Answer:
To change keyboard language right-click on the language-settings and choose your language by clicking on Add. Don't forget to apply this setting. Then you can choose your chosen language by clicking on the language box and you can find your language there.
Answer:
In Windows XP, you go to 'Control Panel', double-click on 'Regional and Language Options', under the tab 'Regional Options' choose the language you wish to use and click. You may also click on 'Customize' to set more specifics on how you want date, time, currency and numbers displayed. More advanced settings can be found under tabs 'Languages' and 'Advanced'.
Keep in mind that your computer may or may not have the software required to use the language so you may have to purchase separately. Instructions for installing are generally found with the software itself. If you still need to change settings, the the procedure above should help.
To type an upper comma (also known as an acute accent or accent aigu) on a keyboard, you typically use the key combination for accents. On a standard US keyboard, you can type it by pressing the Shift key along with the ’ key (often located next to the Enter key) followed by the letter you want to accent. On some keyboards, especially those set to different languages, you may need to use specific key combinations or a dedicated key for accents.
Sounds like your keyboard has been changed to a different layout. You can manually insert a / mark - by looking for it in the Character Map - and use copy/paste to insert where you need it to be.
Whitney Houston performed a great many different songs. Each one of these songs have a very different set of keyboard notes.
Set NumLock on, then type ALT and 168 to get ¿
The '~ #' key is between (diagonally speaking) the enter key and the right shift key on an English keyboard.
ASCII (American Standard Codes for Information Interchange) is a character set, not a language. It helps in the process of allowing symbols represented on your keyboard to be printed on the screen. All letters, digits, punctuation symbols and many other things are given codes. These codes are standardised so they can work on different computers. The ASCII Code for "a" is 97. The ASCII Code for "A" is 65. If you open Notepad, you can demonstrate this. First make sure the Num Lock light is on. Hold down the ALT key, and keeping it held down type 65 on the Numeric keyboard (that is on the right of your keyboard and not the numbers just above the main part of the keyboard. AFter typing 65, let go of the Alt key. An A should appear in Notepad. Try this for other numbers, using numbers between 0 and 255. You will be able to get characters and symbols that are not on your keyboard. Different countries use different kinds of keyboards, as their languages are different. A character like á will not appear on keyboards in some countries, but will in others. Some characters are in different places on keyboards from different countries. The @ is on the key 2 on American keyboards, but on a keyboard in Ireland or Britain, the " is on the 2 key. The @ character is where the " is on an American keyboard. The software in your computer is able to recognise what each key is defined to do. If you change the software setting on your computer, you can have your keyboard give different characters than the ones that are on the keys. ASCII only has a limited set of characters. A computers are used in more countries, they need to be able to deal with a lot more characters. The Chinese and Japanese languages have thousands of different characters, but ASCII does not support them. To use them you need a character set called Unicode which is on modern computers. A Chinese person can use a keyboard that does not have those symbols on them, but still be able to type them, if they have the software installed.
If typing "mjkluio" results in "0123456," it suggests that the keyboard layout is set to a different language or configuration. To resolve this, you can check the keyboard settings in your device's control panel or settings menu and ensure it matches the intended layout, such as QWERTY. Alternatively, you may want to switch to a different input language or reset the keyboard settings. If the issue persists, consider testing the keyboard on another device to rule out hardware problems.
It because your keyboard settings have been set different to the layout of the keyboard you are using. Most of the keys will work as normal but ones like @ and " are reversed. You will find some others work differently too. Go to Control Panel and check the Regional settings and language settings and keyboard settings and set them to where you are from and the type of keyboard you have. That will fix your problem.
Yes, you can replace the keyboard. 1. Go to market place on your phone. 2. Type in keyboard in the search bar and browse through which keyboard you would like to try. ( a very popular, well developed keyboard is smartkeyboard) 3. install the application and follow the instructions as to how to set it is as your default keyboard.
First, set the range of of the instrument on the little keyboard in the Channel Settings dialog box for the instrument. Do this with all the instruments you want to use at once on the keyboard. Of course, set different ranges for each instrument, unless you want them to both play on one key.Then create a Layer channel in the Step Sequencer, and assign all the instrument channels you want to use at one time to the Layer channel's children. Then, when you choose the Layer channel and play the keyboard, your various instruments you assigned will play in the different keyboard ranges you assigned them to.
In Java, that would be called "boolean". In other languages it may have different names, for example, "logical". In C, there is no true boolean data type, so people just use integer and if you want the integer to be true, you set it to 1 and if you want it to be false, you set it to 0.
Make sure the keyboard is set to your country and language. A keyboard in the UK, if set to the USA, will print a @ when the " key is pressed.