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On 17/10/2018 17:12, James Knott wrote:
What about this? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QWERTY#United_Kingdom_(Extended)_Layout
Never really saw much need for it. With a Compose key, you don't need those special keystrokes -- I can enter them all in a moment anyway. And personally I find the Compose shortcuts much easier to remember. E.g. # for tilde? What on Earth? I have a tilde key! It makes, shock horror, a tilde: ~ So compose, tilde, n is ñ and compose, tilde, N is Ñ, in case I feel like typing mañana or cañon. C for cedilla? Then you need to remember what a cedilla is called, which I will bet many people don't. (Or a tilde, which I've often heard called a "squiggle".) Whereas a comma *looks like* a cedilla, so ç is just compose, comma, c. Backtick is grave: compose, `, a is à. Ordinary apostrophe is an acute: compose, ', a is á. As I live in Czechia, it's also useful for things like, well, the name of the street with SUSE's office -- Křižíkova. compose, <, r = ř compose, <, z = ž compose, ', i = í And it works exactly the same on any layout, from Azerbaijani to Zulu. -- Liam Proven - Technical Writer, SUSE Linux s.r.o. Corso II, Křižíkova 148/34, 186-00 Praha 8 - Karlín, Czechia Email: lproven@suse.com - Office telephone: +420 284 241 084 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org