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https://github.com/zaki/mac-hun-keyboard
A standard Hungarian keyboard layout for Mac OSX 10.6
https://github.com/zaki/mac-hun-keyboard
Last synced: 30 days ago
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A standard Hungarian keyboard layout for Mac OSX 10.6
- Host: GitHub
- URL: https://github.com/zaki/mac-hun-keyboard
- Owner: zaki
- Created: 2010-09-26T16:54:47.000Z (about 14 years ago)
- Default Branch: master
- Last Pushed: 2023-03-24T06:25:05.000Z (over 1 year ago)
- Last Synced: 2024-08-04T01:26:08.932Z (4 months ago)
- Homepage: http://github.com/zaki/mac-hun-keyboard
- Size: 112 KB
- Stars: 103
- Watchers: 6
- Forks: 29
- Open Issues: 2
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Metadata Files:
- Readme: README.markdown
Awesome Lists containing this project
README
# About
Copy the keylayout file into `/Library/Keyboard Layouts/` and you can then
select the new layout from System Preferences > Language & Text > Input Sources# Layout
This layout puts the most important (for programming) characters back to
where they usually are on a PC keyboard (Windows, Linux, probably every
single OS got it right, except Mac OSX for some reason).- 0 is now right left to 1 (rather than í, which moved to Alt+J)
- On international QUERTY layouts you can type í with the key located between
the left shift and the Z. You can also use that key along with the Z key
combined with Alt to type the "<" and ">" symbols like on hungarian keyboards.
- Alt is now the primary way to enter symbols eg:
- Alt-Q is now \ Alt-V is @ and so on.
- Alt-F and Alt-G are [ and ] respectively.In general, everything should be where it belongs on a PC keyboard.
I had pretty good luck with this on a wireless keyboard with US keys, but YMMV.
If you are stuck with a JP keyboard, either learn a new layout, or you can
still use Ctrl-Alt-0 to enter a 0, because the keyboard misses a key on the
left of 1.# License
Use it for whatever purpose, just don't blame me if something doesn't work out.