Version 9 vs 12
Version 9 vs 12
Content Changes
Content Changes
{nav icon=home, name=Main Page >
icon=info-circle, name=PureOS >
icon=desktop, name=GNOME Desktop >
icon=keyboard-o, name=Keyboard Layout}
Set up keyboard layouts
---
= Keyboard layout setting =
Open the //**GNOME Control Center**// and click //**Region & Language**//. Click the !!+!! button to add another layout:
{F31933, size=full, alt=kl1}
...for example, another English layout:
{F31939, size=full, alt=kl2}
...for example, Dvorak:
{F31935, size=full, alt=kl3}
Select the layout and click !!Add!!:
{F31937, size=full, alt=kl4}
You can also add other other layouts, click the 3-dot button:
{F31941, size=full, alt=kl5}
...and then //Other//:
{F31943, size=full, alt=kl6}
You can scroll for the language or simply type into the search bar, select it and click !!Add!!:
{F31945, size=full, alt=kl7}
The final list of the keyboard layouts:
{F31947,size=full, alt=kl8}
You can order them, use the up/down arrow buttons:
{F31949,size=full, alt=kl9}
You can remove a layout by clicking the !!-!! button:
{F31951,size=full, alt=kl10}
Click the !!Options!! button to get more advanced options:
{F31953,size=full, alt=kl11}
== Additional keyboard layouts ==
You need to specifically enable them in the GNOME Tweaks tool:
{F41026, size=full, alt=kl12}
Log out and log back in for the setting to take effect, and open //**Region & Language**// settings to see additional layouts. For example, you can click on //English// to list additional language variants that match the US physical keyboard layout:
{F41028, size=full, alt=kl13}
== Troubleshooting ==
=== I do not see my language on the list. ===
Edit the file ///etc/locale.gen// and uncomment (remove leading //#//) your language code, for example:
`#de_DE.UTF-8 UTF-8` change to `de_DE.UTF-8 UTF-8`
and then run in terminal:
{icon terminal}`sudo locale-gen`
Your language (in this case German-Germany) should appear on the list.
{nav icon=home, name=Main Page >
icon=info-circle, name=PureOS >
icon=desktop, name=GNOME Desktop >
icon=keyboard-o, name=Keyboard Layout}
Set up keyboard layouts
---
= Keyboard layout setting =
Open the //**GNOME Control Center**// and click //**Region & Language**//. Click the !!+!! button to add another layout:
{F31933, size=full, alt=kl1}
...for example, another English layout:
{F31939, size=full, alt=kl2}
...for example, Dvorak:
{F31935, size=full, alt=kl3}
Select the layout and click !!Add!!:
{F31937, size=full, alt=kl4}
You can also add other other layouts, click the 3-dot button:
{F31941, size=full, alt=kl5}
...and then //Other//:
{F31943, size=full, alt=kl6}
You can scroll for the language or simply type into the search bar, select it and click !!Add!!:
{F31945, size=full, alt=kl7}
The final list of the keyboard layouts:
{F31947,size=full, alt=kl8}
You can order them, use the up/down arrow buttons:
{F31949,size=full, alt=kl9}
You can remove a layout by clicking the !!-!! button:
{F31951,size=full, alt=kl10}
Click the !!Options!! button to get more advanced options:
{F31953,size=full, alt=kl11}
== Additional keyboard layouts ==
You need to specifically enable them in the GNOME Tweaks tool:
{F41026, size=full, alt=kl12}
Log out and log back in for the setting to take effect, and open //**Region & Language**// settings to see additional layouts. For example, you can click on //English// to list additional language variants that match the US physical keyboard layout:
{F41028, size=full, alt=kl13}
== Troubleshooting ==
=== I do not see my language on the list. ===
Edit the file ///etc/locale.gen// and uncomment (remove leading //#//) your language code, for example:
`#de_DE.UTF-8 UTF-8` change to `de_DE.UTF-8 UTF-8`
and then run in terminal:
{icon terminal}`sudo locale-gen`
Your language (in this case German-Germany) should appear on the list.