Shaun McCanceshaunm@gnome.org2012Julita Incayrazes@gmail.comMichael Hillmdhillca@gmail.comJuanjo Marínjuanj.marin@juntadeandalucia.esEkaterina Gerasimovakittykat3756@gmail.com2013Add keyboard layouts and switch between them.Use alternative keyboard layouts
Keyboards come in hundreds of different layouts for different languages.
Even for a single language, there are often multiple keyboard layouts, such
as the Dvorak layout for English. You can make your keyboard behave like a
keyboard with a different layout, regardless of the letters and symbols
printed on the keys. This is useful if you often switch between multiple
languages.
Open the Activities
overview and start typing Keyboard.
Select SettingsKeyboard from the
results. This will open the Keyboard panel.
Click the + Add Input Source… button in the
Input Sources section,
select the language which is associated with the layout, then select a
layout and press Add.
If there are multiple user accounts on your system, there is a separate
section for the Login Screen in the
Region & Language panel in the System panel.
Some rarely used keyboard layout variants are not available by default
when you click the + Add Input Source… button. To make also those input sources
available you can open a Terminal window and run this command:
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources
show-all-sources true
You can preview an image of any layout by clicking the
settings
button next to the language in the Input Sources list and selecting
View Keyboard Layout.
Certain languages offer some extra configuration options. You can
identify those languages because they have a
settings
icon next to them in the Add an Input Source dialog.
If you want to access these extra parameters, click the
settings button next to the language
in the Input Sources list and select Preferences
which will give you access to the extra settings.
When you use multiple layouts, you can choose to have all windows use the
same layout or to set a different layout for each window. Using a different
layout for each window is useful, for example, if you’re writing an article
in another language in a word processor window. Your keyboard selection will
be remembered for each window as you switch between windows. Press the
Options button to select how you want to manage
multiple layouts.
The top bar will display a short identifier for the current layout, such
as en for the standard English layout. Click the layout indicator
and select the layout you want to use from the menu. If the selected language
has any extra settings, they will be shown below the list of available
layouts. This gives you a quick overview of your settings. You can also open
an image with the current keyboard layout for reference.
The fastest way to change to another layout is by using the
Input SourceKeyboard Shortcuts. These shortcuts open
the Input Source chooser where you can move forward and backward.
By default, you can switch to the next input source with
SuperSpace
and to the previous one with
ShiftSuperSpace. You can
change these shortcuts in the Keyboard settings under
Keyboard ShortcutsView and Customize ShortcutsTyping.
shaunm
We're totally coping out on the custom options. That dialog is a
monster, and needs a reference. Note that the options in there are
dynamic from the X server. We might not get a definitive reference
of everything ever, but let's do our best. Make a separate page.
Don't clutter this page with that crap.
Also, we should identify common uses of those options and create
task pages for them.