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Lmg Arun Keyboard Layout (2025)


Here’s a detailed write-up on the LMG Arun Keyboard Layout:


If you’d like, I can:

(Invoking related search terms for further exploration.) lmg arun keyboard layout

Here’s a practical guide to understanding and using the LMG Arun keyboard layout, a lesser-known but ergonomically interesting layout designed for efficient typing in English and some programming contexts.


While full keymaps vary slightly by implementer, a typical LMG Arun layout for a 30–34-key board (e.g., without number row) looks like: Here’s a detailed write-up on the LMG Arun

Left hand
A O E U (home)
Y I ' - (top)
W B G V (bottom)

Right hand
N T R S (home)
H D L C (top)
M P K F (bottom) If you’d like, I can:

(Note: exact placements may vary; some Arun variants move H or C.)

Thumbs typically handle space, backspace, enter, and layers.

Sanskrit is famous for clusters like "त्र" (t+ra), "ज्ञ" (gya), and "श्र" (shra). General phonetic layouts require you to type t + halant + r to get "त्र". LMG Arun introduces dedicated dead keys and shift-state overrides.

For example: