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450 Series USB Encoder
Engineering Manual
www.storm-interface.com
450 Series USB Encoder Engineering Manual rev 1.5 Jun 2018 Page 17 of 48
3 Typical language mappings: Belg:<\> FrCa:
á
‹ â Dan:<\> Dutch:]|[ Fren:<> Ger:<|> Ital:<> LatAm:<> Nor:<>
Span:<> Swed:<|> Swiss:<\> UK:\| Brazil: \|.
4 Typically remapped for other languages in the host system.
5 Keyboard Enter and Keypad Enter generate different Usage codes.
6 Typically near the Left‐Shift key in AT‐102 implementations.
7 Example, Erase‐Eaze. key.
8 Reserved for language‐specific functions, such as Front End Processors and Input Method Editors.
9 Reserved for typical keyboard status or keyboard errors. Sent as a member of the keyboard array. Not a physical
key.
10 Windows key for Windows 95, and
gCompose.
h
11 Implemented as a non‐locking key; sent as member of an array.
12 Implemented as a locking key; sent as a toggle button. Available for legacy support; however, most systems
should use the non‐locking version of this key.
13 Backs up the cursor one position, deleting a character as it goes.
14 Deletes one character without changing position.
15‐20 See additional foot notes in the USB spec
21 Toggle double‐byte/single‐byte mode
22 Undefined, available for other front end language processors
23 Windowing environment key, examples are Microsoft left win key, mac left apple key, sun left meta key
24 Windowing environment key, example are microdoft wight win key, macintosh right apple key, sun right meta key