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Arabic Keyboard Tester

Arabic layout labels on a standard physical keyboard. Press keys to verify Arabic mapping and key response (RTL display).

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How to use

  1. Ensure your OS keyboard layout is set to Arabic (or the variant you want to test).
  2. Focus the page so key events reach the tool.
  3. Press keys — the on-screen keyboard uses RTL layout labels and highlights the activated key.
  4. Verify that the key you press matches the expected Arabic character position for your physical keyboard.
  5. Use Reset to clear press counts and history when switching keyboards or layouts.

FAQ

Does this change my system layout?

No. You must select Arabic input in the OS; the tool only visualizes which keys fire.

Is data sent to a server?

No. Key events stay in your browser tab.

Introduction

Arabic Keyboard Tester mirrors the same workflow as the main keyboard tester but renders an Arabic labeling map with right-to-left display so you can confirm your hardware matches the active IME layout.

Purpose

  • Validate Arabic stickers or dedicated Arabic keyboards.
  • Teach or debug layout mismatches without installing extra desktop apps.

Key Features

  • On-screen Arabic labels with RTL presentation aligned to physical testing.
  • Same interaction model as the main keyboard tester — press and see mapping.

Common Use Cases

  • Validating Arabic overlay stickers or dedicated Arabic hardware.
  • Classroom demos of IME + layout behavior in the browser.

Best Practices

  • Set Windows/macOS input source to Arabic before testing; the page does not switch OS layout for you.
  • If a key fails, confirm whether Fn layers or laptop compact layouts remap that position.

Comparison metrics

Signal Use
Highlight vs expectation Each key press should light the symbol you believe you pressed; systematic offsets mean wrong regional layout or IME.
Press counts Repeatable taps should increment cleanly — double counts may hint at chatter (use the Chatter Detector for numeric thresholds).