wpm
is a curses-based UNIX terminal program for measuring and improving your typing
speed (measured in words per minute, or WPM).
It depends only on standard Python libraries and therefore works with Python 2, 3 and PyPy.
- Over 4900 quotes in the database, shamelessly stolen from typeracerdata.com
- Extremely low typing latency!
- Timer starts when you strike the first key
- Completed text is darkened, helping you to focus ahead
- Keep separate scores for, e.g. type of keyboard, layout etc.
- Saves race scores in a CSV file that is a superset of TypeRacer's export format. Loads fine in Excel as well.
- Launches quickly in your terminal window for "in-between moments"
The recommended way is to install via PyPi
$ pip install wpm
The above usually requires sudo
. If you don't want to install it
system-wide, you can use pip install wpm --user
.
Remember to check for upgrades with pip install --upgrade wpm
. You can also
install it from the source repository with
$ python setup.py install [--user]
To just test the app without installing, type make run
.
Just type wpm
to start the program. The timer will start when you press the
first key. At any time, you can hit ESCAPE to quit.
You can backspace for the current word you're editing, if you make a mistake. Mistakes will lower the accuracy score.
If you have problems finding the wpm
file, you can also start it by typing
python -m wpm
. You can also see options with python -m wpm --help
.
The WPM is calculated by dividing characters per second by five and then multiplying that with 60. This is a well-known formula, but gives slightly higher scores than on sites like typeracer.com. It is, however, good enough to gauge your typing speed. And it works offline, and with your own texts.
Regarding TypeRacer, I really suggest everyone check it out. I use this program merely to warm up before heading over to typeracer.com, where you can race against others.
Run outside of tmux, and use a really speedy terminal window. On my macOS system, I found the best latency using the built-in Terminal.app, which easily beats iTerm. I also found the Kitty terminal to provide very low latency.
On Linux, the ultimate typing latency is achieved if you open up one of the
virtual consoles. For example, hit CTRL+ALT+F2 and log in, set your
TERM=xterm-color
and run wpm
. Many terms also have quite a high
latency. Try using uxterm if you need to run it inside X.
I believe that everyone can type at 100 WPM with enough practice. If you are currently typing slower than that, my suggestions are:
- Learn to type without looking at the keyboard
- Learn to use all your fingers
- Sit up straight and type in a comfortable situation
If you are consistently above 100 WPM:
- Focus on the next word
- Type words instead of characters
- Train muscle memory
- Type hard parts slower
- Raise your wrists
Practice a little bit every few days, but don't overdo it. Stop when you're tired or feeling unmotivated.
If you want to type a custom text, run
$ wpm --load yourfile.txt
If you use --load
, the author will currently be empty, the title will be
the basename of the file. The text ID will be its inode, just to make them
somewhat unique, so your stats will work.
You can also bundle up several texts into a single JSON file, using wpm
--load-json yourfile.json
. It must have the following format:
[
{
"author": "Author Name",
"title": "Title of Work",
"text": "The text to type here ..."
"id": 123,
},
...
]
The id
is an optional integer. If you leave it out, an increasing,
zero-based integer will be used.
wpm will save scores in a CSV file in ~/.wpm.csv. This file can be loaded directly into Excel. It uses the same format as TypeRacer, with the addition of a few extra columns at the end. That means is should be possible to use existing TypeRacer score history tools with this file with minor modifications.
The column order is:
Column | Datatype | Explanation |
race | int | Race number, always increasing and tied to timestamp |
wpm | float | The average WPM for that quote that single time |
accuracy | float | From 0 to 1, where 1 means no mistakes |
rank | int | Always 1 |
racers | int | Always 1 |
text_id | int | Item number of text in given database |
timestamp | str | UTC timestamp in strptime format %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f |
database | str | Either "default" or the basename of the file used |
tag | str | A user supplied tag for that score (e.g., keyboard) |
Should there be any problem saving or loading the score history, it will copy the existing file into ~/.wpm.csv.backup and create a new one.
If you use --tag=... to tag your scores, this will be used until you change it. It is just a free text field that is saved along with each race result. It is useful to compare how well you are typing in various situations.
For example, perhaps you want to check if you are typing faster (but perhaps less accurate?) on different keyboards, or you are learning a new keyboard layout like Dvorak or Colemak and then use the tags --tag=qwerty and --tag=dvorak. If you are learning to touch type, or type with more fingers, you often start out slower than your normal speed. Tagging is a great way to keep track of your progress.
By running wpm --stats (or just -s), you will see a table of statistics, grouped by each tag. It shows things like the average over time, along with confidence and prediction intervals. An item like n-10 means "the last 10 games".
The first time you start wpm, it writes a .wpmrc file to your home directory. It contains user settings that you can change. They are given in the table below.
Section | Name | Default | Description |
curses | escdelay | 15 | Time in ms to wait for follow-up key after ESC |
curses | window_timeout | 20 | Time in ms until giving up waiting for a keypress. If negative, wait forever. |
wpm | confidence_level | 0.95 | The confidence level for WPM statistics |
wpm | cpm | 0 | If positive, report CPM in stats instead of WPM |
wpm | tab_spaces | 1 | Number of spaces to expand tabs to |
wpm | wrap_width | -1 | If positive, wrap text at this width |
xterm256colors | Color codes for 256-color terminals (foreground, background) | ||
xtermcolors | Color codes for ordinary terminals (foreground, background) |
You can enable certain unofficial features by seting the environment variable WPM_DEVFEATURES=feature1:feature2:etc..
Look in the file wpm/devfeatures.py for a list.
Copyright 2017, 2018 Christian Stigen Larsen
Distributed under the GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) v3 or later. See the file LICENSE.txt for the full license text. This software makes use of open source software.
The quotes database is not covered by the AGPL!