![]() ![]() In particular, we’ll look in more detail at how keys are arranged, just what can be specified for each key, and lastly, how this all looks in the JSON code used to define the touch hold layout. In this blog post, we’ll continue that discussion, describing some of the details to be considered, in the context of the same Amharic phonetic keyboard discussed in that post. Last week, we presented an introduction to how Keyman Developer 9 can be used to develop touch keyboard layouts. For all other user-defined key codes, continue to use T_ as usual. For keys with a single Unicode character output, please use U_XXXX (where XXXX is the Unicode code point) instead of T_XXXX. We've updated information regarding user-defined key codes.
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