jevil7452
Freshman Member
Posts: 66
OS: Windows 10 20H1 (19041.1415)
Theme: Classic
CPU: 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-1135G7 @ 2.40GHz
RAM: 20,0 GB (19,8 GB usable)
GPU: Intel Iris Xe Graphics G7 80EU
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Post by jevil7452 on Aug 21, 2022 7:32:49 GMT -8
This is a method to get Windows 7's keyboard layout manager, that does not involve replacing files. There was a method to do this already described, however it involved replacing system files, and, if your version of Windows is old enough to have the Languages control panel page (originally from Windows 8), it would break that. To do this method, you need to get Windows 7's input.dll and input.dll.mui. Then, rename them to be input.cpl and input.cpl.mui, and put them into System32 and your language folder This works, because input.dll is actually a control panel file, and by renaming Windows 7's version, you are avoiding file conflicts while still letting you use it. You can launch it from the newly added Control Panel entry
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Post by OrthodoxWin32 on Aug 22, 2022 0:55:39 GMT -8
This is a method to get Windows 7's keyboard layout manager, that does not involve replacing files. I haven't tested it yet, but it looks great (I need to install a Windows 7 VM) ! It is really necessary to preserve the control panel (and particularly the classic applets).
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