![]() ![]() ![]() It may be daunting at first, but dont freak out its a breeze after youre used to it. Do you see what Im getting at? The workaround lies in temporarily changing the way characters are mapped to keys. Why? Because these characters are mapped to that key and to that combination of those two particular keys. Press the A key and you get a Press Shift+A and you get A. At this time, the key with the semicolon on the bottom (and the colon on the top) is such that if you press it, you get just that, a semicolon. Either way, English is EN, so you will see an EN on the bottom of your screen near the sys tray after you get everything set in Regional and Language Options. Your default setup is EnglishU.K., which would correspond to a keyboard that somewhere has £ on one of the keys instead of $.) Or maybe youre in the U.S. (Usually, Shift+Alt.)įor example: Youre currently set to the EN keyboard layout. ![]() Its pretty intuitive.) After youve got it configured, you toggle between the two layouts with a hotkey. (You might need to Google for tips, and it will vary depending on whether you have XP, Vista, 7, etc., but give it a try. Assuming youre on a Windows computer, you can do it through Control Panel, Regional and Language Options. The idea is to make your existing keyboard function as though it were two keyboards in one, so to speak. Yeah, Murgas is talking about keyboard remapping. ![]()
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