- steno-dictionaries VS steno
- steno-dictionaries VS plover_japanese_sokutaipu
- steno-dictionaries VS chatgpt-script
- steno-dictionaries VS emily-symbols
- steno-dictionaries VS peridot-steno
- steno-dictionaries VS compress
- steno-dictionaries VS plover_grandjean
- steno-dictionaries VS The_Uni
- steno-dictionaries VS keyboard_layouts
- steno-dictionaries VS plover
Steno-dictionaries Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to steno-dictionaries
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monkeytype
The most customizable typing website with a minimalistic design and a ton of features. Test yourself in various modes, track your progress and improve your speed.
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SaaSHub
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SymSpell
SymSpell: 1 million times faster spelling correction & fuzzy search through Symmetric Delete spelling correction algorithm
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emily-symbols
A Plover python dictionary allowing for consistent symbol input with specification of attachment and capitalisation in one stroke.
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The_Uni
A uni-board split ortholinear made for stenography. Uses QMK Firmware's Gemini Protocol. This is the pro micro version (aka Uni v2)
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steno-dictionaries discussion
steno-dictionaries reviews and mentions
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Show HN: I automated 1/2 of my typing
https://steno.sammdot.ca/emily-symbols.png
for these, where it says starter, you just press all those keys down, and then on the other side you press the keys listed for what you want. so for example, I can enter like ~104 symbols without moving my hands. the average sybmol layer has like 20. the crossplatform movement dict lets me move around much easier in any text field. (note that you don't really even need to know what the key names you are pressing are as its all a pattern) I currently have six other dictionaries that I use some of the time. you can see more here: https://www.openstenoproject.org/stenodict/.
any cli program would be very easy to add most of the commands to a dictionary if you wanted. for example, a basic git dictionary: https://github.com/didoesdigital/steno-dictionaries/blob/mas...
plover has made using a computer much more fun. its a bit of a hard sell for a lot of people, but I recommend trying out some of the other dictionaries to see what you can do besides type words fast. its seriously really crazy that we are only pressing one key at a time using a keyboard.
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[warning:LONG] thoughts on encoding density and ambiguity, pen and stenotype, in a verbatim context
In the spirit of reduction, I look another look at https://github.com/didoesdigital/steno-dictionaries/blob/master/dictionaries/dict.json. In the same way that I asked how many of the 128 left-hand (four fingers only) states are actually used by the dictionary, I can also ask how many of the 4 million available chords are actually used?
Stats
didoesdigital/steno-dictionaries is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 only which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of steno-dictionaries is JSON.