This one recently helped me [decide to give up on Dvorak]:
http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Using_Vim_with_the_Dvorak_keyboard_layout
--
.
Actually both. I just couldn't bare having to use two hands to navigate with hjkl, and remapping them seemed like a bad idea. It's a shame because I really do like Dvorak better than Sholes, and wish that I had learnt that before Sholes, but I type fast enough already and don't really see an advantage of switching to Dvorak now (I don't get RSI or anything). In fact, I see two-handed hjkl as a distinct disadvantage.
--
.
Has there been some new evidence since this?
http://www.utdallas.edu/~liebowit/keys1.html
I've always been told that the superiority of Dvorak was a myth. I've
yet to see anything that makes me think otherwise!
c
--
Chris Lott <ch...@chrislott.org>
TL;DR
>I've always been told that the superiority of Dvorak was a myth. I've
>yet to see anything that makes me think otherwise!
I think we can type just as fast in any layout as long as we get used to it. If a person first learns speed typing in Sholes, he reaches x WPM. If he had first learnt speed typing in Dvorak, he'd reach y WPM. The difference twixt x and y is too small to consider either one 'better' than the other, IMHO. Dvorak does 'feel' better, though, and people who suffer from RSI using Sholes do say they can type more comfortably in Dvorak. It also might be worth considering that the world's fastest typer did it in Dvorak.
IOW, if you're already fast enough in Sholes and don't suffer RSI, Dvorak won't help you much.
--
.