Does a minimum keyboard exist commercially? [closed]
I was wondering if I can buy (for some reasonable amount) a keyboard, which has only the keys that I use:
Has:
- esc, F1-F12, delete, home, end, page up, page down
- tilde, numbers, backspace
Tab, left Shift, left Control, left Alt
- space, letters, commas, braces, enter
Doesn't have:
Caps Lock, Windows key, drop down menu invocation
right Ctrl, Shift, Alt
- numpad
Of course this would be a non-standard layout and will require a bit of tinkering to work with any OS. But are they sold? A quick amazon search yields nothing.
keyboard ergonomics
closed as off-topic by gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH Dec 17 at 15:08
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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I was wondering if I can buy (for some reasonable amount) a keyboard, which has only the keys that I use:
Has:
- esc, F1-F12, delete, home, end, page up, page down
- tilde, numbers, backspace
Tab, left Shift, left Control, left Alt
- space, letters, commas, braces, enter
Doesn't have:
Caps Lock, Windows key, drop down menu invocation
right Ctrl, Shift, Alt
- numpad
Of course this would be a non-standard layout and will require a bit of tinkering to work with any OS. But are they sold? A quick amazon search yields nothing.
keyboard ergonomics
closed as off-topic by gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH Dec 17 at 15:08
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
This question is off topic. However, its entirely possible to build your own keyboard however you want it to be
– Keltari
Dec 17 at 14:39
add a comment |
I was wondering if I can buy (for some reasonable amount) a keyboard, which has only the keys that I use:
Has:
- esc, F1-F12, delete, home, end, page up, page down
- tilde, numbers, backspace
Tab, left Shift, left Control, left Alt
- space, letters, commas, braces, enter
Doesn't have:
Caps Lock, Windows key, drop down menu invocation
right Ctrl, Shift, Alt
- numpad
Of course this would be a non-standard layout and will require a bit of tinkering to work with any OS. But are they sold? A quick amazon search yields nothing.
keyboard ergonomics
I was wondering if I can buy (for some reasonable amount) a keyboard, which has only the keys that I use:
Has:
- esc, F1-F12, delete, home, end, page up, page down
- tilde, numbers, backspace
Tab, left Shift, left Control, left Alt
- space, letters, commas, braces, enter
Doesn't have:
Caps Lock, Windows key, drop down menu invocation
right Ctrl, Shift, Alt
- numpad
Of course this would be a non-standard layout and will require a bit of tinkering to work with any OS. But are they sold? A quick amazon search yields nothing.
keyboard ergonomics
keyboard ergonomics
edited Dec 26 at 19:35
mature
1494
1494
asked Dec 17 at 14:24
Vorac
2721313
2721313
closed as off-topic by gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH Dec 17 at 15:08
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as off-topic by gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH Dec 17 at 15:08
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – gronostaj, Keltari, Toto, mtak, PeterH
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
This question is off topic. However, its entirely possible to build your own keyboard however you want it to be
– Keltari
Dec 17 at 14:39
add a comment |
This question is off topic. However, its entirely possible to build your own keyboard however you want it to be
– Keltari
Dec 17 at 14:39
This question is off topic. However, its entirely possible to build your own keyboard however you want it to be
– Keltari
Dec 17 at 14:39
This question is off topic. However, its entirely possible to build your own keyboard however you want it to be
– Keltari
Dec 17 at 14:39
add a comment |
1 Answer
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The 75% format is, as far as I know, closest to what you're describing. It's not a standard format, though, and I doubt you'll find commercially available keyboards of this size.
You can either get a 60% keyboard which has F_ keys and text navigation keys accessible with modifier key (similar to the Fn key in laptops), or a tenkeyless keyboard which is simply a standard keyboard without a numpad.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The 75% format is, as far as I know, closest to what you're describing. It's not a standard format, though, and I doubt you'll find commercially available keyboards of this size.
You can either get a 60% keyboard which has F_ keys and text navigation keys accessible with modifier key (similar to the Fn key in laptops), or a tenkeyless keyboard which is simply a standard keyboard without a numpad.
add a comment |
The 75% format is, as far as I know, closest to what you're describing. It's not a standard format, though, and I doubt you'll find commercially available keyboards of this size.
You can either get a 60% keyboard which has F_ keys and text navigation keys accessible with modifier key (similar to the Fn key in laptops), or a tenkeyless keyboard which is simply a standard keyboard without a numpad.
add a comment |
The 75% format is, as far as I know, closest to what you're describing. It's not a standard format, though, and I doubt you'll find commercially available keyboards of this size.
You can either get a 60% keyboard which has F_ keys and text navigation keys accessible with modifier key (similar to the Fn key in laptops), or a tenkeyless keyboard which is simply a standard keyboard without a numpad.
The 75% format is, as far as I know, closest to what you're describing. It's not a standard format, though, and I doubt you'll find commercially available keyboards of this size.
You can either get a 60% keyboard which has F_ keys and text navigation keys accessible with modifier key (similar to the Fn key in laptops), or a tenkeyless keyboard which is simply a standard keyboard without a numpad.
answered Dec 17 at 14:41
gronostaj
27.9k1368107
27.9k1368107
add a comment |
add a comment |
This question is off topic. However, its entirely possible to build your own keyboard however you want it to be
– Keltari
Dec 17 at 14:39