EvaPlusMinus said:Shift for numbers?
What in the what
A LOT of characters sharing the same key than numbers are used very frequently. There's no need to have a direct access to numbers on the top row since there's a numpad most of the time.
EvaPlusMinus said:Shift for numbers?
What in the what
ksan said:![]()
ÅÄÖÅÄÖÅÄÖÅÄÖÅÄÖ
It's worse for typing in English though. ' is not very well located. :/
Also @ and \ requires you to press "Alt Gr"
I do like my <>< key though :lol
Raist said:A LOT of characters sharing the same key than numbers are used very frequently. There's no need to have a direct access to numbers on the top row since there's a numpad most of the time.
Oh, ye forgot to mention it, it is indeed Swedish.Raist said:Looks like a weird mix of english and german keyboards
What is it? Swedish?
edit: it's in the url name heh.
EvaPlusMinus said:You some sort of crazy keyboard defensive unit?
Exactly the same as we use in Finland except we don't have the Alt Gr + 5 (at least every keyboard I have had).ksan said:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e0/KB_Sweden.svg/500px-KB_Sweden.svg.png
ÅÄÖÅÄÖÅÄÖÅÄÖÅÄÖ
It's worse for typing in English though. ' is not very well located. :/
Also @ and \ requires you to press "Alt Gr"
I do like my <>< key though :lol
Champomade said:AZERTY is so much better (for French of course). For English, I don't see anything on a QWERTY that I can't do on AZERTY
Keyser Soze said:First I heard of this... photo needed
![]()
EEEEEEEK... /, (, and @ are all Alt?
Eh, in Finland for example you only need Ä and Ö special keys compared to normal QWERTY keyboard (Å doesn't have much use in Finnish but it's still there because of the Finnish Swedish community). There's not really any use for ¨.Raist said:Even for german or scandinavian languages, AZERTY is probably easier than QWERTY as there's a visible key for ¨.
Boonoo said:Fun fact about QWERTY. It was initially QWE.TY, but they stuck the R in so you could write TYPEWRITER all on one row.
Orin GA said: