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Since all Japanese characters occupy the space of a square box, it is sometimes desirable to input Roman characters in the same square form in order to preserve the grid layout of the text. These Roman characters that have been fitted to a square character cell are called fullwidth, while the normal ones are called halfwidth.
Dubeolsik (두벌식) layout, the national standard layout of South Korea. The standard keyboard layout for IBM PC compatibles of South Korea is almost identical to the U.S. layout, with some exceptions: Hangul characters are printed on the keys. On the top of the \ key, the backslash is replaced with the ₩ or both of them are printed. The ...
SKY (Japanese: スカイ配列, Hepburn: Sukai hairetsu) is a Latin alphabet keyboard layout for typing Japanese developed in 1987. The name comes from the fact that the keys S, K, and Y are under the user's fingers in the home row of the left hand. According to the creator, SKY stands for “Simplified Keyboard for You”.
A typical 105-key computer keyboard, consisting of sections with different types of keys. A computer keyboard consists of alphanumeric or character keys for typing, modifier keys for altering the functions of other keys, [1] navigation keys for moving the text cursor on the screen, function keys and system command keys—such as Esc and Break—for special actions, and often a numeric keypad ...
The Latvian QWERTY keyboard layout is most commonly used; its layout is the same as the United States one, but with a dead key, which allows entering special characters (āčēģīķļņōŗšūž). The most common dead key is the apostrophe ('), which is followed by Alt+Gr (Windows default for Latvian layout).
I adjusted positions and shapes of some characters, and added auxiliary boxes and circles. 15:18, 20 September 2010: 900 × 300 (317 KB) Yes0song: I changed the color of the hankaku/zenkaku key and the enter key into grey because they are not character keys. 15:47, 11 May 2010: 900 × 300 (317 KB) Kuromabo
In relation to the Japanese language and computers many adaptation issues arise, some unique to Japanese and others common to languages which have a very large number of characters. The number of characters needed in order to write in English is quite small, and thus it is possible to use only one byte (2 8 =256 possible values) to encode each ...
The thumb-shift keyboard (親指シフト, oyayubi shifuto) is a keyboard design for inputting Japanese sentences on word processors and computers.It was invented by Fujitsu in the late 1970s and released in 1980 as a feature of the line of Japanese word processors the company sold, named OASYS, to make Japanese input easier, faster and more natural.