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AltGr key

AltGr (also Alt Graph) is a modifier key found on many computer keyboards (rather than a second Alt key found on US keyboards). It is primarily used to type special characters and symbols that are not widely used in the territory where sold, such as foreign currency symbols, typographic marks and accented letters.[1] On a typical Windows-compatible PC keyboard, the AltGr key, when present, takes the place of the right-hand Alt key. The key at this location will operate as AltGr if a keyboard layout using AltGr is chosen in the operating system, regardless of what is engraved on the key.[2] In macOS, the Option key has functions similar to the AltGr key.

The AltGr key is the first key to the right of the space bar.

The AltGr key is used as an additional Shift key, to provide a third and a fourth (when Shift is also pressed) grapheme for most keys. Most are accented variants of the letters on the keys, but also additional symbols and punctuation marks. Some languages such as Bengali use this key when the number of letters of their alphabet is too large for a standard keyboard. For example, on the US-International keyboard layout, the C key can be used to insert four different characters:

History edit

IBM states that AltGr is an abbreviation for alternate graphic.[3][4]

 
Sun Microsystems keyboard, which labels the key as Alt Graph

A key labelled with some variation of "Alt Graphic" was on many computer keyboards before the Windows international layouts. On early home computers the alternate graphemes were primarily box-drawing characters.[5]

This likely was the intended purpose of the Alt key on PC keyboards, however software quickly used this as a combination key for shortcuts, requiring a new key for producing additional characters.

Ctrl+Alt edit

Windows interprets Ctrl+Alt as AltGr, to accommodate some compact keyboards like those of netbooks which have neither the AltGr key nor a right-hand Alt key. Thus Ctrl+Alt+a has the same effect as AltGr+a. Because of this feature, Microsoft advises that Ctrl+Alt not be used as part of any application keyboard shortcut, as it would prevent typing the matching AltGr character on such keyboards.[6][a]

Function by default national keyboard edit

In most of the keyboard diagrams the symbol one gets when holding down AltGr is in blue in the lower-right of the corner. If different, the symbol for Shift+AltGr is shown in the upper-right.

Bangladesh edit

 
Jatiya layout (Alt Gr activated characters in blue)

Belgium edit

 
Belgian keyboard under Linux (Ubuntu 9.10)

The Windows version of the Belgian keyboard may only support a subset of these characters. Several of the AltGr combinations are themselves dead keys, which are followed by another letter to produce an accented version of that letter.

Brazil edit

 
ABNT complying keyboard layout (Alt Gr activated characters in blue)


 
ABNT2 complying keyboard layout (Alt Gr activated characters in blue)

Some notes edit

  • The AltGr+C combination results in the (obsolete) symbol ₢ for the former Brazilian currency, the Brazilian cruzeiro.
  • The AltGr+Q, AltGr+W, AltGr+E combinations are useful as a replacement for the "/?" key, which is physically absent on non-Brazilian keyboards.
  • Some software (e.g. Microsoft Word) will map AltGr+R to ® and AltGr+T to ™, but this is not standard behavior and was likely an accident owing to the fact that the combinations Ctrl+Alt+R and Ctrl+Alt+T were intended.

Finland edit

 
The original design for the Finnish Multilingual Keyboard, dead keys in red; Icelandic and Faroese Ð/ð is on the D key, the Sámi Đ/đ available using the AltGr diacritic on L

The new Finnish keyboard standard of 2008 (SFS 5966) was designed for easily typing 1) Finnish, Swedish, Danish and Norwegian; 2) Nordic minority languages and 3) European Latin letters (based on MES-2, with emphasis on contemporary proper nouns), without needing engravings different from those on existing standard keyboards of Finland and Sweden. AltGr and dead diacritic keys are extensively used, although letters of Finnish and Swedish are mostly provided as normal keys.[7]

France edit

On AZERTY keyboards, AltGr enables the user to type the following characters:

 
French AZERTY keyboard

Germany edit

On German keyboards, AltGr enables the user to type the following characters, which are indicated on the keyboard:

 
German keyboard layout "T1" according to DIN 2137-1:2012-06

Windows 8 introduced the ability of pressing AltGr+⇧ Shift+ß to produce (capital ß). Even though this is usually not indicated on the physical keyboard—potentially due to a lack of space, since the ß-key already has three different levels (ß → "ß", ⇧ Shift+ß → "?", and, as shown above, AltGr+ß → "\")—, it can be seen in the Windows On-Screen Keyboard by selecting the necessary keys with the German keyboard layout selected. Some newer types of German keyboards offer the assignment AltGr+H → capital ß.

Greece edit

 

Some of these key combinations also result in different characters if the polytonic layout is used.

Israel edit

Hebrew edit

On Hebrew keyboards, AltGr enables the user to type the Hebrew vowels and pronunciation marks. In addition, there are several combinations for special characters:

Yiddish edit

Using a Hebrew keyboard, one may write in Yiddish as the two languages share many letters. However, Yiddish has some additional digraphs not otherwise found in Hebrew, which are entered via AltGr:

Italy edit

On Italian keyboards, AltGr enables the user to type the following characters:

There is an alternate layout, which differ just in disposition of characters accessible through AltGr and includes the tilde and the curly brackets.

Latvia edit

The following letters can be input in the Latvian keyboard layout using AltGr:

North Macedonia edit

On Macedonian keyboards, AltGr enables the user to type the following characters:

Netherlands edit

Nordic countries and Estonia edit

The keyboard layouts in the Nordic countries Denmark (DK), Faroe Islands (FO), Finland (FI), Norway (NO) and Sweden (SE) as well as in Estonia (EE) are largely similar to each other. Generally the AltGr key can be used to create the following characters:

Other AltGr combinations are peculiar to just some of the countries:

Finnish multilingual edit

The Finnish multilingual keyboard standard adds many new characters to the traditional layout via the AltGr key, as shown in the image below (the blue characters can be written with the AltGr key; several dead key diacritics, shown in red, are also available as an AltGr combination).[8][9]

 

Poland edit

Typewriters in Poland used a QWERTZ layout specifically designed for the Polish language with accented letters in the Polish alphabet obtainable directly. When personal computers became available worldwide in the 1980s, commercial importing into Poland was not supported by its communist government, so most machines in Poland were brought in by private individuals. Most had US keyboards, and various methods were devised to make available the accented Polish letters. An established method was to configure the right Alt key as an AltGr key and to use it in combination with a Latin base letter to obtain the equivalent precomposed character (accented form of the letter).

  • AltGr+Aą
  • AltGr+Cć
  • AltGr+Eę
  • AltGr+Lł
  • AltGr+Nń
  • AltGr+Oó
  • AltGr+Sś
  • AltGr+U
  • AltGr+Xź
  • AltGr+Zż

(Because there are two types of "z with diacritic" (ź and ż), AltGr+X is a special case.)

At the time of the Fall of communism and opening of commercial import channels this practice was so widespread that it was adopted as the de facto standard. Nowadays nearly all PCs in Poland have standard US keyboards and use the AltGr method to enter Polish diacritics. This keyboard mapping is referred to as the Polish programmers' layout (klawiatura polska programisty) or simply Polish layout.

Another layout is still used on typewriters, mostly by professional typists. Computer keyboards with this layout are available, though difficult to find, and supported by a number of operating systems; they are known as Polish typists' layout (klawiatura polska maszynistki). Older Polish versions of Microsoft Windows used this layout, describing it as Polish layout. On current versions it is referred to as Polish (214).

Romania edit

The keymap with the AltGr key: < Romanian standard

  • AltGr+`
  • AltGr+1~
  • AltGr+2ˇ
  • AltGr+3^
  • AltGr+4˘
  • AltGr+5°
  • AltGr+6˛
  • AltGr+7`
  • AltGr+8˙
  • AltGr+9´
  • AltGr+0˝
  • AltGr+-¨
  • AltGr+e
  • AltGr+p§
  • AltGr+ă[
  • AltGr+î]
  • AltGr+â\
  • AltGr+sß
  • AltGr+dđ
  • AltGr+D+⇧ ShiftĐ
  • AltGr+lł
  • AltGr+L+⇧ ShiftŁ
  • AltGr+ș;
  • AltGr+ț'
  • AltGr+c©

+ the signs mostly pressed with AltGr prints the US keyboard signs Romanian standard>

 â ß € r ț y u î o § „ ” ă ș đ f g h j k ł  ; z x © v b n m «  » 

Russia edit

Since release 1903, versions of Windows 10 have the binding:

South Slavic Latin and Czech keyboards edit

On South Slavic Latin (used in Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Serbia) and on Czech keyboards, the following letters and special characters are created using AltGr:

 

South Slavic cyrillic keyboards use a different layout.

Switzerland edit

On Swiss keyboards, AltGr in combination with the following keys types the following characters:

Switzerland has four national Languages (German, French, Italian, and Romansh). The Swiss keyboard layout is therefore designed with compatibility in mind for all four languages. In German-speaking and Romansh-speaking Switzerland (as well as the Czech Republic), the Swiss German layout is used, while in the French-speaking and Italian-speaking Switzerland, the Swiss French layout is used. The two layouts only differ on three keys—OEM1, OEM5, and OEM7. On the Swiss German layout, these three keys are labelled èü, éö, and àä, respectively, while on the Swiss French layout, the labels are inverted as üè, öé, and äà; namely, the base layer and the Shift⇧ layer are swapped. However, with respect to the AltGr layer, the region-specific layouts are irrelevant.

Swiss German: AltGr+Ä → {

Swiss French: AltGr+À → {

Turkey edit

In Turkish keyboard variants the AltGr can be used to display the following characters:

  • AltGr+aæ
  • AltGr+sß
  • AltGr+e
  • AltGr+t
  • AltGr+q@
  • AltGr+ıi
  • AltGr+ü a → ã
  • AltGr+ğ a → ä
  • AltGr+ş a → á
  • AltGr+, a → à

Ukraine edit

In Ukrainian (enhanced) keyboard, added in Windows Vista, combination AltGr+U (or as it is written in Cyrillic keyboards AltGr+Г gives letter ґ and Ґ.

United Kingdom and Ireland edit

 

In UK and Ireland keyboard layouts, only two alternative use symbols are printed on most keyboards, which require the AltGr key to function. These are:

  • the euro sign. Located on the "4/$" key.
  • ¦ the broken bar symbol. Located on the "`/¬" key, to the immediate left of "1".

Using the AltGr key on Linux produces many foreign characters and international symbols, e.g. ¹²³€½{[]}@łe¶ŧ←↓→øþæßðđŋħjĸł«»¢“”nµΩŁE®Ŧ¥↑ıØÞƧЪŊĦJ&Ł<>©‘’Nº×÷· (If reconfigured as a compose key, an even larger repertoire is available).

With the UK extended keyboard setting (below), ChromeOS offers a large repertoire of symbols and precomposed characters.

Scotland and Wales edit

For the diacritics used by Welsh (ŵ and ŷ) and Scottish Gaelic (à, è, ì, ò and ù), the UK extended keyboard setting is needed. This makes available AltGr+6 (for circumflex accent) and AltGr+` (for grave accent) as dead keys.

UK extended keyboard layout edit

The UK-Extended keyboard mapping (available with Microsoft Windows, Linux and ChromeOS) allows many characters with diacritical marks (including those used in other European countries) to be generated by using the AltGr key, dead keys or a compose key, in combination with others.

UK extended layout under ChromeOS
¬
¦
! ¡
1 ¹
" ½
2
£
3 ³
$ ¼
4
%
5 ½
^
6
&
7 {
*
8 [
( ±
9 ]
) °
0 }
_ ¿
- \
+
=
tab Q Ω
q @
W
w
E É
e é
R ®
r
T Ŧ
t ŧ
Y Ý
y ý
U Ú
u ú
I Í
i í
O Ó
o ó
P Þ
p þ
{
[
}
]
A Á
a á
S §
s ß
D Ð
d ð
F ª
f đ
G Ŋ
g ŋ
H Ħ
h ħ
J
j
K &
k ĸ
L Ł
l ł
:
;
@
'
~
#
shift | ¦
\ |
Z <
z «
X >
x »
C Ç
c ç
V
v
B
b
N N
n n
M º
m µ
< ×
,
> ÷
. ·
?
/

Notes: Dotted circle (◌) is used here to indicate a dead key, invoked using AltGr. The ` (grave accent) key is the only one that acts as a free-standing dead key and thus does not respond as shown on the key-cap. (For a complete list of the characters generated using dead keys, see QWERTY#ChromeOS.)
AltGr+⇧ Shift+0 (°) is a degree sign; AltGr+⇧ Shift+M (º) is a masculine ordinal indicator. AltGr+, is an em-dash; there is no provision for en-dash.

United States edit

Most keyboards sold in the US do not have an (engraved) AltGr key. However, if there is an right-hand Alt key it will act as AltGr if a layout using it is installed (conversely a foreign keyboard AltGr will act like the right-hand Alt if the standard US keyboard layout is installed).

US-International edit

Microsoft provides a US-International keyboard layout that uses AltGr (or right-hand Alt or Ctrl+Alt) key to produce more characters:

 

Red characters are dead keys; for example ä can be entered with "a.

Other operating systems such as Linux and ChromeOS follow this layout but increase the repertoire of glyphs provided.

X Window System edit

In the X Window System (Linux, BSD, Unix), AltGr can often be used to produce additional characters with almost every key on the keyboard. Furthermore, with some keys, AltGr will produce a dead key; for example on a UK keyboard, semicolon can be used to add an acute accent to a base letter, and left square bracket can be used to add a trema:

  • AltGr+; followed by Eé
  • AltGr+[ followed by ⇧ Shift+OÖ

This use of dead keys enables one to type a wide variety of precomposed characters that combine various diacritics with either uppercase or lowercase letters, achieving a similar effect to the Compose key.

Keyboard maps edit

Below are some diagrams and examples of country-specific key maps. For the diagrams, the grey symbols are the standard characters, yellow is with ⇧ Shift, red is with AltGr, and blue is with ⇧ Shift+AltGr.

Danish keyboard edit

The Danish keymap features the following key combinations:

  • AltGr+⇧ Shift+QΩ
  • AltGr+Oœ
  • AltGr+Mµ

Italian keyboard edit

The Italian keymap includes, among other combinations, the following:

Norwegian keyboard edit

 
The complete Norwegian X Window key map with its AltGr combinations

Polish keyboard edit

The Polish keymap on X-based systems features changed combination for € sign:

  • AltGr+5

AltGr+U results in ↓ instead. It also introduces several symbols and characters from different languages, including among others:

  • AltGr+Tß
  • AltGr+Pþ
  • AltGr+Dð
  • AltGr+Qπ
  • AltGr+⇧ Shift+QΩ
  • AltGr+Mµ
  • AltGr+⇧ Shift+M
  • AltGr+Fæ
  • AltGr+Wœ

Swedish keyboard edit

 
The complete Swedish X Window key map with its AltGr combinations

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In general the substitution for the AltGr-key with Ctrl+Alt works as expected, but in some programs unexpected results can occur. For example in a local MS Outlook 365 installation the key combo Ctrl+Alt is not recognized as an AltGr.

References edit

  1. ^ "What is AltGr key?".
  2. ^ Microsoft Support. "How to use the United States-International keyboard layout in Windows 7, in Windows Vista, and in Windows XP". Microsoft. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  3. ^ . ibm.com. Archived from the original on 14 January 2006. Retrieved 4 June 2005.
  4. ^ "IBM Globalization – Alternate graphic". ibm.com.
  5. ^ Kaplan, Michael S.: "To start press the ALTGR key." Hmm... where's the ALTGR key?. 28 December 2004.
  6. ^ Raymond Chen (29 March 2004). "Why Ctrl+Alt shouldn't be used as a shortcut modifier". Microsoft.
  7. ^ (PDF) (in Finnish). 20 June 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 July 2011.
  8. ^ SFS 5966 Keyboard layout. Finnish-Swedish multilingual keyboard setting. Finnish Standards Association SFS. 3 November 2008.
  9. ^ Kotoistus: Uusi näppäinasettelu = Status of the new Keyboard Layout 27 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. A bi-lingual (Finnish + English) presentation page collecting drafts of the Finnish Multilingual Keyboard. CSC – IT Center for Science Ltd. Page updated 28 December 2006.
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altgr, ralt, redirects, here, manufacturer, racing, cars, ralt, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news. RAlt redirects here For the manufacturer of racing cars see Ralt This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources AltGr key news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message AltGr also Alt Graph is a modifier key found on many computer keyboards rather than a second Alt key found on US keyboards It is primarily used to type special characters and symbols that are not widely used in the territory where sold such as foreign currency symbols typographic marks and accented letters 1 On a typical Windows compatible PC keyboard the AltGr key when present takes the place of the right hand Alt key The key at this location will operate as AltGr if a keyboard layout using AltGr is chosen in the operating system regardless of what is engraved on the key 2 In macOS the Option key has functions similar to the AltGr key The AltGr key is the first key to the right of the space bar The AltGr key is used as an additional Shift key to provide a third and a fourth when Shift is also pressed grapheme for most keys Most are accented variants of the letters on the keys but also additional symbols and punctuation marks Some languages such as Bengali use this key when the number of letters of their alphabet is too large for a standard keyboard For example on the US International keyboard layout the C key can be used to insert four different characters C c lowercase first level Shift C C uppercase second level AltGr C c copyright sign third level AltGr Shift C cent sign fourth level Contents 1 History 1 1 Ctrl Alt 2 Function by default national keyboard 2 1 Bangladesh 2 2 Belgium 2 3 Brazil 2 3 1 Some notes 2 4 Finland 2 5 France 2 6 Germany 2 7 Greece 2 8 Israel 2 8 1 Hebrew 2 8 2 Yiddish 2 9 Italy 2 10 Latvia 2 10 1 Lowercase letters 2 10 2 Uppercase letters 2 11 North Macedonia 2 12 Netherlands 2 13 Nordic countries and Estonia 2 13 1 Finnish multilingual 2 14 Poland 2 15 Romania 2 16 Russia 2 17 South Slavic Latin and Czech keyboards 2 18 Switzerland 2 19 Turkey 2 20 Ukraine 2 21 United Kingdom and Ireland 2 21 1 Scotland and Wales 2 21 2 UK extended keyboard layout 2 22 United States 2 22 1 US International 3 X Window System 3 1 Keyboard maps 3 1 1 Danish keyboard 3 1 2 Italian keyboard 3 1 3 Norwegian keyboard 3 1 4 Polish keyboard 3 1 5 Swedish keyboard 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory editIBM states that AltGr is an abbreviation for alternate graphic 3 4 nbsp Sun Microsystems keyboard which labels the key as Alt GraphA key labelled with some variation of Alt Graphic was on many computer keyboards before the Windows international layouts On early home computers the alternate graphemes were primarily box drawing characters 5 This likely was the intended purpose of the Alt key on PC keyboards however software quickly used this as a combination key for shortcuts requiring a new key for producing additional characters Ctrl Alt edit Windows interprets Ctrl Alt as AltGr to accommodate some compact keyboards like those of netbooks which have neither the AltGr key nor a right hand Alt key Thus Ctrl Alt a has the same effect as AltGr a Because of this feature Microsoft advises that Ctrl Alt not be used as part of any application keyboard shortcut as it would prevent typing the matching AltGr character on such keyboards 6 a Function by default national keyboard editIn most of the keyboard diagrams the symbol one gets when holding down AltGr is in blue in the lower right of the corner If different the symbol for Shift AltGr is shown in the upper right Bangladesh edit nbsp Jatiya layout Alt Gr activated characters in blue Belgium edit nbsp Belgian keyboard under Linux Ubuntu 9 10 The Windows version of the Belgian keyboard may only support a subset of these characters Several of the AltGr combinations are themselves dead keys which are followed by another letter to produce an accented version of that letter Brazil edit nbsp ABNT complying keyboard layout Alt Gr activated characters in blue nbsp ABNT2 complying keyboard layout Alt Gr activated characters in blue Some notes edit The AltGr C combination results in the obsolete symbol for the former Brazilian currency the Brazilian cruzeiro The AltGr Q AltGr W AltGr E combinations are useful as a replacement for the key which is physically absent on non Brazilian keyboards Some software e g Microsoft Word will map AltGr R to and AltGr T to but this is not standard behavior and was likely an accident owing to the fact that the combinations Ctrl Alt R and Ctrl Alt T were intended Finland edit nbsp The original design for the Finnish Multilingual Keyboard dead keys in red Icelandic and Faroese D d is on the D key the Sami Đ đ available using the AltGr diacritic on LThe new Finnish keyboard standard of 2008 SFS 5966 was designed for easily typing 1 Finnish Swedish Danish and Norwegian 2 Nordic minority languages and 3 European Latin letters based on MES 2 with emphasis on contemporary proper nouns without needing engravings different from those on existing standard keyboards of Finland and Sweden AltGr and dead diacritic keys are extensively used although letters of Finnish and Swedish are mostly provided as normal keys 7 France edit On AZERTY keyboards AltGr enables the user to type the following characters nbsp French AZERTY keyboardGermany edit On German keyboards AltGr enables the user to type the following characters which are indicated on the keyboard nbsp German keyboard layout T1 according to DIN 2137 1 2012 06Windows 8 introduced the ability of pressing AltGr Shift ss to produce ẞ capital ss Even though this is usually not indicated on the physical keyboard potentially due to a lack of space since the ss key already has three different levels ss ss Shift ss and as shown above AltGr ss it can be seen in the Windows On Screen Keyboard by selecting the necessary keys with the German keyboard layout selected Some newer types of German keyboards offer the assignment AltGr H capital ss Greece edit nbsp Some of these key combinations also result in different characters if the polytonic layout is used Israel edit Hebrew edit On Hebrew keyboards AltGr enables the user to type the Hebrew vowels and pronunciation marks In addition there are several combinations for special characters AltGr 3 AltGr 4 AltGr 5 AltGr 6 AltGr 7 AltGr 8 AltGr 9 LRM AltGr 0 RLM AltGr AltGr AltGr AltGr ך AltGr Shift ך AltGr ף AltGr ת AltGr Shift ת AltGr ץ AltGr AltGr AltGr Shift נ Yiddish edit Using a Hebrew keyboard one may write in Yiddish as the two languages share many letters However Yiddish has some additional digraphs not otherwise found in Hebrew which are entered via AltGr AltGr י ײ AltGr ע ױ AltGr ט װ Italy edit On Italian keyboards AltGr enables the user to type the following characters AltGr E AltGr 5 AltGr o AltGr a AltGr e AltGr AltGr Shift e AltGr Shift There is an alternate layout which differ just in disposition of characters accessible through AltGr and includes the tilde and the curly brackets Latvia edit The following letters can be input in the Latvian keyboard layout using AltGr Lowercase letters edit AltGr A a AltGr C c AltGr E e AltGr G g AltGr I i AltGr K k AltGr L l AltGr N n AltGr O ō AltGr R ŗ AltGr S s AltGr U u AltGr Z z Uppercase letters edit AltGr Shift A A AltGr Shift C C AltGr Shift E E AltGr Shift G G AltGr Shift I i AltGr Shift K k AltGr Shift L L AltGr Shift N N AltGr Shift O Ō AltGr Shift R Ŗ AltGr Shift S S AltGr Shift U u AltGr Shift Z Z North Macedonia edit On Macedonian keyboards AltGr enables the user to type the following characters AltGr e AltGr sh Ђ AltGr ѓ ђ AltGr f AltGr g AltGr ch Ћ AltGr ќ ћ AltGr v AltGr b AltGr n AltGr m Netherlands edit The US international keyboard see below is a popular alternative in the Netherlands Digits row AltGr 1 and AltGr 2 AltGr 3 AltGr 4 and AltGr 5 AltGr 6 AltGr 7 AltGr 8 AltGr 9 AltGr 0 AltGr AltGr and Top letters row AltGr Q a and A AltGr W a and A AltGr E e and E AltGr R AltGr T th and TH Icelandic and Old English thorn AltGr Y u and U AltGr U u and U AltGr I i and I AltGr O o and o AltGr P o and O AltGr AltGr AltGr and Middle letters row Home row AltGr A a and A AltGr S ss German eszett aka sharp s and AltGr D d and D Icelandic edh AltGr L o and O AltGr and AltGr and Bottom letters row AltGr Z ae and AE AltGr C c and AltGr N n and N AltGr M µ AltGr c and C AltGr Nordic countries and Estonia edit The keyboard layouts in the Nordic countries Denmark DK Faroe Islands FO Finland FI Norway NO and Sweden SE as well as in Estonia EE are largely similar to each other Generally the AltGr key can be used to create the following characters AltGr 2 AltGr 3 AltGr 4 AltGr E AltGr M µ AltGr 7 AltGr 8 AltGr 9 AltGr 0 AltGr excluding EE Other AltGr combinations are peculiar to just some of the countries AltGr EE FI SE AltGr lt EE FI SE AltGr lt DK FO AltGr DK FO AltGr NO AltGr d FO AltGr a FO AltGr o FO AltGr 5 NO DK FO SE sometimes FI AltGr S s EE sometimes FI AltGr Z z EE sometimes FI AltGr O EE AltGr EE Finnish multilingual edit The Finnish multilingual keyboard standard adds many new characters to the traditional layout via the AltGr key as shown in the image below the blue characters can be written with the AltGr key several dead key diacritics shown in red are also available as an AltGr combination 8 9 nbsp Poland edit Typewriters in Poland used a QWERTZ layout specifically designed for the Polish language with accented letters in the Polish alphabet obtainable directly When personal computers became available worldwide in the 1980s commercial importing into Poland was not supported by its communist government so most machines in Poland were brought in by private individuals Most had US keyboards and various methods were devised to make available the accented Polish letters An established method was to configure the right Alt key as an AltGr key and to use it in combination with a Latin base letter to obtain the equivalent precomposed character accented form of the letter AltGr A a AltGr C c AltGr E e AltGr L l AltGr N n AltGr O o AltGr S s AltGr U AltGr X z AltGr Z z Because there are two types of z with diacritic z and z AltGr X is a special case At the time of the Fall of communism and opening of commercial import channels this practice was so widespread that it was adopted as the de facto standard Nowadays nearly all PCs in Poland have standard US keyboards and use the AltGr method to enter Polish diacritics This keyboard mapping is referred to as the Polish programmers layout klawiatura polska programisty or simply Polish layout Another layout is still used on typewriters mostly by professional typists Computer keyboards with this layout are available though difficult to find and supported by a number of operating systems they are known as Polish typists layout klawiatura polska maszynistki Older Polish versions of Microsoft Windows used this layout describing it as Polish layout On current versions it is referred to as Polish 214 Romania edit The keymap with the AltGr key lt Romanian standard AltGr AltGr 1 AltGr 2 ˇ AltGr 3 AltGr 4 AltGr 5 AltGr 6 AltGr 7 AltGr 8 AltGr 9 AltGr 0 AltGr AltGr e AltGr p AltGr ă AltGr i AltGr a AltGr s ss AltGr d đ AltGr D Shift Đ AltGr l l AltGr L Shift L AltGr ș AltGr ț AltGr c c the signs mostly pressed with AltGr prints the US keyboard signs Romanian standard gt a ss r ț y u i o ă ș đ f g h j k l z x c v b n m Russia edit Since release 1903 versions of Windows 10 have the binding AltGr 8 Ruble sign South Slavic Latin and Czech keyboards edit On South Slavic Latin used in Croatia Slovenia Bosnia and Herzegovina Montenegro and Serbia and on Czech keyboards the following letters and special characters are created using AltGr AltGr Q AltGr W AltGr E AltGr S AltGr Đ AltGr F AltGr G AltGr K l AltGr L L AltGr C ss AltGr Z AltGr V AltGr B AltGr N AltGr M AltGr lt AltGr gt AltGr 1 AltGr 2 ˇ AltGr 3 AltGr 4 AltGr 5 AltGr 6 AltGr 7 AltGr 8 AltGr 9 AltGr 0 AltGr AltGr nbsp South Slavic cyrillic keyboards use a different layout Switzerland edit On Swiss keyboards AltGr in combination with the following keys types the following characters AltGr 1 AltGr 2 AltGr 3 AltGr 4 AltGr 5 AltGr 6 AltGr 7 AltGr 8 AltGr lt AltGr E AltGr dead key AltGr dead key AltGr U AltGr E See explanation below AltGr AltGr A AltGr A See explanation below AltGr Switzerland has four national Languages German French Italian and Romansh The Swiss keyboard layout is therefore designed with compatibility in mind for all four languages In German speaking and Romansh speaking Switzerland as well as the Czech Republic the Swiss German layout is used while in the French speaking and Italian speaking Switzerland the Swiss French layout is used The two layouts only differ on three keys OEM1 OEM5 and OEM7 On the Swiss German layout these three keys are labelled eu eo and aa respectively while on the Swiss French layout the labels are inverted as ue oe and aa namely the base layer and the Shift layer are swapped However with respect to the AltGr layer the region specific layouts are irrelevant Swiss German AltGr A Swiss French AltGr A Turkey edit In Turkish keyboard variants the AltGr can be used to display the following characters AltGr a ae AltGr s ss AltGr e AltGr t AltGr q AltGr i i AltGr u a a AltGr g a a AltGr s a a AltGr a a Ukraine edit In Ukrainian enhanced keyboard added in Windows Vista combination AltGr U or as it is written in Cyrillic keyboards AltGr G gives letter g and G United Kingdom and Ireland edit For broader coverage of this topic see QWERTY United Kingdom and QWERTY Irish nbsp AltGr A a and A AltGr E e and E AltGr I i and I AltGr O o and o AltGr U u and U AltGr 4 AltGr AltGr In UK and Ireland keyboard layouts only two alternative use symbols are printed on most keyboards which require the AltGr key to function These are the euro sign Located on the 4 key the broken bar symbol Located on the key to the immediate left of 1 Using the AltGr key on Linux produces many foreign characters and international symbols e g le ŧ othaessdđŋħjĸl nµWLE Ŧ iOTHAE DªŊĦJ amp L lt gt c Nº If reconfigured as a compose key an even larger repertoire is available With the UK extended keyboard setting below ChromeOS offers a large repertoire of symbols and precomposed characters Scotland and Wales edit For the diacritics used by Welsh ŵ and ŷ and Scottish Gaelic a e i o and u the UK extended keyboard setting is needed This makes available AltGr 6 for circumflex accent and AltGr for grave accent as dead keys UK extended keyboard layout edit The UK Extended keyboard mapping available with Microsoft Windows Linux and ChromeOS allows many characters with diacritical marks including those used in other European countries to be generated by using the AltGr key dead keys or a compose key in combination with others UK extended layout under ChromeOS 1 2 3 4 5 6 amp 7 8 9 0 tab Q W q W Ẃ w ẃ E E e e R r T Ŧ t ŧ Y Y y y U U u u I I i i O o o o P TH p th A A a a S s ss D D d d F ª f đ G Ŋ g ŋ H Ħ h ħ J j K amp k ĸ L L l l shift Z lt z X gt x C C c c V v B b N N n n M º m µ lt gt Notes Dotted circle is used here to indicate a dead key invoked using AltGr The grave accent key is the only one that acts as a free standing dead key and thus does not respond as shown on the key cap For a complete list of the characters generated using dead keys see QWERTY ChromeOS AltGr Shift 0 is a degree sign AltGr Shift M º is a masculine ordinal indicator AltGr is an em dash there is no provision for en dash United States edit Most keyboards sold in the US do not have an engraved AltGr key However if there is an right hand Alt key it will act as AltGr if a layout using it is installed conversely a foreign keyboard AltGr will act like the right hand Alt if the standard US keyboard layout is installed US International edit For broader coverage of this topic see QWERTY US International Microsoft provides a US International keyboard layout that uses AltGr or right hand Alt or Ctrl Alt key to produce more characters nbsp Red characters are dead keys for example a can be entered with a Other operating systems such as Linux and ChromeOS follow this layout but increase the repertoire of glyphs provided X Window System editIn the X Window System Linux BSD Unix AltGr can often be used to produce additional characters with almost every key on the keyboard Furthermore with some keys AltGr will produce a dead key for example on a UK keyboard semicolon can be used to add an acute accent to a base letter and left square bracket can be used to add a trema AltGr followed by E e AltGr followed by Shift O OThis use of dead keys enables one to type a wide variety of precomposed characters that combine various diacritics with either uppercase or lowercase letters achieving a similar effect to the Compose key Keyboard maps edit Below are some diagrams and examples of country specific key maps For the diagrams the grey symbols are the standard characters yellow is with Shift red is with AltGr and blue is with Shift AltGr Danish keyboard edit The Danish keymap features the following key combinations AltGr Shift Q W AltGr O œ AltGr M µItalian keyboard edit The Italian keymap includes among other combinations the following AltGr H ħ AltGr i AltGr AltGr Norwegian keyboard edit nbsp The complete Norwegian X Window key map with its AltGr combinationsPolish keyboard edit The Polish keymap on X based systems features changed combination for sign AltGr 5 AltGr U results in instead It also introduces several symbols and characters from different languages including among others AltGr T ss AltGr P th AltGr D d AltGr Q p AltGr Shift Q W AltGr M µ AltGr Shift M AltGr F ae AltGr W œSwedish keyboard edit nbsp The complete Swedish X Window key map with its AltGr combinationsSee also editModifier key Option key Shift key Dead key Escape character Compose key Windows Alt keycodes Precomposed characterNotes edit In general the substitution for the AltGr key with Ctrl Alt works as expected but in some programs unexpected results can occur For example in a local MS Outlook 365 installation the key combo Ctrl Alt is not recognized as an AltGr References edit What is AltGr key Microsoft Support How to use the United States International keyboard layout in Windows 7 in Windows Vista and in Windows XP Microsoft Retrieved 30 May 2020 Keyboard Technical Reference ibm com Archived from the original on 14 January 2006 Retrieved 4 June 2005 IBM Globalization Alternate graphic ibm com Kaplan Michael S To start press the ALTGR key Hmm where s the ALTGR key 28 December 2004 Raymond Chen 29 March 2004 Why Ctrl Alt shouldn t be used as a shortcut modifier Microsoft Suomalainen monikielinen nappaimistokaavio viimeiseksi tarkoitettu luonnos PDF in Finnish 20 June 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 20 July 2011 SFS 5966 Keyboard layout Finnish Swedish multilingual keyboard setting Finnish Standards Association SFS 3 November 2008 Kotoistus Uusi nappainasettelu Status of the new Keyboard Layout Archived 27 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine A bi lingual Finnish English presentation page collecting drafts of the Finnish Multilingual Keyboard CSC IT Center for Science Ltd Page updated 28 December 2006 IBM PC keyboard Windows ANSI US layout vteEsc F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 F6 F7 F8 F9 F10 F11 F12 PrtScn SysRq ScrollLock Pause Break nbsp Insert Home PgUp NumLock Delete End PgDn 7 8 9 4 5 6 1 2 3 Enter 0 Ins Del Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AltGr key amp oldid 1212161377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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