Typing Practice

Last updated: 2026-06-25

TL;DR

Typing practice is a repeat-drill tool that has you type English or Korean practice sentences one at a time to build your typing speed (WPM) and accuracy.

Correct characters turn green, incorrect ones red, and your running average speed and accuracy across finished sentences are shown together.

Type One Sentence at a Time

Changing the language loads a new practice sentence and resets the running totals.

Loading practice sentence...

Correct characters turn green and incorrect ones turn red. Finishing the sentence records it automatically.

Current WPM

0

Accuracy

0%

Sentences done

0

Average WPM

0

Results are reference figures that can vary with the sentence difficulty and how speed is measured. Use them for fun.

How to Use

  1. Choose a language — Select an English or Korean practice sentence.
  2. Type the sentence — Type along with the prompt. Correct characters turn green, incorrect ones red.
  3. Next sentence — Finish a sentence, move on with the Next Sentence button, and watch your running average speed and accuracy.

How to Practice Typing Effectively

The key to typing practice is accuracy, not raw speed. Building a habit of typing fast with mistakes eventually caps your speed. At first, look at the prompt and type slowly and accurately; once your fingers remember the positions, speed comes naturally. Repeating one sentence at a time builds finger muscle memory efficiently.

Typing practice goals by stage
StageGoalTarget accuracy
Beginner (weeks 1–2)Learn finger placement & home row98%+ (speed aside)
Novice (under 40 WPM)Type without looking down95%+
Intermediate (40–70 WPM)Type with steady, unbroken rhythm95%+
Advanced (70+ WPM)Stay consistent over long text97%+

Keeping accuracy at 95% or higher while raising your speed is the fastest path. Once you have practiced enough, check your current speed with the typing speed test, take on longer text with long-text typing, and follow a structured plan in the How to Type Faster guide.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

How much typing practice should I do each day?

Short, consistent practice of 10 to 20 minutes a day works better than one long session. Finger muscle memory forms best with brief, repeated practice. If your accuracy drops, slow down for a while and focus on hitting the right keys.

Should I practice English or Korean first?

It is most practical to start with the language you use most. For English, the basics are keeping your fingers on the home row (asdf jkl;). For Korean, the Dubeolsik layout splits consonants (left hand) and vowels (right hand), so getting used to that division is key.

How are correct and incorrect characters shown?

Characters that match the prompt turn green, mismatches are shown in red, and the next position to type is highlighted. The live feedback lets you correct typos right away.

How is the running average speed calculated?

The speed and accuracy of every finished sentence are combined into an average. Practicing more sentences in a session gives a steadier average, and pressing Restart resets the running totals.

Is my practice saved?

No. All practice runs only in your browser, and what you type and your records are never sent to or stored on a server. Refreshing the page clears the running totals.

Last updated: 2026-06-25