I am getting used to Mac, I have a french keyboard, and can see Character Viewer
and Keyboard Viewer
, but I still don't know how to type some characters, for instance [ and ]?
- Can you specify if your question is related to a French keyboard from Canada (qwerty) or France (azerty) ?– MaximeCommentedMar 27, 2012 at 18:04
- In Mac OS X there are four standard software keyboard layouts for French: Canadian French-CSA; French; French-Numerical; and Swiss French.– user9290CommentedMar 28, 2012 at 22:14
- You had two questions in here. This site works better when there is only one question per question. That way, it's easier for other people to find solutions if they have the same problem. I've edited out your second question, but feel free to ask it separately.– Daniel♦CommentedApr 4, 2012 at 1:39
3 Answers
The AZERTY keyboard is the most common in France. '[' is shared with the '5' key and ']' is shared with the degrees symbol key to the right of '0'. The '[' or ']' characters appear when you use the AltGr key.
I would hate to be doing Objective C on a French keyboard!
Home and End depend on context in Windows. If the text is editable, home goes to the beginning of the line and End to the end of the line. The Mac does this with Command-Right Arrow (End) and Command-Left Arrow (Home).
When the document is not editable, Home goes to the beginning of the document and End to the end of the document in Windows. On a Mac, for Home you use Command-Up Arrow, and for End you use Command-Down Arrow.
- At least with the home/end keys I've used, they go to the beginning/end of a line, which would be Command-Left Arrow and Command-Right Arrow. Do home/end keys have different functionality on different keyboard layouts?CommentedMar 27, 2012 at 3:04
- It's tricky, changes with whether text is editable or not - answer updated.– user3117CommentedMar 27, 2012 at 3:05
- Ah, good catch -- didn't think about when using those keys in something like a web browser.CommentedMar 27, 2012 at 3:09
- Your description of how to make those characters seems totally wrong for OS X with the layout provided by Apple. Are you really able to do it that way?CommentedApr 3, 2012 at 21:16
On the French keyboard on a Mac, whether a hardware keyboard or the French keyboard layout in software, I believe that you must hold down three keys simultaneously to generate the "[
" and "]
" characters.
I cannot test this myself, not having a French hardware keyboard, but I believe the required sequence is:
The "[
" is generated by typing Shift + Option + (
and the "]
" is generated by typing Shift + Option + ).
Here is a diagram of the Apple Wireless Keyboard - French which you can purchase from Apple.
The Option key is Apple's name for the "Alt" key on a PC. It is located between the Ctrl key and the Command key, next to the space bar.
- I have added that information and a link in my answer.– user9290CommentedApr 3, 2012 at 18:03
In Canada, the 'french' keyboard is QWERTY. It looks like this:
To answer your questions:
[ is accessible via alt + 9
] is accessible via alt + 0
Home is accessible via + <= (left arrow)
End is accessible via + => (right arrow)
- @WheatWilliams: The question talks about a "French keyboard" but doesn't specify if it's from France or Canada. I have a French keyboard and I am from Canada. French is not only spoken in France.– MaximeCommentedMar 27, 2012 at 18:01
- Ok... and how is that linked with the fact that my answer is not helpful ?– MaximeCommentedMar 27, 2012 at 22:12