British and American keyboards
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
There are two major English language keyboard layouts, the United States layout and the United Kingdom layout. US users do not frequently need the £ and currency symbols, which are common needs in the UK and Ireland. As one might expect, different operating system vendors have provided their own solutions to this, which are often not equivalent.
Microsoft Windows
For its UK layout, Microsoft accordingly adds an AltGr key, maps the £ to where the US layout has a #, and adds a 102nd key to accommodate the #. A few other variations (the reversals of @ and ", and the movement of ~ to the # key to accommodate a ¬ on the backquote key, and the movement of the \ key to the left of Z) have also crept in between the two. On laptop computers, the | and \ key is often placed next to the space bar, and a Function key added.
Early versions of Windows handled both the differences between the two keyboards and the differences between American English and British English by having two English language optionsa UK setting and a US setting. While adequate for users in the United States, United Kingdom, and Ireland, this solution caused difficulty in other English-speaking countries. In many Commonwealth countries and other English-speaking jurisdictions (e.g., Australia, Canada, the Caribbean nations, Hong Kong, New Zealand, and South Africa), local spelling, grammar, and vocabulary strongly conformed to British English usage, while the supplied keyboard was printed with the United States layout on the keys. People in these countries were forced to choose between a keyboard layout incompatible with their hardware, or having their spell checker software complain about locally-correct spelling like 'colour'.
However, in more recent editions, the number of options was
increased, allowing users to select the correct keyboard and
dialect independently. For example, one is given a number of
default options for locality that will usually correctly match
dialect and keyboard. Further, even if your hardware
keyboard layout does not match the
device driver software layout that was pre-selected, you can
change that without changing the regional setting.
Since the standard US keyboard layout in Microsoft Windows
offers no way of inputting any sort of diacritic or accent, this
makes it unsuitable for all but a handful of languages unless
the US International layout is used. The US International layout
changes the `, ~, ^, " (for ¨), the comma, and ' (for ΄) keys
into
dead keys for producing accented characters. The US
International layout also uses left alt and right alt (AltGr) as
modifiers to enter special characters.
Mac OS
The default US layout on Macintosh computers has allowed input of diacritical characters since inception, whereby the entire MacRoman character set is directly available, so many of the problems outlined above are not encountered, but even so Apple supplies a UK layout where characters such as £ are more accessible, in this case it is transposed with the # character, at Shift-3 and Option-3 respectively. Another character swap present on UK layouts is between @ and " (straight double quote), where the former is available via Shift-2 and the latter via Shift-apostrophe.
See also
- Keyboard layout
- Technical standards in colonial Hong Kong
Categories: Keyboard layouts | American and British English differences | Computer keyboards

