The keyboard is irrelevant if you don’t look at the keys, it’s the keyboard layout that’s relevant, and that’s a software setting. I was very confused the first time I used a computer whose keyboard layout had been changed to Dvorak.
But there is something of a problem if you share a computer with someone who uses Qwerty, I guess. Switching back and forth might get annoying (although maybe you can set an AutoHotKey to do it?).
Other people use my computer fairly often, and I just set it to shift back and forth with command+shift+1. I can change it before I give it to them, so others won’t even know if I don’t want them to.
The keyboard is irrelevant if you don’t look at the keys, it’s the keyboard layout that’s relevant, and that’s a software setting. I was very confused the first time I used a computer whose keyboard layout had been changed to Dvorak.
But there is something of a problem if you share a computer with someone who uses Qwerty, I guess. Switching back and forth might get annoying (although maybe you can set an AutoHotKey to do it?).
Other people use my computer fairly often, and I just set it to shift back and forth with command+shift+1. I can change it before I give it to them, so others won’t even know if I don’t want them to.
I have to admit, I hadn’t thought of that.
No need for AHK, layout-switching shortcuts exist in every operating system I’ve used.