In order to activate the phonetic Russian Cyrillic keyboard  on a Windows laptop, follow the steps below, noting that some steps may vary slightly depending on your laptop:

Note that You can load the on-screen keyboard if you have any difficulties determining the correct key or combination of keys for a particular Russian character; simply click the Start key, type Keyboard and you will find an option to make it appear on the screen.


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Step 4: A Russian phonetic keyboard should now appear in the panel to your left. Be sure to tick Show Input menu in menu bar as this will allow you to toggle between keyboards manually from the menu at the top of your Mac. For ease of accessibility, you may also configure the Caps Lock key to switch between keyboards.

Step 5: Click the flag at the top right-hand corner of your Mac in order to checkthat the keyboard was added as intended. Clicking Show keyboard viewer will allow you to clarify precisely which keys correspond to various Russian letters.

To see different keyboard states, move the mouse over state keys such as Shift, Caps or AltGr. You can also lock or unlock those keys by clicking them.

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.

Given that right now everything is connected to the Internet, the next logical step would be IP geolocalization. True, it is not fail-proof, but will be more reliable after everyone installing russian locales.

Physical keyboard with Cyrillic layout helps more against us! Just buy a new keyboard with Russian characters on the keys, throw away old keyboard, connect the new one to your computer and you are protected against us. No need to change anything in Windows.

And yes, Ukrainian (and Belarussian and the other Slavic languages) have different rules, sometimes very different rules. Not to mention that Russian has changed over the years (read Russian revolutionary posters from the first twenty years of the 20th Century for examples). I remember a Russian woman joking, while we listened to Polish and then an English translation, about how a Russian word would pop out every ten words or so, revealing just how much Polish has diverged.

If this happens (and the first time it does the experience may be a bit jarring) hit the Windows key and the space bar at the same time; if you have more than one language installed you will see the ability to quickly toggle from one to the other. The little box that pops up when one hits that keyboard combo looks like this:

Most of Russian computers are in the same IP address space as American ones 192.168.X.X and 10.X.X.X

So, IP range check is no help. There are other localization checks that can be performed. Extra keyboard layout protection will not last long.

Some legal Russian software products offer free licenses to the users from CIS countries. One of such products asked to enter current day of the week in Russian as a part of the activation procedure. Malware might do something similar.

Active keyboard changes a lot, especially with those writing in English.

Not everybody can install russian primary language on a non-licensed Windows.

But default keyboard could be an option.

To type in Russian using Cyrillic characters, if you do not already have a Russian language keyboard setting availabe, you will need to configure one prior to starting a placement test. The information here is a rough guide for users of Windows 8 and Windows 10 with specifics that may not apply to earlier versions of Windows. Users of Windows 7, Vista, and earlier versions should contrast Microsoft's instructions for adding a keyboard to the information found here.

On the Time & Language screen, select the sub-category for "Region & Language" on the left side of the screen, then choose the "Add a language" button on the right to begin configuring a keyboard for the Russian language.

By default, Russian language support uses the same keyboard layout as in Russia. If this layout is familiar to you, then you may skip the next step. Most users, however, will want to use a Mnemonic keyboard setting instead because this more closely maps the sounds of Cyrillc letters to the Roman letters on a standard U.S. QWERTY keyboard.

To avoid the confusion of having two different Russian language keyboards, you may wish to remove the original keyboard setting, "Russian - ", by clicking on it and then selecting the Remove option. This will leave the Mnemonic keyboard as the main keyboard for Russian input.

When ready to use the Russian keyboard setting, you will be able to switch back-and-forth between Roman and Cyrillic keyboards as needed. 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.

I have a partial and rather ugly solution for this. In the code below I have a window with Text widget, which have some "in-box" connection between standard Ctrl+C keyboard events and their proper handling. However, if I simply change the keyboard layout to, say, Russian, these functions do not work anymore. To solve the problem I re-wrote implementation for these events, and now everything works fine. But I feel slightly frustrated about such a solution. Does anyone have any better ideas?.. For instance, is there a way to trigger (or mimic) "normal" key press in python tkinter?

You can use the installer packages to deploy these keyboard layouts without any restrictions. Free Demo version can be used to make changes and test them. To deploy a modified version, a Premium, Personal orLite edition is needed.

JCUKEN (tag_hash_118, also known as YCUKEN, YTsUKEN and JTSUKEN) is the main Cyrillic keyboard layout for the Russian language in computers and typewriters. Earlier in Russia JIUKEN (tag_hash_123) layout was the main layout, but it was replaced by JCUKEN when the Russian alphabet reform of 1917 removed the letters , , , and . The letter  had decreased in usage significantly after the reform.

The short U ( ) is located in place of the shcha ( ). It is the only JCUKEN keyboard that lacks a key for , as it is the only language in the Cyrillic script that does not contain the letter  itself; the decimal I ( ) replaces it. It also lacks a hard sign ( ), usually seen just to the right of letter ha ( ) as that position is taken by the Apostrophe.

The short U substitutes the shcha, like the Belarusian keyboard (see above), and the ka with descender substitutes the yery. Moreover, the letter ghayn substitutes the minus sign and the underscore, while the kha with descender substitutes the plus sign and equal sign.

Substitutions to this keyboard are: having the schwa replacing the ya, the oe replacing the yu, the ghayn replacing the soft sign, the Che with vertical stroke replacing the hard sign, the ue replacing the tsa and the shha replacing the shcha.

In the Serbian keyboard LjNjERTZ (), letters of the Serbian language are used instead of Russian letters. It lacks the yers and yeru ( ,   and  ), , and . It is based on the QWERTZ keyboard layout.

Macedonian keyboard layouts under Microsoft Windows (KBDMAC.DLL and KBDMACST.DLL) do not use "dead keys". Instead, letters Gje and Kje are present as dedicated keys, and AltGr is used to access additional letters and punctuation.

The "Russian for Gringos" keyboard works for Windows 11 users. With this version of Windows the selected language is no longer program-specific. If you select a language it will be your input language across multiple applications until you change it (like it works for Mac users).

As I understand it, there are two major layouts in use; the official Russian keyboard "", used in Russia and some other countries (available by default in all operating systems), and a transliterated Qwerty-based layout, mostly used outside Russia by people who have to type Russian occasionally. The latter could probably be Colemak'ized, and be easy to learn for an existing Colemak user, but would probably be far from optimal for typing Russian. However I've read not so good things about the official Russian keyboard either; the six most frequent characters are all on the index fingers! Its inventor probably tried to make it ergonomic, but didn't think about it very hard...

I type in Russian occasionally and I am fine with using the transliterated Russian keyboard that fits my Colemak keyboard. I even have the installation file that I found on some college student's website a few years ago. I am not very concerned about comfort since I don't type using that layout as often. Plus I am very fast with it without having to learn a new layout since ARST is  and I can flip layouts with just a keyboard shortcut.

Hi there. I have to type in Russian alot recently and was kinda curios is there russian layout like Colemak (which i'm using about 8 months for now).

Glad I've found this topic. I'm about to give ghen's layout some testing, and will write about results here.

I hope you/we could agree on a Cyrillic layout, so there isn't one Ghoul layout and one Ghen one and so on - but it's hard to do. Fortunately, most of the letters are agreed on - and all the most common ones too I hope. When it comes to local variations such as Russian versus Bulgarian I'd hope that these could be contained to a few keys. I've decided to use the '[', ']' and VK_102 keys for such local variants whenever I make a local layout. If I want a more compliant layout I only use the '[' and ']' keys with AltGr and put the most common local glyph on the VK_102 key. If you're using a keyboard in a country that needs extra glyphs, it will have the VK_102 key (or more!). It is still my belief that people in underdeveloped countries who don't use a VK_102 key should get themselves a better keyboard. ;) ff782bc1db

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