• No Dead Keys. No Shift. No AltGr. No Long Press.
• All One-touch Accents.
(Trema = double dot)
• Nearest Keys As Possible
1/7
How to use this key
`+aeiou → àèìòù
`+n → ñ (Shift is not required)
Otherwise, it stays as the symbol itself.
You don’t need to press Shift to type “~” for ñ/Ñ.
Your grave input(`) is always entered as the accent grave(`) before aeiou, but as the accent tilde(~) before n, and as the symbol grave in all other cases.
This is what the Parallel Layout is about.
2/7
How to use this key
q+a → æ q+o → œ
Otherwise, it stays as just q
You probably don’t know any words that contain -qa- or -qo-.
So this combination safely serves only for accent input.
3/7
How to use this key
,+aeiouy → áéíóúý
,+c → ç
Otherwise, it stays as comma.
You always insert a space after a comma in normal writing.
Therefore, there’s absolutely no chance of conflict when you type a vowel right after it.
4/7
How to use this key
..+aeiouy → äëïöüÿ
Otherwise, it stays as two dots.
When you type an ellipsis with two dots, you always add a space afterward.
So this pattern never interferes with your regular writing.
5/7
How to use this key
;+aeiouy → âêîôûŷ
Otherwise, it stays as semicolon.
You always insert a space after a semicolon.
Therefore, it never conflicts with typing a circumflex accent.
(In some programming languages, the semicolon marks the end of a statement.
It’s a good habit to leave a space after it.)
6/7
Tip for Developers
Q. Does UniQwerty cause any issues while coding?
A. Almost none.
Leave a space after commas and semicolons.
If a backtick (`) ever triggers an accent, just press Backspace once — then retype it, and it’ll stay as plain text.