Standard Hebrew keyboard Standard Hebrew keyboards have a 101/104-key layout. Like the standard
English keyboard layout,
QWERTY, the Hebrew layout was derived from the order of letters on Hebrew
typewriters. The layout is codified in SI-1452 by
SII. The latest revision, from 2013, mostly modified the location of the diacritics points and punctuation such as
quotation marks and
geresh. One noteworthy feature is that in the standard layout, paired delimiters—parentheses (), brackets [], braces {}, and angle brackets (less/greater than) <>—have the opposite logical representation from the standard in left-to-right languages. This gets flipped again by the rendering engine's BiDi mirroring algorithm, resulting in the same visual representation as in Latin keyboards. Key mappings follow the logical rather than the physical representation. For instance, whether on a right-to-left or left-to-right keyboard, Shift-9 always produces a logical "open parenthesis". On a right-to-left keyboard, this is written as the Unicode character U+0029, "right parenthesis": ). This is true on
Arabic keyboards as well. On a left-to-right keyboard, this is written as the Unicode character U+0028, "left parenthesis": (. In a 102/105-key layout of this form, there would be an additional key to the right of the left shift key. This would be an additional
backslash key. Keyboards with 102 keys are not sold as standard, except by certain manufacturers which have elected to sell European-style 102-key Hebrew keyboards, such as
Logitech and
Apple). On computers running Windows, Alt-Shift switches between keyboard layouts. Holding down a
Shift key (or pressing
Caps Lock) in Windows produces the
uppercase Latin letter without the need to switch layouts.
SI-1452-2 Improved Mapping In 2018, SII published the SI-1452-2 "Improved Mapping" standard. This layout is also known as arkn (Hebrew: ) after the four consecutive keys in the top left of the keyboard. It is mostly identical to the SI-1452 layout, with the following changes: • The
punctuation marks period (
.), comma (
,), apostrophe (') and forward slash (
/) have been moved to the same position as on a QWERTY keyboard. • Note: semicolon (
;) remains in place. • takes 's place in order to move the latter away from , to which its proximity sometimes causes confusion. • and were moved to the top left part of the keyboard. • All
Niqqud marks moved to their
Lyx-style layout, even on systems where this isn't supported with the SI-1452 layout (such as macOS). • The
rafe diacritic (◌ֿ) and two
cantillation marks,
meteg (◌ֽ) and
ole (◌֫), were added. • True Hebrew
gershayim (),
quotes (
„”) and
maqaf () were added. •
RLM and
LRM characters added on all systems. •
Multiplication (
×) and
division (
÷) signs were added. The improved mapping is provided by X Keyboard Config since August 2023, but as of November 2023 has no support on
MacOS. Users whose system doesn't provide the mapping are able to download it from mikladot.com.
Hebrew on standard Latin-based keyboards There are a variety of layouts that, for the most part, follow the phonology of the letters on a Latin-character keyboard such as the
QWERTY or
AZERTY. Where no phonology mapping is possible, or where multiple Hebrew letters map to a single Latin letter, a similarity in shape or other characteristic may be chosen. For instance, if (
samech) is assigned to , (
shin/sin) may be assigned to , which it arguably resembles. The shift key is often used to access the five Hebrew letters that have final forms (
sofit) used at the end of words. These layouts are commonly known as "Hebrew-QWERTY" or "French AZERTY-Hebrew" layouts. While Hebrew layouts for Latin-based keyboards are not well standardized,
macOS comes with a Hebrew-QWERTY variant, and software layouts for
Microsoft Windows can be found on the Internet. Tools such as the Microsoft Keyboard Layout Creator can also be used to produce custom layouts. While uncommon, manufacturers are beginning to produce Hebrew-QWERTY stickers and printed keyboards, useful for those who do not wish to memorize the positions of the Hebrew characters. ==Niqqud==