Each language keyboard layout is different for many of the *extra* characters. On my Swedish language keyboard, backslash \ is with Alt Gr and the + key which is next to the rightmost key on the top row (next to 0). I know this is not the placement on American English keyboards were it is the key just to the left of the bottom of the Enter key.
on the question mark key, it is the slash.
no, it is a candy bar. it has a qwerty key board but that comes up on the screen. ;)
Use the Backslash key, just above the "return" key on the right side of the keyboard. The key will have two characters: | ("pipe") and \ ("backslash").
Yes, it has a virtual QWERTY keyboard on the front touch screen and also flips open sideways to reveal a QWERTY keyboard.
No.its is a regular touch screen with a slide out QWERTY key board.
The forward slash is the best alternative. 5/7
On a standard QWERTY keyboard, the "divide" function is represented by a forward slash ( "/" ). It usually shares the same key as the question mark ( "?" ), or can be found by itself on the number pad.
The back slash is located above the enter key and to the right of the bracket keys, the underscore is to the right of the 0, on the same key as the minus.The forward slash is on the same key as the question mark.
It is because the qwerty keyboard is used universally. Most people are used to the qwerty keyboard layout but there are some keyboard layout that you can also consider the devorak and colemak
It is usually on the key above the Enter (or Return) key on the keyboard.
It is called a QWERTY keyboard because of the first 6 letters on your keyboard. Look at your keyboard and look at the first six letters at the top. It will be 'qwerty' hence the name.
They are called forward slashes or just slashes for short. You can recognize that this is true when you realize that before computer keyboards, typewriters and typography in general had no such thing as the "backslash". (At least, not commonly.) The only "slash" was the "forward slash". (Think and-slash-or for and/or. When have you ever seen the backslash, "\", in literature? And have you ever noticed that the question mark/forward slash key practically always sits in the same location on all QWERTY keyboards, while the backslash is often in different locations on different QWERTY keyboards? It's not even always paired with the vertical bar.)