If you wish your keyboard's keys were laid out just a tad bit differently, you can change it around with a keyboard remapper. Windows users have a few to choose from, but the easiest to use is certainly KeyTweak, which presents you with a full, visual keyboard layout and multiple methods for changing it.


Update: KeyTweak's home page seems to be down, with no indication of whether the program has been abandoned or anything. However, it's still available from software sites like Major Geeks, so we've updated our link to the download page below.

Platform: Windows

Price: Free

Download Page (Major Geeks)

Features

Remap any key on the keyboard, including special media or web keys

Choose remapped keys from a list or press the desired key to remap using "Teach Mode"

Remove all remappings with a single button

Enable/Disable annoying keys

Warnings make sure the Ctrl+Alt+Delete shortcut is always available

Where It Excels

KeyTweak makes remapping keys a cinch, whether you're an experienced user or a beginner. You can click on the key you want to change using a visual layout of your keyboard, then select the new function from a list, or use its "Teach Mode" to remap just by pressing the desired keys. Support for media keys is especially nice, and you can restore all the defaults with a single button click, in case something goes wrong. Simply put, KeyTweak is the easiest remapper out there.


Where It Falls Short

KeyTweak doesn't remap keyboard shortcuts, like Alt+Tab or Ctrl+Alt+Delete, but that isn't really its job—use something like AutoHotkey for that functionality. Its only real downside is that you have to install the program—you can't just run a portable version. Other than that, it's about as good as it gets.

The Competition

If you don't need the Teach Mode that KeyTweak provides, MapKeyboard is a great alternative. It provides a visual keyboard layout, letting you click on keys and choose their new function via a dropdown. Its big advantage over KeyTweak is that it's available as a portable app, which means you don't need to install anything. Just extract the zip file anywhere you want and run the program.


SharpKeys is another great portable key tweaker, which doesn't include a visual layout—just a simple two column view that lets you remap your keys. It isn't quite as easy to use as KeyTweak or MapKeyboard, but it works great, and doesn't require any installation, which is a big plus.

If you want to change the entire layout of your keyboard rather than just a few keys, you probably want something more like the Microsoft Keyboard Layout Creator. You can create a new layout from scratch, base one on an existing popular layout, and otherwise change the entire keyboard. It's great for adding new language support to Windows, adding symbols to your keyboard, or trying something like the Dvorak layout for faster typing.


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