At sign on QWERTY!
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Angie
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sijilmassi idrissi -
sijilmassi idrissi -
Hello,
I need help, I just bought an English ASUS netbook, my keyboard is a QWERTY configured in Canadian French. I can't use the at sign or the question mark, I’ve tried your combinations but it doesn’t work.
My at sign is combined with the comma on the same key, the at sign is above it. I've tried alt, shift, lock, alt gr, fn... I don't know what to do!!!!!!!
Configuration: Windows 7 / Internet Explorer 9.0
I need help, I just bought an English ASUS netbook, my keyboard is a QWERTY configured in Canadian French. I can't use the at sign or the question mark, I’ve tried your combinations but it doesn’t work.
My at sign is combined with the comma on the same key, the at sign is above it. I've tried alt, shift, lock, alt gr, fn... I don't know what to do!!!!!!!
Configuration: Windows 7 / Internet Explorer 9.0
2 réponses
Hello;
Here may be a solution:
On a French AZERTY keyboard on a PC platform, you obtain the sign @ by pressing the Alt Gr and à keys together. On a Belgian AZERTY keyboard, it is obtained by pressing the AltGr and é keys together. On a Swiss QWERTZ keyboard, it is obtained by pressing the Alt Gr and 2 keys together. On a Canadian-French QWERTY keyboard, it is obtained by pressing the AltCar and 2 keys together. On a French Macintosh keyboard, this sign is directly accessible (first key on the left of the top alphanumeric row), or obtained by pressing Shift and 2 together. On a Swiss Macintosh keyboard, it is accessible by pressing the Option Alt and G keys together. On a French BÉPO keyboard, the at sign is directly accessible: it is the "6 lowercase."
"perit ut vivat"
Here may be a solution:
On a French AZERTY keyboard on a PC platform, you obtain the sign @ by pressing the Alt Gr and à keys together. On a Belgian AZERTY keyboard, it is obtained by pressing the AltGr and é keys together. On a Swiss QWERTZ keyboard, it is obtained by pressing the Alt Gr and 2 keys together. On a Canadian-French QWERTY keyboard, it is obtained by pressing the AltCar and 2 keys together. On a French Macintosh keyboard, this sign is directly accessible (first key on the left of the top alphanumeric row), or obtained by pressing Shift and 2 together. On a Swiss Macintosh keyboard, it is accessible by pressing the Option Alt and G keys together. On a French BÉPO keyboard, the at sign is directly accessible: it is the "6 lowercase."
"perit ut vivat"
"On a Canadian-French QWERTY keyboard, it can be obtained by pressing the AltCar and 2 keys together"
@@@@@
yayy lol