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Acer Aspire 5732ZG Windows 7: Writing Polish Characters (ó, ś, ż, ą, ź, ń, ł, ę) with Left Alt

zardes 58626 16
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  • #1 10902490
    zardes
    Level 9  
    Acer Aspire 5732ZG Windows 7
    I have a problem with writing Polish characters such as "ó, ś, ż, ą, ż, ź, ń, ł, ę, ń"
    but I have the option of writing these characters with the right Alta (except ae, ę)
    I read something about the problem with ATI CCC but I can't find hotkey options here. I still read about the Polish.reg file, but I can't find it on the Intel website either, the links have expired. When I have nothing turned on on the 1st plan, i.e. I have the desktop turned on and I press the Alt + character combination, the system will either make a sound or do nothing, otherwise it looks different in other programs, e.g. in chrome, the Alt + e combination I open Settings.

    Please help, I don't know what to do, can I return to the factory settings? just if it doesn't delete my programs and files.
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    #2 10902501
    jkbgajda
    Level 23  
    What is the operating system?
    Since when has this been happening?
  • #3 10902511
    zardes
    Level 9  
    I added what operating system it is, a
    more specifically Windows 7 Home Premium
    I've been struggling with this for a month now, I don't remember what was the reason
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    #4 10902556
    otapi
    Level 25  
    Since I remember, in Windows, Polish characters were always under the right ALT, not the left one.
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    #5 10902605
    jeryw
    Level 19  
    In Windows, the Polish characters for the selected keyboard are selected by the programmer's Polish using the right Alt + letter key combination, any shortcomings may be caused by the operation of programs using the same shortcut, you need to run various programs to check which shortcut is used and in the program settings or disable it in general keyboard shortcuts using the right Alt-a or change it so that the letter with the Polish diacritical mark is not used, e.g. m, b, k, j, h.
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    #6 10902610
    jkbgajda
    Level 23  
    otapi wrote:
    Since I remember, in Windows, Polish characters were always under the right ALT, not the left one.


    Right.
    Polish signs are always under the right alto.
    Do you want to rearrange them to be under the left?
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  • #7 10902714
    zardes
    Level 9  
    I'm sorry, I made a mistake because, so that I could write with Polish characters, I installed a hotkey program and only on the left one I could assign Polish characters (not all) and hence this mistake is about the right one (I can't write it)
  • Helpful post
    #8 10902740
    otapi
    Level 25  
    If you don't find a solution, you can use left Alt + Ctrl + letter, it works exactly like right Alt + letter.
  • #9 10905244
    zardes
    Level 9  
    otapi wrote:
    you can use left Alt + Ctrl + letter combination, it works exactly like right Alt + letter.


    This combination does not work :(
    I still don't know what to do
  • Helpful post
    #10 10905328
    delic
    Level 15  
    What's your keyboard set? Should be a polish developer - switch between default keyboards left ctrl + left shift. Press ctrl + shift and try Polish fonts. CCC from ATI caused only the lack of the letter ć because the right alt + c opened the card management.
  • #12 10908966
    zardes
    Level 9  
    delic wrote:
    What's your keyboard set? Should be a Polish programmer

    Yes, I have the Polish language of a programmer

    Matuzalem wrote:

    I wrote a few posts above that I want to have the missing diacritics set as it should be in win 7, i.e. the right Alt, but I will try to work something with this program
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    #13 10909059
    Matuzalem
    Level 43  
    zardes wrote:
    A few posts above ...


    zardes wrote:
    ... I have the option of writing these characters with the right ...


    On the other hand, without the knowledge of the hardware (in terms of drivers) and the dedicated software you use (although not only it has to come into play) it is impossible - i.e. probably "google" would do something, but it can be tedious due to the lack of data - write directly what and where to modify, in order to get a pair of "bits" by default.
  • #14 10909518
    zardes
    Level 9  
    Matuzalem wrote:

    On the other hand, without the knowledge of the hardware (in terms of drivers) and the dedicated software you use (although not only it has to come into play) it is impossible - i.e. probably "google" would do something, but it can be tedious due to the lack of data - write directly what and where to modify, in order to get a pair of "bits" by default.


    I'm sorry, I am not so circulated in Computers, but if you write what and where it is, I will try to write everything that is needed :)
  • Helpful post
    #15 10909580
    otapi
    Level 25  
    If it is really the Ati controls, fire CCC and if you are in Basic mode, switch to Advanced and at the top you have the Hotkeys button, turn it off and see if anything changes (uncheck the bird next to enable hotkeys).

    BTW. see what icons you have next to the watch ... close everything you can and see if something changes ... maybe you will find out what program causes it, then it will be easier to say something specific.
  • #16 10910631
    zardes
    Level 9  
    otapi wrote:
    BTW. see what icons you have next to the watch ... close everything you can and see if something changes ... maybe you will find out what program causes it, then it will be easier to say something specific.


    It was the easiest way, and it worked :) now I know what causes these signs to be missing.
    The pest is:

    WLTRAY.EXE Broadcom 802.11 Network Adapter Wireless Network Tray Applet

    Now I have to figure out how to fix it
  • #17 14851684
    mirkol
    Level 12  
    otapi wrote:
    If you don't find a solution, you can use left Alt + Ctrl + letter, it works exactly like right Alt + letter.


    That's what it works and it pisses me off a lot how to change to the right alt. In 8.1

    greetings

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around the difficulty of typing Polish characters (ó, ś, ż, ą, ź, ń, ł, ę) on an Acer Aspire 5732ZG running Windows 7 Home Premium. The user reports that while they can type these characters using the right Alt key, they are unable to do so with the left Alt key. Responses indicate that Polish characters are typically accessed via the right Alt key, and suggest potential conflicts with other software using similar shortcuts. A hotkey program was installed to enable left Alt character input, but it did not resolve the issue. Users recommend checking keyboard settings, disabling conflicting hotkeys in the ATI CCC software, and using alternative key combinations. Ultimately, the user identifies that the WLTRAY.EXE process from the Broadcom wireless adapter was causing the issue, and seeks further assistance in resolving it.
Summary generated by the language model.
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