However, starting with macOS 10.12 Sierra, Apple made some major changes to how key remapping takes place – for the better in my opinion. I used the program Ukelele to do the necessary configury to get the necessary diacritics for vowels that are pretty common in Czech. I’ve done remapping before on macOS, in particular to make typing in Czech much easier without having to resort to switching to a Czech keyboard layout. Worse, it occupies a place where I would normally type a “`” or a “~” – characters that are useful in my typing at work and in Markdown text like this blog entry. I have never had the need to type a “§” or a “±” in my life, so that key in the upper-left corner is completely useless to me. I’m still getting used to the keys, but the biggest problem was that contrary to my expressed wishes, I received an international key layout, with keys like so: When I joined Criteo, I was given a brand new MacBook Pro, the one with the Touch Bar and the less-than-stellar keyboard. Menu Remapping Keys on macOS High Sierra Apr 6th, 2018 macOS (3)
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