Using The US International Keyboard Layout
Using The US International Keyboard Layout
The US International keyboard layout is a variation of the standard US keyboard layout that lets you type
all common characters used in Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish, and Swedish. Some of these characters are typed by holding down a
special AltChar key, while others are typed by pressing a sequence of keys.
This keyboard is based on the QWERTY keyboard layout that is commonly used in the United States. If
you are not familiar with using a keyboard arranged in this manner, the US International Keyboard Layout
may not be the best layout for your needs.
• To insert a character shown on the upper right side of a key, hold down Shift and the AltChar key (the
Alt key to the right of the Spacebar) as you press the key showing the desired character.
Figure A-1 The US International keyboard layout lets you type special characters not available
on the US English keyboard layout.
à, è, ì, ò, or ù a, e, i, o, or u.
ä, ë, ï, ö, ü, or ÿ a, e, i, o, u, or y.
â, ê, î, ô, or û a, e, i, o, or u.
Table A-1 Putting accents on characters using the US International keyboard layout.
*To use an open-quote, tilde, or caret followed by one of these letters, type the accent
character, press the spacebar, then type the letter.
To insert the grave accent, acute accent, or circumflex alone, press the Spacebar instead of a letter after
you press and release the accent key (or Shift plus the accent key). To insert the umlaut/dieresis alone,
press Control plus Shift plus the colon (:) key; release, then press the Spacebar.
The thing to remember when using accent keys with the US International keyboard layout is that your
computer waits for you to press the next key. Your system needs to know whether you want to insert the
accent character alone or as an accent over a letter. After you press and release the accent key, you must
press another key before anything is displayed on the screen.