

This is a list that consists of the 7 most popular Nordic keyboard layouts. Here are every single keyboard layouts that are a part of the Nordic language group. Here is the article – ARTICLE ABOUT QWERTY The list of all Nordic layouts It goes in-depth about QWERTY with some interesting tests. If you want to read more about the QWERTY layout, I can recommend my article. That’s also because QWERTY was created by an American. All the letters you need are already in the QWERTY layout. In American English, there are no such special characters except the dollar symbol. The difference in languages creates the need for a special layout. Here are those characters from the Swedish layout compared to QWERTY: Those special characteristics are what makes Nordic layouts different from the standard QWERTY. This change is required to enable typing in the Swedish language. Those letters are the ones from the Swedish alphabet (look at the image to see a detailed comparison). It is pretty much QWERTY but with special characters. Let’s take the Swedish layout (which is Nordic) for example.

The only difference is that the Norwegian layout has more special letters – the ones that are unique to the Norwegian language. Let’s get for example a Norwegian layout. Because of that, it has few other symbols on top of regular QWERTY. Nordic is meant to enable people to type in Nordic languages. That’s because it has a different job to do. Why is Nordic a different keyboard layout than a regular QWERTY? What is the difference between Nordic and QWERTY? In this layout, it’s the Swedish letters are added. It is pretty much a QWERTY layout with extra letters used in specific languages. This is an example of a few Nordic layouts: A nordic layout is a name for a group of layouts, not a specific layout (look at the whole list of Nordic layouts). It’s mostly similar to QWERTY (as on the image). This layout is required to type in the languages from the North Germanic branch. The nordic layout is the layout that’s used in countries from the Nordic region. There’s a version of this layout for: Danish, Faroese, Icelandic, Norwegian, Swedish, and more. It means that there are many languages that this layout needs to serve. There are many countries that use this layout. The main purpose of this layout is to enable typing for people from the Nordic region. It is not very different from the standard QWERTY. Nordic QWERTY is a modification to the standard QWERTY.
