How to fix a keyboard layout on each Windows 10 computer?
You should be able to modify that within the synchronization settings on each machine:
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How to delete a custom keyboard layout in Windows?
I believe I know why this happened. The creator makes some .msis for various architectures and a setup.exe. If you run one of these .msis directly, no uninstaller is made. You should use the setup.exe created instead.The easy solution is as mihi says: run the .msi with the /uninstall flag
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Ubuntu Studio 14.04.1 does not offer Bulgarian phonetic keyboard layout
My plain vanilla Ubuntu system contains a keyboard version of Bulgarian phonetic. I've posted it here.Download this file to /downloads/bg.txt and compare it to your current keyboard lay-out file in /usr/share/X11/xkb/symbols/bg by using the following command:If they are identical (which they should be) just go to the dash by pressing AltF1Enter, type system settings, click the only remaining icon and add a new keyboard and take Bulgarian phonetic from the list and you are up and running!If they are not identical, copy the file over yours by the following command:and then take the solution for identical keyboards. !
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How do I use english spelling, but also use the US keyboard layout?
I do not see what the keyboard layout has to do with it. That's just what key makes which letter, it's got nothing to do with actual language. (though certain keyboard layouts are more efficient for a certain language) Your problem seems to be Microsoft Word's autocorrect feature "correcting" your British spelling. It may vary in your version of Word, but you should be able to set the default language to "English (UK)" by going to Extra --> Language ---> Set Language. This will make Word consider the British spelling to be correct.
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Is there a shortcut to type a symbol from a different keyboard layout?
Well, you can not type symbols from other layouts, but there is indeed an equivalent to access symbols which are actually part of the Lithuanian layout.To type 1 with the Lithuanian keyboard layout:AltGr1To better understand how the Lithuanian layout on Linux works: When Lithuanian is selected, click the layout indicator at the top right of the screen and select the Show keyboard layout option. That will show an image of the Lithuanian layout. Let's take the 1 key as an example: That tells us:HTH
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How can I input @ to send mails, when my keyboard layout requires pressing Alt?
when my keyboard layout requires pressing Alt?
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How do I get current keyboard layout?
Another simpler approach, because of fixed positions of the output of the xset -q command, is this:It prints 00000002 or 00001002 depending on your current keyboard layout
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Installing different keyboard layout on live debian image
For a linux console use this command:and it will set the AZERTY keyboard
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How can I write braces, and , in Emacs on Mac OS X with a scandinavian keyboard layout?
I found the answer on StackOverflow.com:Unable to type braces and square braces in emacs
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How to NOT show keyboard layout chooser popup when changing language in GNOME 3
The overlay appears if you press and hold a bit longer. A quick press and release should change the layout without showing the overlay. As a workaround you may set another keyboard shortcut to switch layouts, see this for reference: Ubuntu 17. 10 can not change the input switching shortcut to altshift
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How to get current gnome keyboard layout from terminal?
(Not sure if it works in previous releases)To see more option:
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No normal German keyboard layout in (K)ubuntu 16.04 LTS
I see the same on Kubuntu 16.10; it's apparently a KDE bug.The way around it is to set Limit selection by language to All languages before selecting the layout. Then you will see multiple German options including the "normal" one
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Romanian keyboard layout
The current Romanian National Standard SR 13392:2004 establishes two layouts for Romanian keyboards: a "primary" one and a "secondary" one. The "primary" layout is intended for more traditional users that learned long ago how to type with older, Microsoft-style implementations of the Romanian keyboard. The "secondary" layout is mainly used by programmers and it does not contradict the physical arrangement of keys on a US-style keyboard. The "secondary" arrangement is used as the default one by the majority of GNU/Linux distributions. There are four Romanian-specific characters that are incorrectly implemented in all Microsoft Windows versions before Vista: . LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH COMMA BELOW - incorrectly implemented as U015E LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CEDILLA U0219 LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH COMMA BELOW - incorrectly implemented as U015F LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH CEDILLA U021A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T WITH COMMA BELOW - incorrectly implemented as U0162 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T WITH CEDILLA U021B LATIN SMALL LETTER T WITH COMMA BELOW - incorrectly implemented as U0163 LATIN SMALL LETTER T WITH CEDILLASince Romanian hardware keyboards are not widely available, Cristian Secar has created a driver that allows the Romanian characters to be generated with a US-style keyboard, in all Windows versions previous to Vista. It uses the right AltGr key modifier to generate the characters.