Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by jcranmer 514 days ago
AZERTY is primarily a French keyboard layout, to my knowledge.

The standard QWERTY layout for the number key row is `/~, 1/!, 2/@, 3/#, 4/$, 5/%, 6/^, 7/&, 8/*, 9/(, 0/), -/_, =/+. I don't know how far back the mapping of shift keys for the numbers go, but I'd be shocked if there was any around the 1960s or 1970s that put them like your AZERTY keyboard.

2 comments

During the relevant time there were two predominant layouts for the number key row: “typewriter-paired”, which is more or less same as the one used today and “bit-paired” where the symbols had the same order as they have in ASCII (ie. pressing a number key while holding shift produces a character represented by that number's ascii codepoint minus 0x10)
Yes (I am French). Those characters are found on the top letter row: AZERTYUIOP^$