a separate domain and host an backend server for data synchronization. Therefore, if you like QWERTY Learner, please consider donation. This will definitely motivate us on the way of making QWERTY Learner better!
Note: we only accept donation from Alipay at present.
This project is inspired by many other excellent works.
-
Keybr This is a very popular typing practice website that well-known for its algorithm-generated “pseudo-English” corpus. It geneartes based on people’s accuracy and speed of typing each letter to help the user focus on individual letters that are slow to be typed. Most importantly, it generates a detailed statistics from typing practice history data.
Keybr is the original inspiration of this project. Because Keybr aims more at native English speakers. When I was practicing typing with Keybr, I felt that although the generated pseudo-English could practice letters and syllables, it did not improve entire words for non-native users. Hence I decide to make this project.
-
Typing Academy This is an excellent typing practice website. Its user interface layout and the display of speed and accuracy greatly influenced this project
-
react-code-game A very cool open source project implemented in TypeScript. You can practice typing while memorizing JavaScript’s built-in API. The idea of adding dictionaries of code snippets came from this project.
- React and create-react-app. Their exhaustive documentation is very beginner-friendly, and the React documentation is by far the best I've read in my self-learning process, solving almost most of the problems in use. Many thanks to React for their contribution to the open source world, building a great foundation for us to build really great software for beginners.
- Tailwind CSS. Tailwind CSS mitigates my fear of writing complicated stylesheets. Without Tailwind CSS, this project would unquestionably delayed longer. It helps CSS beginners (like me) getting familiar with front-end development and design user interface in a progressive manner.
English dictionaries are from kajweb. The project collects a lot of common dictionaries. This is the project that let me see the hope of realizing this project.
Phonetic data comes from open API of Youdao Dictionary. I’m very grateful for Youdao's contribution so that small projects like ours can make use of professional pronunciation resources. Besides, thanks to Youdao team and Kao Shen team for their important contribution to Chinese education and communications between China and foreign countries and regions.
JavaScript API is from react-code-game. I am really thankful to the project for crawling and compiling the JavaScript API.
Thanks to libregd for designing the icon, contributing several lovely icon designs to the project, as well as providing design advice, future planning and many other support to the project.
- Thanks to Yunqian and Da Sheng, who starred the project when there were merely a dozen of stargazers. With their attentions, I felt motivated to invest more time in the project.
- Thanks to people who discussed the idea with me at the beginning of the project, offered suggestions and pushed me from time to time, without you the idea might have been delayed for another year.
- Thanks to Pear Mini, who discussed the idea with me at the beginning and gave me support, and whose project made me believe that even a student's idea can be cool. His Gossip project is definitely the next generation presentation authoring tool.
- Thanks to AZ for encouraging me to get my idea out there (though I still procrastinated), his unparalleled drive has influenced me. He’s a really cool library author and has written a lot of great python packages, such as a framework for Chinese speech recognition ASRFrame.
- Thanks to Luyu Cheng, the coolest front-end guru I ever know, for giving the project and my front-end self-learning endless help. He helped me selecting the right tech stack at the beginning of the project, helped me with technical issues during the development phase, provided technical ideas for features I didn't know how to implement, and contributed a lot of very popular features to the project.