meanings of International keyboard layouts encyclopedia of International keyboard layouts dictionary of International keyboard layouts thesaurus on International keyboard layouts books about International keyboard layouts dreams about International keyboard layouts
 International keyboard layouts - Definition 

Computers and other typing devices offer many different keyboard layouts, for people to be able to input data in different languages. The standard English keyboard layout is known as QWERTY. Various alternatives to the QWERTY layout have been suggested, many claiming advantages such as higher typing speeds. The most famous alternative is the Dvorak Simplified Keyboard.

Contents

Keyboard structure

The keys labelled only with a capital letter can type both small and capital letters. To type the symbol at the top left of a key, the Shift key, often labelled "↑", is used. To type the symbol at the bottom right of a key, the Alt Gr key is used. (Further symbols are available on the keyboards of laptop computers, which require further keystroke combinations.)

In the standard keyboard structure are included too the control, alternative, and function keys. Together, these keys are commonly known as modifier keys.

Dead key

Many languages include additional characters, such as accented characters, that do not easily fit onto a standard English keyboard. Typing the accented characters is made easier by using a dead key feature. When you use the dead key, nothing will happen on the screen when you press the designated key for the accent that you want. Next, you type the character that you wish to have accented. If you type the correct accent and character, the desired accented character appears on the screen. This key combination requires that you type an acceptable sequence. For example, if you type the acute accent dead key followed by the letter "a", you will get the accented "a": "á". If you type the accented dead key followed by the "t" key, you will not get anything on the screen unless that particular font includes an accented "t" character. Alternatively, you get an accent as a separate character, followed by the other character.

To type a diacritical mark on its own, it should be followed by a space.

Note on Keyboard layouts

The following layouts assume that the physical location of all keys are the same as on a US 102-key PC/AT keyboard. In practice, keyboards from other countries may have keys in slightly different locations. However, if you have a US 102-key PC/AT keyboard and you configure your operating system to use a non-English language on it, the keys will be placed as follows.

Keyboard layouts for roman script

Although there are a large number of different keyboard layouts used with different languages written in roman script, most of these layouts are quite similar. According to where the keys for Q, A, Z, M, and Y are placed on the keyboard, they can be divided into three main families. These are usually named according to the first six letters.

Note that while the core of the keyboard, the alphabetic section, remains fairly constant, and the numbers from 1-9 are almost invariably on the top row, keyboards differ vastly in:

  • the placement of punctuation characters,
  • which punctuation characters are included,
  • whether numbers are accessible directly or in a shift-state,
  • the presence and placement of accent deadkeys and accented characters.

QWERTY

Is by far the most widespread of these, the only one not confined to a particular geographical area. Note that words like "return" have not been translated from the language of the keyboard in question.

Canadian French

Canadian French keyboard layout

Portuguese, Brazilian

Missing image
KeyboardLayout-Portuguese-Brazil.png
Portuguese (Brazil) keyboard layout

Norwegian

Missing image
Keyboard_Layout_Norwegian.png
Norwegian keyboard layout

Danish

Missing image
KeyboardLayout-Danish.png
Danish keyboard layout

Swedish/Finnish

Swedish/Finnish keyboard layout

To enter the euro sign (€) press AltGr+E.

UK

The United Kingdom layout is similar to the United States layout, except that

  • " and @ are exchanged;
  • the key above right shift immediately to the left of the Enter key is # and ~ when shifted, rather than \ and |;
  • shift-3 gives a £ sign;
  • AltGr-4 gives a sign;
  • the key to the immediate left of numeral 1 (backtick, `) gives ¬ when shifted (not ~) and with AltGr either
    • vertical bar | (OS/2's UK166 keyboard layout, Linux UK keyboard layout, and as usually printed on the keytop on keyboards sold in the UK),
      or
    • broken vertical bar ¦ (Windows' UK keyboard layout);
  • the key to the immediate left of Z gives, when shifted, either
    • broken vertical bar ¦ (OS/2's UK166 keyboard layout and as usually printed on the keytop on keyboards sold in the UK),
      or
    • vertical bar | (Windows' UK keyboard layout and Linux UK keyboard layout).

US

Middle north American keyboard layout

Note that the US keyboard layout offers no way of inputting any sort of diacritic or accent; this makes it unsuitable for all but a handful of languages unless the US International layout is used, which changes the `, ~, ^, " (for ¨), and ' (for ´) keys into dead keys, as well as having some extra AltGr combinations.

QWERTZ

The QWERTZ layout is fairly widely used in Germany and much of Central Europe. The main difference between it and QWERTY is that Y and Z have been swapped.

Germany and Austria (but not Switzerland)

Missing image
KeyboardLayout-German.png
German keyboard layout

Swiss German, Swiss French, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg

Swiss keyboard layout

Remarks: Luxembourg doesn't have a keyboard layout of its own. Public education uses the Swiss-French keyboard, whereas the banking sector prefers the Belgian layout. Other places use either one, or even the US layout.

AZERTY

The AZERTY layout is used in France and in some surrounding countries. It differs from the QWERTY layout thus:

  • A and Q are swapped
  • Z and W are swapped
  • M is moved from the right of N to the right of L [where colon/semicolon is on a US keyboard].

OTHERS

There are also keyboard layouts that do not resemble QWERTY/QWERTZ/AZERTY very closely, if at all. Best known among these is the Dvorak layout (named after its inventor, not the key order), which is claimed by its proponents to offer higher typing speed. Some languages use the Roman script but with non-QWERTY-based keyboard layouts, such as Latvian and Turkish.

Keyboard layouts for non-roman alphabetic scripts

Some keyboard layouts for non-roman alphabetic scripts are actually based off the QWERTY layout, in that, as far as possible, glyphs are assigned to keys which bear similar-sounding or -appearing glyphs in QWERTY. This saves learning time for those familiar

This is not a general rule, though, and many non-roman keyboard layouts are invented from scratch.

Also, most non-roman keyboard layouts have the capacity to be used to input roman letters as well as the script of the language; users of non-roman scripts frequently encounter situations where they must enter roman script (for example, when typing in URLs or names). This may be done through a special key on the keyboard devoted to this task, or through some special combination of keys, or through software programs that don't really interact with the keyboard much.

Arabic

Arabic keyboard layout

Armenian

Armenian keyboard layout

Greek

Greek keyboard layout

Hebrew

Hebrew keyboard layout

Russian

Russian keyboard layout

Sanskrit (also for Hindi)

Sanskrit keyboard layout

Thai

Thai keyboard layout

Note on East Asian languages

Chinese, Japanese and Korean require special input methods (often abbreviated to CJK IMEs) due to the thousands of possible characters in these languages. Various methods have been invented to pack all these possibilities into a normal QWERTY keyboard, so East Asian keyboards are essentially the same as those in other countries. However, their input methods are considerably more complex, without one-to-one mappings between keys and characters.

In general, you need to first narrow down the range of possibilities (most often by entering the desired character's pronunciation), and then if there remains more than one possibility, select the desired ideogram using a graphical menu. The computer assists you by using heuristics to guess which character is most likely desired. Although this may sound clumsy, East Asian input methods are today sufficiently sophisticated that for both beginners or experts, typing in these languages is only somewhat slower than typing English.

In Japanese, QWERTY-based JIS keyboard layout is used, and the pronunciation of each character is entered using Hepburn or Kunrei-shiki romanization. (There are kana-based typing methods, but they are difficult for foreigners to learn and yield only a relatively small speed benefit. However, most Japanese people are using them, and you will see them in typing games as well.) See also Japanese language and computers.

In Korean, there are 2 kinds of Keyboard layouts: Du Bul Sik and Se Bul Sik. They are quite different each other, but both based on the QWERTY keyboard. Du Bul Sik is more commonly used. Hangul keyboard layout is quite simple for someone who understands Hangul. Each Hangul consonant and vowel (jamo) is assigned to the key. You can make a Hangul character to combine those consonants and vowels. ("consonant+vowel+consonant" forms one basic Hangul character.) Each character has its own phonetic value. So, once the pronunciation is known, it is easy to combine consonants and vowels to make a character.

Chinese has the most complex and varied input methods. You can enter characters by pronunciation (like Japanese and Korean) or by structure. The structural methods are the most difficult to learn, but they are extremely fast for experienced typists, as they do away with the need for selecting characters from a menu. For a detailed treatment, see Chinese input methods for computers.

There exist a variety of other, slower ways a character may be entered. If you don't remember the pronunciation of a character, you can also narrow down the selection by giving its component shapes, radicals, and stroke count. Also, many input systems include a "drawing pad" permitting "handwriting" of a character using a mouse. Finally, if you are on a computer without CJK software installed, it is always possible to enter a character directly through its encoding number (e.g. Unicode).

Chinese

Computers shipped in the Republic of China (Taiwan) will often use Zhuyin (bopomofo) style keyboards, many also with Cangjie method key labels, as Cangjie is the standard method for speed-typing in Traditional Chinese. The bopomofo style keyboards are in lexicographical order, top-to-bottom left-to-right. Keyboards used in the People's Republic of China will typically use a Western keyboard and input Chinese characters using Hanyu pinyin, which represents sounds of Chinese characters using Latin letters.

See the section on East Asian languages above, and also Chinese input methods for computers.

Hangul (for Korean)

Pressing Ha/En key once switches between Hangul as shown, and English. There shall have another key just next to the Ha/En key or the left Alt key, for Hanja input. If you are using a standard 104-key keyboard, the right Alt key will become the Ha/En key; and the right Ctrl key will become the Hanja key. Alternate keyboard styles exist, such as those used by IBM mainframes, but these are rarely used.

Hangul keyboard layout

Japanese

Usually the JIS keyboard is used. Alt+Zen/Han key combination is used to switch on input method editor. Some people prefer US layout, in which case Alt+` does the role.

See the section on East Asian languages above, and also Japanese language and computers.

Missing image
Keyboard_Layout_Japanese(JIS).png
JIS keyboard layout

See also

External links


ja:キー配列

Copyright 2008 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  ::  Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "International keyboard layouts".