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Store results and show past scores #11
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Hi, |
@abaksy perhaps it would be good to store the whole of |
I think CSV should work fine, easily parsable by |
I'd be willing to take a crack at this. I just want to know if serialization is something that is open for discussion, or if manual parsing of the values into CSV is preferred.
I'm leaning towards using Serde just because it opens up future expansion for graphing etc. without much, if any, rewriting as most libraries support Serde pretty well. Only issue I know Serde will have is that the I'm interested in any thoughts regarding this. |
@treatybreaker thank you for taking a crack at this. I prefer the serde solution. I'm assuming that each
This is reasonable. Although, along with the duration I would also like to store the start timestamp of the test. Perhaps |
Is it possible to capture some of the metrics used in keyboard dynamics? I am particularly interested in dwell (or key-hold) time. Knowing how long I take to press and release a key on average and maximum (or high percentile) would help me adjust some timeouts I need to specify in tools like Kmonad, Kanata and keyd to support home rowm modifiers. I suppose QMK/ZMK users would benefit too. |
@argenkiwi that's an interesting idea! Do you know any examples of typing test apps that have implemented this? To use as a reference |
That's what's odd: there seems to be a lot of content related to keystroke dynamics and keystroke metrics, but the focus is on their use in authentication applications and it seems typing tests focus mostly in WPM and CPM. I have only been able to find some code snippets on StackOverflow and I made a very simple one myself using Javascript, but it would be ideal if it was processed as part of a typing test because you are incentivized to type with as much accuracy and speed as possible. |
Thanks for the research! To know how long a key is pressed, we would need both the key down and key up events. But turns out that detecting key up events in a terminal app is sadly not possible: https://blog.robertelder.org/detect-keyup-event-linux-terminal/ It's possible in web (like you've shown in JS) and desktop apps though. |
That is what I feared. Thank you @Samyak2, it helps me narrow down my search. |
What and why?
It would be nice if toipe stored the results of each test in a file or a DB on the local system. There could be a screen to display past results - maybe a local leaderboard or a graph tracking speed across time.
How?
TODO. Need to figure out the details.
Context
Suggestion from reddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/tvamfz/comment/i3bqomq/
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