The standard score on a words per minute typing test is considered to be 60 wpm. This minimum score measures both your overall keystroke rate (how many keys you actually hit in the minute) as well as your accuracy. Therefore, if you hit 70 keystrokes, but made 7 errors, your score would be 63 wpm.
7,888,888,908
Studies show humans can hear up to 300 WPM with full comprehension, although most audio books are at about 150-160 WPM.
If I remember correctly this is a straight subtraction problem. 189 - 80 = 109 wpm ========
0 wpm since there is no following paragraph and so zero words in it.
5 kpm = 1 wpm 1400 kpm / 10 min = 140 kpm so answer is 28 wpm
To convert words per minute (wpm) to keystrokes per hour (kph), we multiply by 12. So, for 50 wpm, the calculation is 50 wpm * 12 = 600 kph.
6000 keystrokes per hour (kph) = 6000/60 keystrokes per minute or 100 keystrokes per minute.The average word length in the English language is 5.1 letters. Add one space after each word, which makes it 6.1 keystrokes per word.That gives 100/6.1 = 16.4 words per minute (wpm), without allowing any keystrokes for punctuation.6000 keystrokes per hour (kph) = 6000/60 keystrokes per minute or 100 keystrokes per minute.The average word length in the English language is 5.1 letters. Add one space after each word, which makes it 6.1 keystrokes per word.That gives 100/6.1 = 16.4 words per minute (wpm), without allowing any keystrokes for punctuation.6000 keystrokes per hour (kph) = 6000/60 keystrokes per minute or 100 keystrokes per minute.The average word length in the English language is 5.1 letters. Add one space after each word, which makes it 6.1 keystrokes per word.That gives 100/6.1 = 16.4 words per minute (wpm), without allowing any keystrokes for punctuation.6000 keystrokes per hour (kph) = 6000/60 keystrokes per minute or 100 keystrokes per minute.The average word length in the English language is 5.1 letters. Add one space after each word, which makes it 6.1 keystrokes per word.That gives 100/6.1 = 16.4 words per minute (wpm), without allowing any keystrokes for punctuation.
According to the following website: http://www.ehow.com/about_5079380_data-entry-keystrokes.html == == 2. Keystroke speed can be used to determine typing speed by using a formula. It is not 100-percent accurate, but comes pretty close, because keying alphabets usually takes more keystrokes than numbers, to accommodate for longer words, phrases and sentences. Keystrokes are measured per hour and words are measured per minute. The formula for measuring keystrokes per hour is to multiply the number of keystrokes by 30. For example 336 ks x 30 = 10,080 kph. The formula for converting kph to wpm (words per minute) is kph divided by 300. So 10,080 kph is about 33-34 wpm. To convert wpm back to kph, multiply the wpm by 300: 34 wpm x 300 is 10,200 kph.
The first step we would take would be to determine the meaning of each abbreviation, whereupon we would be positioned to set about formulating a solution strategy. For wpm (words per minute) the word is taken as 5 keystrokes. Thus to convert to cph (characters per hour) multiply by 300 (x5 to convert wpm to cpm (characters per minute) and then x60 as there are 60 minutes in an hour). kph (keystrokes per hour) is usually used for data entry using a keypad.
The minimum is 25 wpm.
The standard score on a words per minute typing test is considered to be 60 wpm. This minimum score measures both your overall keystroke rate (how many keys you actually hit in the minute) as well as your accuracy. Therefore, if you hit 70 keystrokes, but made 7 errors, your score would be 63 wpm.
10 keystrokes are needed to type "Wichita, KS."
it depends on how long it takes to type 5000 keystrokes.
according to US weekly, and Scooter :) he can type 120 wpm
Oh, dude, converting words per minute to keystrokes per minute is a piece of cake! All you gotta do is consider that an average word has about 5 characters, so you multiply wpm by 5 to get kpm. It's like converting apples to oranges, but way less delicious.
Accuracy % = ((keystrokes - errors) / keystrokes) * 100 Example: 500 keystrokes - 25 errors = 475 accurate keystrokes 95% = ((500 - 25) / 500) * 100 = (475 / 500) * 100) = .95 * 100 Check: 500 keystrokes - 25 errors = 475 accurate keystrokes 500 keystrokes * 95% accuracy = 500 * .95 = 475 accurate keystrokes 475=475=true! --------------------------- Original Poster's Method: --------------------------- number of mistakes divided by the number of keystrokes multiply by 100 subtract from 100