Michael Everson <everson at evertype dot com> wrote: > Let's say I was making a keyboard for Northern Sami, intended to work > on PCs running Windows, and wanted to replace the Q key with the > letter A. That's easy enough, but since Q has been replaced, it needs > to be available via another mechanism such. On the Mac, you could > have the following: > > plain q = � > shift q = A > option q = q > shift-option q = Q > > Can this be done on PCs with the Alt key or the AltGr key, or with > some other key that won't interfere with the menu shortcuts and so > on? Would Tavultesoft be the way to do this?
AltGr on the PC corresponds to ISO 9995 Level 3, as Option does on the Mac, so you would use AltGr for this purpose. Keyboards that don't have an AltGr key (all keyboards in North America, for instance) can use Alt+Ctrl instead. Alt+key is reserved for menu shortcuts and Ctrl+key for application-specific features. You could do this with Keyman, or alternatively there are programs that let you define "native" Windows keyboards (e.g. Janko's Keyboard Generator). I have no idea how good such programs are, as I have not used them. -Doug Ewell Fullerton, California

