Please note that the help guides listed here are for languages that Miami currently teaches. If you have questions about setting up a language keyboard for a language that Miami does not currently teach, please contact the ILRC Director, Daniel Meyers, and he will assist you in getting your specific language set up.

For some Latin-based languages, such as French, German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish, you may have an easier time with diacritical character input by using the US International keyboard layout You might decide to choose to use this layout over memorizing the individual ANSI codes for each character.


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To enter ALT codes, be sure your Number Lock key is pressed for your numeric keypad. Press the ALT key and hold it while typing the number combination on the numeric keypad to the right of the keyboard.

The Greek polytonic keyboard is set up very similarly to the QWERTY English keyboard. The notible exception is on the far right-hand side of the keyboard, where several accent and breath mark glyphs can be combined with other letters.

I have a user that is moving from Windows 7 to Windows 10 and needs a Chinese keyboard set up. However, I can't seem to set up a keyboard that gives me the same output as on Windows 7. I need the options to look like those in the photo below when I type "g4".

I have figured this out. You need to use the Chinese (Traditional, Taiwan) language and the Microsoft Bopomofo keyboard. However, the bigger key was that the candidate list did not appear automatically. Once you type the characters you need to use the arrow keys to make the candidate list appear.

I have the Microsoft pinyin Chinese simplified keyboard installed (PC) and so far it works okay. But the keyboard itself seems to have two settings: a  setting and a  setting. The former is on by default and it is what I use to type, I'm guessing the latter is used if you want to type English.

I'm switching between my default German keyboard and the pinyin keyboard a lot using alt-shift (hence my initial thought that maybe I hit win-shift by accident, but I'm really not!) and that's usually not a problem.

The OP already has IME and knows how to switch it on and off from their primary German keyboard. The issue is that when within IME, the input sometimes turns to English. The OP wanted to know how this happened, and asked whether there was a hotkey that toggled between Chinese and English from within IME. Note that toggling IME itself on and off will switch between Chinese and German, not English (unless there is also an English keyboard installed from Languages settings).

That's right. When in IME, one can invoke an English alphabetical keyboard. It's useful but can also be a nuisance, as the OP's question shows. One can choose from a few hotkey options to turn this on and off from Settings, following the rather lengthy sequence in my answer above. The default is Ctrl+Space but other key combinations may have the same effect.

So I use Cntrl+Shift to switch, however, sometimes the ying character comes up instead of zhong. So I have to manually click on the little icon. It's annoying though when I want to type things quickly in both english and chinese, which obviously i often do.

Edit the .klc file with a Text Editor, to change the VK code mapping. That is because most of the applications in Microsoft Windows, when you press the hotkeys, detects VK code sent to OS, not the "key chars"(the characters output as you type in a text processing software). So in order to make the key chars of your keyboard layout to match with their VK code, you must do this manually. MSKLC will not change that for you. Some details here:

Open your registry editor, enter HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Keyboard Layouts\, find your new keyboard layout at the bottom (mine with name like a0000xxxx). Copy the dll file name. That is the DLL file containing your newly created keyboard layout info.

Simplified Chinese uses KBDUS.dll, that means "keyboard layout for US keyboard". This will apply to MS Pinyin, too. Change this value to your copied DLL name, so that it will load your DLL next time the OS launches.

The "ABC - Extended" keyboard is the input method you'll need to select when you want to type pinyin with tone marks. On older Mac operating systems, this may also be called the "U.S. Extended" keyboard.

On a Mac, you can type accents and other special characters without changing the keyboard settings. If you learn these basic shortcuts, you can type accented letters in any software, including Word, Firefox, email, etc.

Some customers are more familiar using the search ability and thus typing(or writing the product out). When I operate my Cafe, I type the product name instead of going through menus. At the time, all my product names were in English so the build in Samba keyboard is good enough but when I moved back to NYC, some customers want to WRITE Chinese instead of typing it. Sigh.

Chinese is not written using individual letters like the English alphabet; rather, it uses pictographs composed of several strokes. Since listing thousands of characters on the keyboard is not functional, the most used way of typing in Chinese is Pinyin.

Pinyin Qwerty or Pinyin Keyboard is basically the same thing. It is essentially the phonetic translation of Chinese words using the Latin alphabet using a Qwerty keyboard. The computer then swaps out the words for the corresponding Chinese characters.

Settings > Time & Language > Language & Region > Preferred Language Tab > Add Language. Search for Traditional or Simplified Chinese > Select Language Options > Add a keyboard > Microsoft Pinyin.Read our blog for an in-depth step-by-step tutorial to type in Pinyin on your computer.

Latin IMEs aim to help people type in Latin-script languages (e.g., French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Dutch) using the US keyboard. Features include automatic diacritics, spell correction, and prefix completion.

Windows 10 only provides a phonetic keyboard for Amharic. To type with a keyboard preview we recommend using Google Input Tools with Chrome to type in Amharic on Windows 10 computers. Read more about using Google Input Tools here.

*Avant Assessment has compiled the information in this guide to assist you in activating various language virtual keyboards on Windows 10 Operating Systems. Since software and hardware updates and changes occur quite frequently, these are only suggested processes that we have identified, tested and produced in these simple guides. If one of the processes outlined does not seem to work for your configuration, please check with the developer of your hardware and operating system for more specific support. There may be more updated information available through those resources. As always, Google is also a great resource to use if you are searching for assistance with this process as well.

Laptop and desktop keyboards come with various layouts and languages, which are specific to a given country or region. Here you'll find detailed illustrations to quickly determine which Windows keyboard layout you have. These are also the exact layouts we use on our decorative laptop keyboard stickers and language keyboard stickers.

Used in the US, Canada, Australia, Puerto Rico, Guam, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, India, Hong Kong, New Zealand, and many other countries. Has horizontal, rectangular enter key. You can buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can also buy US English keyboard stickers.

It has an identical symbol set as US English but with additional Euro symbol and Alt Gr key instead of Alt. Has horizontal, rectangular enter key. Can be easily misidentified as US English layout. You can buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can also buy US International keyboard stickers.

Used in the England, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Can also be found on Malta, Gibraltar and former British colonies. You can buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can also buy UK British English keyboard stickers.

Used in Arabic-speaking countries: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman, Yemen, etc. You can buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can also buy Arabic keyboard stickers.

Used in Armenia. This layout is available through Windows keyboard settings. You most likely can't easily buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can buy Armenian keyboard stickers instead.

Used in Azerbaijan. This layout is available through Windows keyboard settings. You most likely can't easily buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can buy Azeri keyboard stickers instead.

Used in Bangladesh and India. This layout is available through Windows keyboard settings. You most likely can't easily buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can buy Bengali keyboard stickers instead.

Used in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It's identical to Croatian, Slovene/Slovenian, and Serbian (Latin) layouts. You can buy a laptop/desktop keyboard with this layout. You can also buy Bosnian keyboard stickers. 006ab0faaa

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