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Left-handed Dvorak layout with the ")(" placement of parenthesis Right-handed Dvorak layout. In the 1960s, Dvorak designed left- and right-handed Dvorak layouts for touch-typing with only one hand. He tried to minimize the need to move the hand from side to side (lateral travel), as well as to minimize finger movement.
Dvorak right-hand keyboard layout. Based on Image:KB United States.svg. Category:Keyboard layouts: File usage. The following page uses this file: Dvorak keyboard layout;
US Programmer Dvorak layout. Based on Image:KB_United_States_Dvorak.svg by User:StuartBrady: File usage. The following page uses this file: Dvorak keyboard layout;
This is a chart of alternative keyboard layouts for typing Latin-script characters. National and specialized versions of QWERTY which do not change the letter keys are not included. Layout
The Dvorak keyboard layout. The Dvorak layout was named after its inventor, August Dvorak. There are also numerous adaptations for languages other than English and single-handed variants. Dvorak's original layout had the numerals rearranged, but the present-day layout has them in numerical order.
The idea is to only use one hand (preferably the left one) and type the right-hand letters by holding a key which acts as a modifier key.The layout is mirrored, so the use of the muscle memory of the other hand is possible, which greatly reduces the amount of time needed to learn the layout, if the person previously used both hands to type.
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Italian keyboard layout. Braces (right above square brackets and shown in purple) are given with both AltGr and Shift pressed. The tilde (~) and backquote (`) characters are not present on the Italian keyboard layout (with Linux, they are available by pressing AltGr+ ì, and AltGr+ '; Windows might not recognise these keybindings).