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  2. Romanian keyboard layout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanian_keyboard_layout

    The "primary" layout is intended for more traditional users that learned long ago how to type with older, Microsoft-style implementations of the Romanian keyboard. The "secondary" layout is mainly used by programmers and it does not contradict the physical arrangement of keys on a US-style keyboard.

  3. List of QWERTY keyboard language variants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_QWERTY_keyboard...

    The "primary" layout is intended for traditional users who have learned how to type with older, Microsoft-style implementations of the Romanian keyboard. The "secondary" layout is mainly used by programmers as it does not contradict the physical arrangement of keys on a US-style keyboard.

  4. File:Romanian keyboard layout (Romania & Moldova) - text as ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Romanian_keyboard...

    Also note that this layout contains one key extra compared to the template; this is because the Romanian keyboard layout uses the key left to the Z (what most keyboards call the Macro key). The S-komma looks a bit odd because Helvetica doesn't support this character and therefore Tahoma had to be used instead.

  5. QWERTY - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QWERTY

    The "primary" layout is intended for traditional users who have learned how to type with older, Microsoft-style implementations of the Romanian keyboard. The "secondary" layout is mainly used by programmers as it does not contradict the physical arrangement of keys on a US-style keyboard.

  6. EurKEY - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EurKEY

    EurKEY keyboard layout. EurKEY is a multilingual keyboard layout which is intended for Europeans, programmers and translators and was developed by Steffen Brüntjen and published under the GPL free software license. It is available for common desktop operating systems such as Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. [1]

  7. Romanian alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanian_alphabet

    In systems such as Linux which employ the XCompose system, Romanian letters may be typed from a non-Romanian keyboard layout using a compose-key. The system's keyboard layout must be set up to use a compose-key. (Exactly how this is accomplished depends on the distribution.) For instance, the 'left Alt' key is often used as a compose-key.

  8. File:Romanian keyboard layout (Romania & Moldova).svg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Romanian_keyboard...

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  9. File:Romanian-keyboard-layout.png - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Romanian-keyboard...

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