TheMicrosoft-Windows-International-Core-WinPE component specifies the default language, locale, and other international settings to use during Windows Setup or Windows Deployment Services installations.
The settings in this component can be applied only in the windowsPE configuration pass. To specify language and locale settings in the oobeSystem and specialize configuration passes, see Microsoft-Windows-International-Core.
The problem is, I don't know how, but this just changed 10 minutes ago, and now if I press ' + E, it types and not 'e, as I want. I did some research and found out this is what "dead keys" do, and unfortunately it is not how I want my keyboard to work.
I read a lot of people suggesting to use the Microsoft keyboard layout creator or just switching to the US layout to disable the dead keys, but, unless I just got crazy, I can assure you all I was using the international layout without dead keys just till 10 minutes ago.
I ran into a somewhat similar problem with the US-International layout. I am using it to type some non-ASCII characters that are available through AltGr combinations (such as and ) but want to keep the default behaviour of other keys, in particular the ' and " keys.
I made a GitHub repository holding a layout that does that. The layout file (direct link) can be opened in Microsoft's Keyboard Layout Creator tool (free as in beer), and built with it. Running the resulting installer adds the new layout to Windows where it can be used exactly like the builtin layouts.
There's no need to fiddle around with configuring anything extra or always having to switch your input with WIN+SPACE. It also should work for any other language's keyboard. Once I got used to this I didn't feel like I needed another solution for that.
This is a project which I have developed (partially based on EurKEY) and which aims to harmonize languages with Latin-based alphabets on US QWERTY, having the dead key combinations, etc. on AltGr and AltGr+Shift.
The answers are not that clear, especially the most upvoted here. (Why should the OP add United States International (and for Brazil Portuguese for that matter) when that keyboard is in fact including dead keys, which the OP already has but wants to go without?)
Every "Language" under those settings comes with a keyboard by default and not much more (and thus it doesn't mean more then a collection of keyboards - unlike what the other answer says); but under its options you can also add, if you chose to download them, a language pack, a handwriting package, and a speech package.
While you cannot add a keyboard without adding a language (and you can add multiple keyboards under one language), adding (having) a "language" always means adding at least one keyboard. What is in fact "added" are always keyboards. Different keyboards are added under each language's "Options", then the keyboards are displayed in the list accessed by clicking the specific tray button.
For the OP not to be able to see that list and switch to the normal default English US, and be stuck to English US International (which has dead keys), that latter layout must have been the only one keyboard added.
When only one language with only one keyboard is added (and this is the default case: except normally that is the simple US not the US Intl), the tray button for keyboards is missing.
With the available keyboard layouts, for accented characters I would suggest keeping also the English US International (and keeping the dead keys for accented characters) and switching easily between keyboards with Super-Space. If one refuses dead keys by all means, one should find a new keyboard that includes accents without dead keys. (For example, for French, one could add French language: that is, language AND keyboard.)
This is a misunderstanding of Input Language and Keyboard Layout. I often find people despaired because they are not able to type accents. This happens because people usually match Input Language and Keyboard Layout, and this is incorrect (except if you want to input the same language as the keyboard was designed to).
The first thing you should do is to set your input language. This has nothing to do with your keyboard layout; this is a personal setting. If your language is set to English, there will be no good support to type characters like or , because they don't exist in English. It is as simple as it is.
So if your language is Italy's Italian, you should select "Italian (Italy)" as input language, and no other one should exist in the list (except if you want to be able to type in several incompatible languages, which rarely is the case).
After you set your language input, you will select your keyboard layout. This is a different thing, because it depends on the keyboard you are using. If your keyboard is US-International, just set it. But always assure the Input Language is the language you really want to use, not your keyboard's country of origin.
Lastly, note that Windows does not set this configuration for you by default. By default, it always guess that your language input matches your keyboard layout (during Windows first launch, they ask what's your keyboard layout and set your input language to the same). Worse than that, you are not able to remove the input language originally set if there is only one input language (so a lot of people think it is not possible to change the input language).
I use AutoHotkey for typing non-English characters with a modifier key, and it's very easy to set up. Just install it, create a text file with .ahk extension that will have the keys to remap and run the file. An icon will appear in the tray that allows you to control the running script.
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It is a known issue that in windows 10 when you decide to add multiple languages you end up with several keyboards that you can not get rid off. A well known solution that I have used in order to have only Greek and English keyboards is to create a powershell script that runs on startup with the following content.
The minor problem that I have is that instead of plain English I want to use the English International qwerty keyboard so that I can add French accents for example. The label of this keyboard when installed on the tray is EN-INTL.
The cupola is a small module designed for the observation of operations outside the station such as robotic activities, the approach of vehicles, and spacewalks. Its six side windows and a direct nadir viewing window provide spectacular views of Earth and celestial objects. The windows are equipped with shutters to protect them from contamination and collisions with orbital debris or micrometeorites. The cupola house the robotic workstation that controls the Canadarm2.
The 2018 editions of the IRC and IECC are the most recent, and many states and localities are in the process of adopting this edition of I-codes. Manufacturers and dealers that sell products in several states should be aware that, at this time, multiple editions of the International Codes are being enforced across the country. To aid in this, the International Code Council (ICC) website provides an adoption chart listing the latest edition being used in each state and in some cases in a local jurisdiction.
The family of International Codes published by the International Code Council is the most widely used in the history of U.S. construction codes. In addition to their widespread use throughout the 50 states and District of Columbia, they are used in the U.S Territories of Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.
Due to the prevalent use by federal agencies, I-codes began being enforced in countries other than the U.S, including the Middle East (Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan). This reliance on the International Codes has now spread to other countries, including Georgia (Eastern Europe), Mexico, Columbia and Honduras.
Tables R301.2(2) and R301.2(3) of the 2018 IRC give the design wind loads for glazed openings based on the design wind speed of the specific location where construction is to take place, the mean height of the building and its exposure to wind. Overall, the prescriptive provisions continue to reference the 2010 edition of American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) 7, Minimum Design Loads for Buildings, while those outside these provisions must be based on the 2016 edition, which was adopted as the IRC reference standard for loads.
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