Pressing Esc on the Thai keyboard layout will toggle the mouse input between virtual QWERTY keyboard and virtual Thai keyboard. The key will also turn on/off your keyboard input conversion. Pressing Esc on your keyboard has the same function.

This is the best and simplest Thai virtual keyboard that helps you to type the Thai language perfectly. You will be able to type any Thai character on your computer by using this virtual keyboard. Even if you do not have a keyboard that is capable of typing the Thai alphabet, it will still be able to type Thai for you.


Thai On Screen Keyboard Free Download


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Typing Thai is extremely simple with this keyboard. Just click on the text box and start typing in Thai font. You can type through your actual keyboard or through the on-screen keyboard.

You can paste any Thai text directly into the text box by using right-click from your mouse or shortcut command.

Instead of an online keyboard, you could also choose to download a Google extension to your browser for a language input tool. The Google Input Tools extension allows users to use input tools in Chrome web pages, for example.

Does anyone know how to setup a Thai keyboard on an English (UK) version of Win 7 so that you can type Thai?

So far I have followed the instructions at

 -keyboard-languages-to-xp-vista-and-windows-7/

which has worked with one minor niggle.

I wanted to use the grave key (the one just below the Esc key) as the key to press to toggle between Thai and English.

This works, however if I'm typing in English and hit the apostrophe key (the one between the semicolon and hash tag keys), the language switches to Thai and I suddenly find myself typing Thai characters, which is obviously not what I want. So currently I'm using the Alt-Shift option to toggle between Thai and English.

I tried installing the US keyboard in Win 7, which fixes this apostrophe problem, however, then the @ and 2 keys become transposed, so I would rather use the English (UK) keyboard.

Thanks in advance for any advice/suggestions.

@wahkorboy: I'd tried that already including setting the Current system locale to Thai for displaying text in programs that don't support Unicode. However, I found that while the grave key works correctly for an American keyboard, I was unable to get it to work properly for an English (United Kingdom) keyboard which is what I needed.

I personally also prefer the simpler look of only one    per key rather than doubling them up, but either is fine. In case the designer reads this, the only thing that should be avoided is to have one    per key and stack them on top of each other, that would definitely piss off either the German speakers or the French speakers depending on which orientation is chosen. If the letters are only used once on each key then they should be side by side (as in the Mac keyboard I linked) or diagonally as in that nice Logitech G11 keyboard above.

I've got my Thai input language added and my language bar on the toolbar with En/Th as needed. Started actually using it today and realized that one letter is missing on the Thai keyboard layout: "s" soo ryysii (sorry about the spelling!). Is that letter not normally used in Thai typing (I doubt it!!) or is there a problem with Vista (using the "Notepad" application)?

I am using Vista and  is [shift][ or K] on the keyboard. .  [N] hermit; recluse. And, I typed the letter on the notepad as well. I got to thinking. Perhaps the problem is that it is difficult to see the letters on the on-screen keyboard. Under "Settings" "Font", try something like "Tahoma, bold".

Thai-Unicode is a Thai script Unicode keyboard based on the standard Thai Kedmanee layout with included On Screen Keyboard. Efficient input of uncommon Thai symbols is defined. Reordering rules maintain consistent underlying sequence of diacritic vowels and tones, and other rules prevent entry of many illegal vowel and tone sequences and beep to alert the typist.  Thai Unicode

If you haven't already, try restarting the iPad. Also go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards to check if the original keyboard is listed here and selected. If not, temporarily change to the QWERTY keyboard, which you will see after selecting your language, then test to see if the same issue persists. Here's some more information about keyboard settings: About the keyboards settings on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch - Apple Support

This keyboard follows the standard Thai Kedmanee layout. It also allows efficient input of uncommon Thai symbols. Characters are reordered while you type to ensure a consistent underlying sequence of diacritic vowels and tones, making tasks like search and replace much easier. Additional rules prevent you from typing many illegal vowel and tone sequences. This keyboard has also been optimised to take advantage of context-sensitive multiple keyboard switching capabilities in Toolbox (a flat database program) available from SIL.

This is a Unicode keyboard and works with any Unicode font which has support for Thai. The standard Windows fonts Tahoma and Arial Unicode MS include support for this keyboard. To see which fonts on your computer support this keyboard, use the Keyman Font Helper.

This keyboard comes preassigned with a hotkey. You can use the hotkey Ctrl+Shift+T to start the keyboard at any time. To remove or change the hotkey, visit the Hotkeys tab of Keyman Configuration, available from the Keyman menu.

Virtual keyboards are represented by a keyboard icon . Clicking on the icon to toggle on/off the current IME or clicking on the arrow next to it to select another input tool. When a virtual keyboard is activated, the button becomes darker grey .

I can use KDE System Settings to add an extra keyboard layout option by choosing Input Devices, then Layouts, then Add. In my case, I add a Thai keyboard option to the existing default US keyboard. After doing this, I can switch between layouts using ctrl-alt-k, and everything works fine.

The problem is that when I reboot, keyboard layout switching no longer works. When I go to the Layouts tab of Input Devices in System Settings, the Thai layout has disappeared from the list of currently available layouts, and I have to add it again if I want to type in Thai. As far as I can tell, this erasure of configuration settings on reboot only affects keyboard layouts, not other KDE settings.

Weirdly, plasma on X seems to use a different system for changing keyboard layouts (accessed through System Settings -> Regional Settings -> Keyboard -> Input Method), and I'm not sure where the configuration file for that setting is kept.

From what I can gather, that file is supposed to be for remembering what keyboard layout was active at logout, and returning to it at login (and the reported bug seemed to be about that not working properly).

Yes, I realise that. I mean that since the file is immutable, the Thai keyboard layout remains available between relogins -- but nevertheless, changes to layout_memory.xml (e.g. substituting "th" for "us") do not seem to change the *active* layout on login.

I then re-added the Thai keyboard layout, checked that ~/.config/kxkbrc had the line "LayoutList=us,th", and changed layout_memory.xml so that it read . I then logged out, checked that the two files had not changed, and logged in again. Once again, the usual had happened: no Thai keyboard layout available, and ~/.config/kxkbrc had reverted to "LayoutList=us".

The word may be typed either using the on-screen keyboard, or using your device's keyboard.Mobile device users will need to select the "Use native keyboard" checkbox to be able to use their device'skeyboard. This will also hide the on-screen keyboard. Unselect this checkbox to return to usingthe on-screen keyboard. (This checkbox is not displayed on desktop devices.)

You can add multiple languages to your keyboard and seamlessly switch between then and your default language. If you add a secondary language this WILL NOT change the language and input throughout the phone. If you would like to change the default language input on your device, check out our guide How do I change the Language input on my Samsung phone? for more information.

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