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8. Korean keyboards

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The Korean keyboard has two keys, the Korean/Chinese +and the Korean/English toggles, that generate scancodes +f1 and f2 (respectively) when pressed, +and nothing when released. They do not repeat. +The keycaps are "hancha" and "han/yong" (written in Hangul). +Hancha (hanja) means Chinese character, and Han/Yong is short for +Hangul/Yongcha (Korean/English). +They are located left and right of the space bar. +

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8.1 An A4tech keyboard +

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Dave Willis reports on his A4tech keyboard: +

Apart from the Korean Hancha and Han/Yong keys, there are on the top row: +

e0 5f (Moon), +e0 6c (Mail), +e0 6b (Computer), +e0 21 (Calculator), +e0 6d (Notes), +e0 10 (Previous), +e0 19 (Next), +e0 2e (Minus), +e0 20 (Mute), +e0 30 (Plus), +e0 22 (Play/Pause), +e0 24 (Stop), +e0 65 (Magnifier), +e0 32 (Home), +e0 66 (Folder), +e0 67 (recycle-style arrows), +e0 68 (x). +

Below mute: +e0 62 (Office). +

On the right hand side: +e0 6a (arrow up left), +e0 69 (arrow down right), +e0 0b (wheel up), +e0 2c (wheel down), +e0 64 (wheel in). +

Wheel up and wheel down have no release code, only the plus and minus keys +will repeat themselves when held down. +

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8.2 The DEC LK201-K +

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