Loading paragraph…
Start typing to begin the test…
Welcome to TypingTips.in's Asees Punjabi typing test — the most comprehensive free online platform for practising and improving your Punjabi typing speed and accuracy in the Asees font. Whether you are preparing for a Punjab government examination, a departmental typing test, or simply want to sharpen your daily Punjabi typing skills, our test is designed to give you a realistic, exam-standard experience every time.
Asees is a traditional, non-Unicode Punjabi font that has been a cornerstone of Punjab state government offices, exam boards, and data-entry departments for decades. Unlike Unicode fonts such as Raavi or Gurmukhi, the Asees font works on an ASCII-mapping system: each key on the standard English QWERTY keyboard is mapped to a specific Punjabi Gurmukhi character glyph. When you type the letter a on your keyboard, the Asees font renders it as the Punjabi character ਅ; when you type s, it renders as ਸ — and so on for every key. This mapping approach is what makes Asees a non-Unicode or "legacy" font.
The Asees font remains the primary font required in Punjab state government typing examinations conducted by PSSSB (Punjab Subordinate Services Selection Board), PPSC, Revenue Patwari exams, and many municipal and panchayat department tests. Mastering the Asees keyboard layout is therefore essential for lakhs of candidates across Punjab who aspire to government clerical or data-entry positions.
The Asees Punjabi typing test on TypingTips.in uses authentic, exam-standard paragraphs sourced from our curated database of Punjabi passages. Each paragraph has been carefully selected to reflect the vocabulary, sentence structure, and character frequency distribution encountered in real Punjab government typing examinations. Practising on our platform provides:
Different Punjab government examinations have specific typing speed and accuracy requirements. Meeting the minimum standard is essential — exceeding it gives you an edge over other candidates. Here are the commonly required benchmarks:
| Examination | Font | Min. WPM | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| PSSSB Clerk / Junior Assistant | Asees | 30 WPM | 10 minutes |
| Revenue Patwari | Asees / Raavi | 25 – 30 WPM | 5 – 10 minutes |
| Data Entry Operator (DEO) | Raavi / Asees | 35 WPM | 10 minutes |
| Steno-Typist | Asees | 30 WPM (typing part) | 5 minutes |
| Municipal Council / Panchayat Clerk | Asees / AnmolLipi | 25 WPM | 5 minutes |
As a general rule, aim to comfortably exceed the required WPM in practice — ideally by 5–10 WPM — to account for exam-day nerves, unfamiliar paragraphs, and occasional keyboard issues.
Before attempting any speed test, invest time in fully memorising the Asees keyboard layout. Print the official keyboard chart and keep it at your workstation. Study the position of each character by tracing your eyes across the chart, then practise typing individual rows. Do not start speed tests until you can find at least 80% of keys without looking at the keyboard. Attempting speed practice before memorising the layout creates bad habits that are very difficult to unlearn later.
Consistency is more important than session length. Twenty minutes of focused Asees Punjabi typing practice every day will produce measurable improvement within two weeks. Use the 15-second and 30-second tests on TypingTips.in for warm-up drills, then graduate to 2-minute and 5-minute sessions as your speed improves. The 10-minute test should be your benchmark session at least twice a week once you pass the 25 WPM mark.
Every incorrect character directly reduces your net WPM score. A typist who types 40 raw WPM with 80% accuracy achieves only 32 net WPM — below the passing mark for most exams. A typist who types 32 raw WPM with 97% accuracy achieves 31 net WPM and passes comfortably. Focus on eliminating errors before chasing higher raw speeds. Accuracy above 93% during practice is a healthy target.
The standard ten-finger home-row technique applies to Punjabi keyboards just as it does to English. Place both index fingers on the designated home keys for the Asees layout, and train each finger to cover a specific zone of the keyboard. Typing with only two or three fingers has a hard ceiling of around 25–30 WPM in Punjabi — you will not break through to the 35+ WPM range required for DEO positions without proper finger placement.
After each test, note which characters you consistently mistype. These are usually characters that share similar-looking ASCII representations in the Asees encoding, or characters whose keys are in unusual positions. Create short repetitive drills that focus on those specific keys. Spend 5 minutes per session drilling two or three weak keys before starting a full-paragraph test.
Government typing exams are typically conducted in unfamiliar environments, on computers you may not have used before, and with paragraphs you have never seen. To prepare for this, regularly use the 5-minute and 10-minute tests on TypingTips.in, avoid memorising specific paragraphs, and practice on different keyboards when possible. Mental composure under time pressure is a skill that must be deliberately trained.
After completing the Asees Punjabi typing test, the result panel displays five key metrics:
The WPM graph below the result panel shows how your speed varied second by second throughout the test. A steady, gradually rising curve indicates good endurance. Sharp drops indicate moments of confusion or consecutive errors — study these patterns to diagnose specific problem areas in your typing technique.
Yes. You need the Asees font installed on your Windows computer and your keyboard input must be set to the Asees Punjabi keyboard layout. You can download the Asees font for free from our Asees font download page.
WPM is calculated using the universal standard formula: (number of correct characters ÷ 5) ÷ number of minutes elapsed. Every consecutive group of five characters — regardless of actual word boundaries — is counted as one "word". This is the same method used by Punjab government examination boards and most international typing assessment systems.
Yes. Our Asees Punjabi typing test is specifically designed for candidates preparing for PSSSB, PPSC, Revenue Department, Municipal Council, and similar Punjab government examinations. The paragraphs are exam-realistic in length, vocabulary, and difficulty, and the WPM calculation matches the standard used in official typing assessments.
Yes. Click any font button (Asees, Raavi, or AnmolLipi) above the test area at any time. The test will reset and load a new paragraph in the selected font. Note that switching fonts requires you to also switch your keyboard layout in Windows to the corresponding Punjabi layout.
This usually means the Asees font is not installed on your device, or your browser is substituting a different font. Install the Asees font from our download page and refresh the page. For Raavi, ensure your browser supports Unicode Gurmukhi rendering (all modern browsers do).
The typing test is designed for desktop computers with a physical keyboard and the Punjabi font/layout installed. Mobile touchscreens do not support the Punjabi hardware keyboard layout required for these tests. We recommend using a desktop or laptop for all typing practice.
Start your Asees Punjabi typing practice now — click the test area above, begin typing, and get your WPM score immediately. Regular daily practice on TypingTips.in is the fastest path to achieving the speed and accuracy required to pass your target government typing examination.
Embark on your journey to becoming proficient in Punjabi typing with our comprehensive tutorials at typingtips.in. Whether you are a novice or looking to polish your skills, our step-by-step guides are tailored to cater to all levels of expertise. Dive into our specialized tutorials for the Asees font, and hone your expertise for government exams. If you're venturing into the realm of Unicode standards, our Raavi font tutorial will set you up for success. For those accustomed to the Anmollipi font, we provide targeted practice sessions to ensure you're well-equipped to tackle any typing challenge. Begin your path to mastery by exploring our [Punjabi Typing Test Tutorials](#) for Asees, Raavi, and Anmollipi fonts, and type your way to excellence.
Streamline your work and ensure compatibility across various documents with our versatile Font Converter Software at typingtips.in. Transitioning between different Punjabi fonts is now a breeze. Effortlessly convert from Asees to Anmollipi when you need that specific font flair, or switch from Anmollipi to Asees for consistency in official documents. Our tool also supports conversions between Asees and Raavi, making it simple to adapt to Unicode standards. If you need to revert from Raavi to Asees or explore conversions between Raavi and Anmollipi—and vice versa—our software has got you covered. Experience seamless font transformation with our Font Converter Software, designed to cater to all your Punjabi font conversion needs without the hassle.