It really depends on the car and your driving situation. I've heard the claim that right hand drive cars drive better, but my own experiences in RHD cars haven't shown any significant difference from their LHD counterparts.
right hand drive
Cars in France are left hand drive (traffic drives on the right hand side of the road)
Yes. Yes, drivers in Ireland (North & South) drive on the left. The only difference between the two are the road signs. The signs in the Irish Republic use kilometers (metric) for distances and speed limits, while the signs in the North (UK) use miles (imperial).
You can't.
Left hand drive.
last time i was there we drove on the right
It is the right pedal.
We drive on the left, so use rhd cars.
The flow of traffic is on the left-hand side of the road, but vehicles with the drivers controls on either the left or the right are lawful.
Left hand drive, the same as the rest of Continental Europe.
If the vehicle is left hand drive, it is the right side. If the vehicle is right hand drive, like a horse, it is the left side.
Whether a car is right or left hand drive is dependent on in what country it will be sold. If it is sold in England, Australia, Japan or other countries where one drives on the left side of the road then the car is right-hand-drive. If the car is sold in most of the other countries on Earth then the car would be left-hand-drive as they drive on the right side of the road. So you can see, whether a car is right or left-hand-drive is dependent on the country in which it is sold, not the make or model of car.