--- title: Key Layouts tags: - misc - keyboard date: 9-08-23 --- Take a look at this typewriter: Getty Images typewriter layout The keys are connected by levers to the internal workings. Those levers have to be spaced apart so that they don't collide, and to ensure smooth typing. More in-depth explanation (off-site) [here](https://deskthority.net/wiki/Staggering#Classic%20typewriter%20keyboard). The modern keyboard stagger, with some exceptions, overwhelmingly looks like this: Best Buy HP Classic Desktop Combo But there are no levers in an electronic keyboard. Why the design holdover? We only staggered the keys in a typewriter because they physically couldn't be aligned any other way. And nobody nowadays has typed on a typewriter necessitating familiarity. The answer? Comfort. Typing on a keyboard like that below, unless you're actively tucking your elbows in at your sides, is completely unbearable: ortholinear keyboard from Mech Keybs So the staggered layout remains. ##### P.S. Yes, [split ortholinear](https://keeb.io/collections/split-keyboards/products/viterbi-keyboard-pcbs-5x7-70-split-ortholinear) and other enthusiast layouts like [Dactyl Manuform](https://github.com/tshort/dactyl-keyboard) exist that alter or eliminate the above concerns. This is just meant to be a minimal example of when necessity stumbles upon a highly performant solution by chance. See also [[Projects/keyboards|my keyboard]] and other [keyboard-related](/tags/keyboard) posts.