sly279 wrote:
To many 100% correct grammar and spelling means intelligence, or having a college degree in a field you work.
I work hard with my spelling. Care a lot about it but I fail. I often screen at my iPad and desire to throw it because it makes a mistake repeat and I have to spend hours correcting it. I spend hours posting on this site.
Sadly the voice to text thing is super inaccurate due to my speech impediment. So I use google to get correct spellings of words I can’t remember or don’t know all this takes time. Also smart phones and iPads keyboard is no where as good as s physical keyboard so it makes tons of mistakes it frustrates me so much.
When I was in school I took a course in typing. It turned out to be one of the most useful classes I took in high school. This is because an Aspie’s weakness is verbal communications and their great strength is written communications. I consider typing to be a quintessential task and almost a mandatory class for an Aspie. I think I can still type at around 60 words per minute. In today’s world, this type of course might be referred to as keyboarding. I find many of the modern keyboards to be unworkable because they often produced double strikes or no strikes. So I bought a special keyboard called a Das Keyboard Model S Professional for my Mac computer because it gives an audible click every time a key is depressed, similar to a typewriter. This keyboard provides outstanding tactile and audible feedback.
In your case, you have an iPad. iPads can be configured with keyboards that are bluetooth compatible. The Das keyboard I have is hardwired. But there may be other external wireless keyboards that exist that have bluetooth configurations.
One of the problems I have is with auto spelling correctors. They will sometimes alter the typing without me even realizing it was done. WP is especially bad at auto checker changes. Sometimes it can make my writing almost unintelligible.