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====[[Canadian French]]====
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linux configuration code: ca_enhanced
====[[Canadian Multilingual Standard]]====
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But note that United States keyboards are also used in Canada.
====[[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] ([[Portugal]])====
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====[[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] ([[Brazil]])====
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====[[Norwegian language|Norwegian]]====
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====[[Danish language|Danish]]====
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====[[Swedish language|Swedish]]/[[Finnish language|Finnish]]====
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====[[United Kingdom|UK]]====
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The United Kingdom layout is similar to the United States layout. In [[Hong Kong]], UK Keyboards are not used. US and Chinese (Traditional) keyboards are used instead. Though such Hong Kong users can add "English (United Kingdom)" as the keyboard input language in the [[operating system]], they need to change the corresponding keyboard layout to "US", not "English (United Kingdom)". See the article [[British and American keyboards]] for details. See also [[Technical standards in colonial Hong Kong]].
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====[[American English|US]]====
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Note that the US keyboard layout does not use AltGr or any dead keys, and thus offers no way of inputting any sort of diacritic or accent; this makes it unsuitable for all but a handful of languages.
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====US-International====
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===QWERTZ===
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====[[Germany]] and [[Austria]] (but not Switzerland)====
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====[[Switzerland|Swiss]] German, Swiss French, [[Liechtenstein]], [[Luxembourg]]====
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Remarks: Luxembourg doesn't have a keyboard layout of its own. Public education uses the Swiss-French keyboard, whereas the banking sector prefers the Belgian layout. Other places use either one, or even the US layout..
====[[Romanian language|Romanian]] in [[Romania]] and [[Moldova]]====
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===AZERTY===
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===Dvorak and others===
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There are also keyboard layouts that do not resemble QWERTY/QWERTZ/AZERTY very closely, if at all. Best known among these is the [[Dvorak Simplified Keyboard]] layout (named after its inventor, not the key order), which reduces finger movement and is claimed by some proponents to offer higher typing speed along with [[Ergonomics|ergonomic]] benefits. Some languages use the Roman script but with non-QWERTY-based keyboard layouts, such as Latvian and Turkish (with the note that the majority of Turkish keyboards are QWERTY, though the so called "Turkish-F keyboard layout" is older and said to be better suited to the language).
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====[[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]]====
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This is the Bulgarian BDS layout.
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This is the Bulgarian Phonetic layout. Although not standard this layout is widely spread, because of its similarity to the QWERTY layout. Note that this is a [[Phonetic]] layout and not a [[Transliteration]] layout and as such produces cyrillic symbols.
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====[[Devanāgarī]]====
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====[[Thai language|Thai]]====
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==East Asian languages==
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=====Chinese (traditional)=====
Computers shipped in the [[Republic of China]] (Taiwan) will often use [[Zhuyin]] (bopomofo) style keyboards (United States keyboards with bopomofo labels), many also with [[Cangjie method]] key labels, as Cangjie is the standard method for speed-typing in Traditional Chinese. The bopomofo style keyboards are in [[lexicographical order]], top-to-bottom left-to-right.
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Remarks: The codes of 3 input methods are typically printed on Chinese (traditional) keyboard: Zhuyin (upper right); Cangjie (lower left); and [[Dayi method|Dayi]] (lower right).
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Remarks: This is an example for a keyboard from Taiwan with Cangjie (blue) and Bopomofo/Zhuyin (red).
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====Dubeolsik [[Hangul]] (for [[Korean language|Korean]])====
Dubeolsik is the most common Hangul keyboard layout in use in South Korea. Pressing Ha/En key once switches between Hangul as shown, and English. There is another key to the right of the Ha/En key for [[Hanja]] input. If the typist is using a standard 104-key keyboard, the right Alt key will become the Ha/En key, and the right Ctrl key will become the Hanja key. Alternate keyboard styles exist, such as those used by IBM mainframes, but these are rarely used. Note that [[consonant]]s occupy the left side of the layout, while [[vowel]]s are on the right.
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====[[Japanese language|Japanese]]====
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Usually the JIS keyboard is used. Some people type Hiragana directly, but most people prefer typing Latin alphabets, which are automatically converted to Hiragana. In both cases, Alt+Zen/Han key combination is used to switch on [[input method editor]]. Some people prefer US layout, in which case Alt+` does the role, or [[Command key|Cmd]]-Space for Macs.
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