The most common are: • • (
Con
tro
l) • (
Alternate) – also labelled on
Apple keyboards. • (
Alternate
Graphic) • – Meta key, found on MIT, Symbolics, and Sun Microsystems keyboards. • – Hyper key, found on the
Space-cadet keyboard • – Super key, found on MIT, Symbolics, Linux, and BSD keyboards. • (Windows logo) – found on Windows keyboards. • – Command key, found on Apple keyboards. On older keyboards labelled (Apple logo). • (
Functio
n) – often present on small-layout keyboards, or keyboard where the top row of function keys have multimedia functions like controlling volume attached. The (Sun) Meta key, Windows key, (Apple) Cmd key, and the analogous "Amiga key" () on
Amiga computers, are usually handled equivalently. Under the Linux operating system, the desktop environment
KDE Plasma calls this key
Meta, while
GNOME calls this key, neutrally,
Super. This could be considered confusing, since the original
space-cadet keyboard and the
X Window System recognize a "" modifier distinct from "". The
ZX Spectrum has a Symbol Shift key in addition to Caps Shift. This was used to access additional punctuation and keywords. The
MSX computer keyboard, besides Shift and Control, also included two special modifier keys, Code and Graph. In some models, as in the Brazilian
Gradiente Expert, the Code and Graph keys are labelled "" and "" (Left and Right Graphics). They are used to select special graphic symbols and extended characters. Likewise, the
Commodore 64 and other Commodore computers had the Commodore key at the bottom left of the keyboard. Compact keyboards, such as those used in
laptops, often have a
Fn key to save space by combining two functions that are normally on separate keys. On laptops, pressing plus one of the function keys, e.g., F2, often control hardware functions. Keyboards that lack a dedicated numeric keypad may mimic its functionality by combining the Fn key with other keys. The
MIT space-cadet keyboard had additional Top and Front modifier keys. Combined with standard modifiers, it could enter as many as 8,000 different characters. Specialist typesetting machines, and word processors such as the
Redactron, sometimes used multiple modifier keys to trigger mode changes e.g. for emboldened text or justification changes. This approach gradually became obsolete after software based on commodity hardware and operating systems adopted the
WIMP metaphor which provided drop-down menus etc.
Accented characters Some non-English language keyboards have special keys to produce
accented modifications of the standard Latin-letter keys. In fact, the standard British
keyboard layout includes an accent key on the top-left corner to produce àèìòù, although this is a two step procedure, with the user pressing the accent key, releasing, then pressing the letter key. These kinds of keys are called
dead keys. The
AltGr modifier produces the áéíóú sequence, or in conjunction with the Shift key, ÁÉÍÓÚ. Keyboards of some languages simply include the accented characters on their own keys. Some keyboards also have a
Compose key for typing accented and other special characters. By pressing , and then two other keys, something similar to a combination of the glyphs of the two previous keys will appear on the screen. == Modifier only ==