Using keyboard layouts in Windows 10.0.27729.1000
Use this page to find out how to type a character on given keyboard or how many keyboards contain given characters.
The entered characters are as follows:
Hex | Dec | Name | Range | C# | HTML | URL | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
U+00B1 | 177 | ± | PLUS-MINUS SIGN | C1 Controls and Latin-1 Supplement (Latin-1 Supplement) | \u00b1 | ± | %C2%B1 |
This text can be typed on 14 system layouts out of 217:
Canadian French | CONTROLMENU+1 |
French (Standard, BÉPO) | CONTROLMENU+7 |
Latvian Latvian (QWERTY) Latvian (Standard) | SHIFTCONTROLMENU+7 |
Canadian Multilingual Standard | SHIFTOEM 8+9 |
Canadian French (Legacy) | SHIFTCONTROLMENU+9 |
Spanish Variation | CONTROLMENU+K |
Dutch French (Standard, AZERTY) | SHIFT+OEM PLUS |
Romanian (Programmers) Romanian (Standard) | SHIFTCONTROLMENU+OEM PLUS |
Greek Greek Polytonic | CONTROLMENU+OEM MINUS |
Greek (220) Greek (220) Latin | CONTROLMENU+OEM 2 |
Greek (319) | SHIFT+OEM 3 |
German Extended (E1) | CONTROLMENU+F, OEM PLUS |
German Extended (E2) | CONTROLMENU+H, OEM PLUS |
Colemak | CONTROLMENU+OEM 5, SHIFT+OEM PLUS |
You can also use these custom-made keyboard layouts:
Note that virtual keys are not always at the same place. For example, Q is next to the Tab key on US keyboard but next to the Caps Lock on French keyboard. You can click on each keyboard layout to find out how it defines the mapping.
Please note current limitations of the algorithm: