![]() ![]() This makes layout juggling mentally taxing: you have to think about it all the time. ![]() Then there is a middle ground when you use a shortcut to switch to “previous”, but if you hold it, it’ll show you full choice.Įither way, it sucks: you have to know where you are right now (be it Latin or one of Cyrillic layouts) to get where you need. Then there are freaks (a majority of the population, actually), who use single hotkey to switch between three layouts (one after each other, so sometimes to get somewhere you click once and sometimes twice). This makes a single hotkey to switch layouts bearable but limits your communication abilities. For example, some of them just have two layouts: either English/Russian or English/Ukrainian. What do you do? Well, most people cope in the worst ways possible. So you have three keyboard layouts and a single keyboard. Different enough to make a single unified layout (where you have all letters for both alphabets) so annoying that I will not speak of it. And keyboard layouts for those two are a little bit different. After hundreds of years of Russian rule, we got a situation where the Russian language is widespread along with Ukrainian. So it’s like a layout for Latin letters (for writing text in English and programming) and layout for Cyrillic letters.īut, you see, here comes a problem. That makes living in Ukraine similar to living in Russia or elsewhere where they have the same problem. ![]() For example, you can’t just use a single layout like all those peoples in the USA or elsewhere where they have this luxury. Life has blessed me with being born in Ukraine this complicates life a bit though when dealing with computers. ![]()
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