…trying not to become a man of success, but rather a man of value. (Albert E.)
![]()
Diacritics make a language what it actually is.
Romanian has a handful (and I mean exactly 5) of diacritics. And because we have been put to the test in the 90s and adapted, nowadays we are very much accustomed to see text even without diacritics and we can still read it without major problems. The issue has a long story and doesn’t make the case of this article.
With time, diacritics and Romanian keyboards have made it to general consumers though and it has been imposed in public administration. We have seen the fights for that and the improvements in the way the Windows OS handles the Romanian diacritics, may it be Vista or fixes to versions prior to Vista.
Yet, there is one more issue that remains. And that is something related to globalization.
Nowadays you buy laptops. And laptops that are being built for the region where you live in, outside Romania, or a region that you are now visiting and has discounts.
So here you are, in UK for example, buying a laptop and you notice that when you switch the keyboard layout to Romanian, it is impossible to know which key is which.
Romanian keyboard layout is based on the US keyboard layout, so a US physical keyboard is quite easy to manage with a Romanian keyboard layout. But a UK physical keyboard, or a Swedish one will be problematic, because the keys are differently placed.
This is where I come in. I admit that my practice breaks rules and standards. Nevertheless keeping only to standards and rules may be counter-productive.
I have built some keyboard layouts that give access to the Romanian diacritics, while still respecting the basic arrangement of the physical keyboard - may it be Swedish/Finnish, British, French, Italian or Spanish.
Merely a living soul;
mostly one that survives.
Often seeing the best in people;
surely one that dies trying.
value, cherish, criticize, plan, enjoy, think
Leave a reply