

RUSSIAN LANGUAGE INPUT ON QWERTY KEYBOARD LAYOUT WINDOWS
United Kingdom keyboard layout for a computer running Windows United States keyboard layoutĮarly versions of Windows handled both the differences between the two keyboards and the differences between American English and British English by having two English language options - a UK setting and a US setting. Some UK keyboards do not label Backspace, Enter, Tab and Shift in words.Diacritics used in Scots Gaelic and Welsh require the UK extended keyboard setting. AltGr+vowel produces the acute accent variant of that vowel as needed for Irish.The Enter key spans two rows, and is narrower to accommodate the #/~ key.The \ key is moved to the left of the Z key ( ⇧ Shift+ \ still produces |).and " are swapped (to ⇧ Shift+ ' and ⇧ Shift+ 2, respectively).€ ( Euro sign) is produced by AltGr+ 4 and is shown as a secondary symbol.AltGr+ ` produces ¦ ( broken bar, shown as a secondary symbol).The ¬ ( negation) takes the place vacated by tilde on the ` ( grave accent) key.The £ ( pound sign) takes the place vacated by the number sign on the 3 key.The Alt key to the right of the space bar is replaced by an AltGr key.The extra key is added next to the Enter key to accommodate # ( number sign) and ~ ( tilde).keyboard (UK=62, US=61, on the typewriter keys, 102 v 101 including function and other keys, 105 vs 104 on models with Windows keys)

The UK keyboard has 1 more key than the U.S.The UK variant of the Enhanced keyboard commonly used with personal computers designed for Microsoft Windows differs from the US layout as follows: In other countries which predominantly use English as a common working language, such as Australia, Canada (in English-speaking parts), and New Zealand, the US keyboard is commonly used. Users in the United States do not frequently need to make use of the £ (pound) and € (euro) currency symbols, which are common needs in the United Kingdom and Ireland, although the $ (dollar sign) symbol is also provided as standard on UK and Irish keyboards. There are two major English language computer keyboard layouts, the United States layout and the United Kingdom layout defined in BS 4822 (48-key version).
