On Windows 10, in the initial setup, you usually get prompted to configure additional keyboard layouts. However, you can always add or remove layouts if you don't choose the correct setting or must type in another language.

Once you complete the steps, the icon will appear in the Taskbar's notification area to access the layouts and switch between them. You can also use the "Windows key + Spacebar" keyboard shortcut to cycle between the available keyboard layouts quickly.


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Whenever you add a language, a keyboard layout or input method is added so you can enter text in the language. If you want to use a different keyboard layout or input method, you can add a new one or switch between the ones you have.

On the desktop taskbar, tap or click the language abbreviation in the notification area at the far right of the taskbar, and then tap or click the keyboard layout or input method you want to switch to.

To switch the keyboard layout you're using, press and hold the Windows key and then repeatedly press the Spacebar to cycle through all your installed keyboards. (If this doesn't do anything, it means you have only one installed.)

Select Add a keyboard and choose the keyboard you want to add. If you don't see the keyboard you want, you may have to add a new language to get additional options. If this is the case, go on to step 4.

To switch the keyboard layout you're using in Windows 10, press and hold the Windows key and then repeatedly press the Spacebar to cycle through all your installed keyboards. (If this doesn't do anything, it means you have only one installed.)

To remove an individual keyboard, select the language in question (see step 2), select Options, scroll down to the Keyboards section, select the keyboard you want to remove, and click Remove.

Well I'm used to having the world standard keyboard which is qwerty and not qwertz... But on windows I can't find the choice for german input which would be qwerty, not qwertz. In linux there was german input with qwerty so it was fun. I believe it should be on Windows too? Cause i'm sick of this qwertz always having to correct and search for z or y...

Edit: Maybe I wasn't clear enough, it's not about changing between different language inputs? It's about having all german keys in german input, just the z and y would be in the correct places like all the worlds keyboards use and like the US keyboard uses...

In Windows' Regional and Language Options control panel dialog box on the Languages tab, you can choose different keyboards. On my Win XP system there are two choices for German, plain German and German (IBM). The latter might have the QWERTY layout you want.

If you want to type umlauts on a keyboard fast, use US-International keyboard layout (LAnguage Bar>Settings>Keyboard). On this layout use Shift+" then type the letter that needs double dots to be added. For caps, don't release Shift+" when typing the letter.

My classic English Qwerty keyboard have gotten stuck on Swedish and I cannot change back to English, making it quite difficult. @now becomes  as an example. All special characters like ( on key 9 is now ). Left ALT+SHIFT does not change back to English, even though the language on the windows bar changes from SWE to ENG. FYI keyboard at work is a Swedish microsoft keyboard and at home where I am working now is a classic british english keyboard.

Any solution depends on the operating system, and is thus somewhat unrelated to LO, but a fairly generic one is to use the US International keyboard layout. This allows dead (combining) key combinations to be made e.g.,

You do not say what language keyboard you are using. For example, I am using a UK international QWERTY keyboard on Ubuntu 12.04. This has an Alt Gr key on the right side of the space bar. To enter French characters such as  I hold the Alt Gr and then eac whatever program I am running. However this is a system question as the solution is independent of the application you are running.

The base EN Anglais (Etat-Unis) qwerty does not support the Western European accents. You need to define the keyboard as EN Anglais (Etat-Unis) International to add the accents. This is a Windows setup requirement. My American qwerty keyboard and my English qwerty keyboard and my French French and my Swiss French all work without a problem with LibreOffice under Ubuntu, Linux Mint and Windows XP.

There is also a tool called keyxpat that can help you, under any windows software. It attaches the characters you want on the key you want, so there is no other keys to type at the same time. For french for example, all chars , , ,  are all on the same E key. To choose one, keyxpat uses a metronome (you chose the period in ms) and you release the E key when necessary to get the right accent. This is straightforward and unobtrusive, an it allows you to type quickly.

The Mac has solved this problem by having a keyboard layout called "Dvorak - Qwerty Command", where the keyboard is normally in Dvorak mode, but if you press a command key the mappings temporarily revert to Qwerty.

I started the change shortly into Christmas break 2.5 years ago. I wasn't in school or work for a bit, so poor typing abilities wouldn't negatively affect my day-to-day activities. I made a pact with myself: no QWERTY, at all, until my Dvorak typing reaches my current QWERTY abilities. That was by far the best and most painful decision. Every day I spent 2-3 hours training for the keyboard. It took 3 weeks to reach 50WPM, and for some reason I capped out there for like 2 months! I kept training, and about 3 months in I surpassed my original normalized efficiency (counts accuracy) from when I used QWERTY. Now I'm marginally faster than when I used QWERTY, but more than anything I've found that my hands no longer hurt at the end of a long day. It makes all the difference in the world.

While I agree with the sentiment of Sam Harwell's advice for new dvorak users, I disagree with the suggestion of not changing shortcut characters. Good keyboard shortcuts are about their positions on the keyboard more than the character that represents it. These are often chosen with good reasons (eg. the common X C V being cut-copy-paste, together at the bottom of the keyboard) and there's no reason to lose that good shortcut positioning when moving to Dvorak. This script will retain that.

so if i buy lenovo french version then even to do a de install it all stays in french so cannot look for repair or delete programs or upload - it all stays in french apart from internally it becomes english keyboard and language

Lots of people are simply getting bluetooth keyboards, my wife has one for her AZERTY laptop or the keyboards that can be put on in place of the French one. If changing keyboard, we actually did it for our daughter with an AZERTY instead of QWERTY it is simple to change with the settings. The laptop will read it. The hybrid keyboards tell the laptop they are QWERTY then all you need is the grammar/spell checker changed to match.

I have my MacBook late 2008 sometimes running Windows 7 via BootCamp. The keyboard has a German layout. Pretty much like the Wikimedia image below except that the blue symbols in the lowest line are not accessible.

I'm using a Mac Book Pro German keyboard via Microsoft Remote Desktop, and have just discovered you MUST use the right hand Command + option keys to get the equivalent Windows AltGr key!

I was working on Linux Mint Live on a USB I found out that its default keyboard was different when piping commands in terminal. I could guess that the tilde sign on UK qwerty keyboard is alternative for that (shift and hash sign next to ENTER key)

Step 1- Press "Windows-X" to launch the power user menu, then click "Control Panel." 

Step 2- Click "Change Input Methods" from the "Clock, Language and Region" group. If you have Control Panel set to list view, click "Language" instead; they both lead to the same menu screen. 

Step 3- Click "Options" next to the box displaying your currently selected language. 

Step 4- Click "Add an input method" from the Input Method section and select an AZERTY keyboard from the list. 

Step 5- Click "Add" to add the keyboard to your language options, then click "Save" to confirm the addition. Once the keyboard is saved, you can switch to the new keyboard any time by pressing "Shift-Ctrl."

After installing the keyboard and restarting, you should now have access to this keyboard layout. Note that you can have multiple keyboard layouts installed for the same Language, so you can switch between English, Hebrew (Standard) and Hebrew (Phonetic) as you wish. The quick shortcut for switching keyboards is Windows Key + Space.


After they purchased the device, Remington made several adjustments, creating a keyboard with essentially the modern QWERTY layout. These adjustments included placing the "R" key in the place previously allotted to the period key. Apocryphal claims that this change was made to let salesmen impress customers by pecking out the brand name "TYPE WRITER QUOTE" from one keyboard row are not formally substantiated.[2] Vestiges of the original alphabetical layout remained in the "home row" sequence DFGHJKL.[4]

In early designs, some characters were produced by printing two symbols with the carriage in the same position. For instance, the exclamation point, which shares a key with the numeral 1 on post-mechanical keyboards, could be reproduced by using a three-stroke combination of an apostrophe, a backspace, and a period. A semicolon (;) was produced by printing a comma (,) over a colon (:). As the backspace key is slow in simple mechanical typewriters (the carriage was heavy and optimized to move in the opposite direction), a more professional approach was to block the carriage by pressing and holding the space bar while printing all characters that needed to be in a shared position. To make this possible, the carriage was designed to advance forward only after releasing the space bar. 17dc91bb1f

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