You can use the On-Screen Keyboard program built into Windows to toggle the Insert key. In Windows 10: Start > Settings > Ease of Access > Keyboard, then turn on On-Screen Keyboard. In Windows 8.1: Hit the lower right corner, click Search, type On-Screen Keyboard, then click On-Screen Keyboard.
Because I normally use an external keyboard and I regularly use my Print Screen key I needed a way to toggle that button between being Print Screen and Home when using the laptop keyboard. Building upon the example from Iian, I setup Win+Print Screen to toggle the override.
Turns out it did end up being steam that was running in the background. I had to expose the hidden items on my task bar to shut steam down. The keyboard looks different from any pic I have seen of the steam keyboard in forums and must have been updated. I followed instructions about disabling it through steam controller settings but that did ...
keyboard-shortcuts; microsoft-word; typing. The Overflow Blog No code, only natural language: Q&A on ...
If you have a different layout you could have a look at this page on Wikipedia which has pictures of many different keyboard layouts. If you're on Windows you can get a ^ by hold down Alt and typing 0 9 4 on your numeric keypad which will work for all layouts, but unfortunately this won't work if you're holding down Ctrl
Language preferences > Spelling, typing & keyboard settings (under"Related settings") > Advanced keyboard settings (under"More keyboard settings"). Set a checkbox"Let me use a different input method for each app window". Now you will have English in a login screen.
The basic Italian keyboard layout as shipped with Windows 7 has no way of typing the backtick (`) or the tilde (~). I checked this using Microsoft Keyboard Layout Creator (MSKLC), with that layout loaded into it. I presume that this layout is more or less standard in Italy, though of course Microsoft might have its own oddities here.
Shortcut Action; Win+D: Display the desktop. Win+M: Minimize all windows. Win+Shift+M: Restore minimized windows to the desktop.
Alt+E, which works on European keyboard layouts, maybe even UK English layouts, but not the US English layout. Pressing the AltGr key together with some key, usually also E from memory. Holding down the Alt key, then typing the Unicode hexadecimal codepoint for the symbol on the numeric keypad while holding the Alt key, and then releasing it.
What is an easy way to type “ñ” (“n” with tilde) on an English keyboard in Windows 10? I don't want to add the US International keyboard, because then typing the" will wait for me to type another letter, and if I type an a, I will get “ä” (“a” with diaeresis). I am a programmer, I don’t want to get around it.