Reposting this on what is probablty the correct community, which I didn’t know actually existed on Lemmy until five minutes ago …

I’m humming and hawing over which split 36-key or thereabouts keyboard to get, either pre-soldered or as a kit to do the soldering myself (which would be an adventure because it has been a minute).

I’m pretty sure I want five columns not six, because I don’t see the point of giving my pinky extra work. I’m not sure about giving my thumb two or three keys for layers. Three keys would probably give me more options but I don’t want to get all layered out, you know?

Any thoughts on that? I know there is huge potential for going down the rabbithole here but assuming I get one keyboard, would I be better getting more rather than less - six columns - to play with layouts and layers? Or just go with my gut and get 5x3+2 right at the start?

PS: Does anybody know if Beekeebs 36-key Piantor case fit the 36-key PCB snugly? Or is it just the 42-key case with a big gap where the extra PCB has been broken off?

  • crankin@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Do you have a programmable keyboard right now? If so you can put a 36 key keymap on it and try it out, or at least certain elements of one.

    A big difference between a 5-col vs 6-col is that 5 will require homerow mods or some riff thereof. If you can put homerow mods on your current keyboard, even without changing anything else, and use them for a week or two to see if they agree with you, then you’ll know for sure whether the 5 col is the right choice. That’s what I did, then made a Fifi

    • Hannah@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeah I think I am more comfortable with the idea of homerow mods than I am with having mods stuck put beyond my pinky. If I end up combining common clusters of keypresses (like ctrl-c and ctrl-v) as well as my Vim leader stuff in an easy-to-access layer then the homerow mods will only really be for edge cases.