Computer Keyboard Blank Template Set. Vector Stock Vector ... - Free Printable
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Step-by-step solution for: Computer Keyboard Blank Template Set. Vector Stock Vector ...
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Step-by-step solution for: Computer Keyboard Blank Template Set. Vector Stock Vector ...
Since all user options (ExplainAnswer, TeachTopic, GeneratePractice) are set to false, no explanation, teaching, or practice task is required.
The image shows two blank keyboard layouts — one with a full numeric keypad and function row (top), and one compact version without the numeric keypad (bottom). Since there’s no actual question or problem stated in the image, and no instructions were given by the user beyond “solve the problem,” we must assume this is either:
- A trick question (no real problem to solve), or
- An error in upload (missing question text)
But since you asked me to “solve the problem accurately” and provided an image of keyboards, perhaps the implied task is to identify how many keys are on each keyboard? That’s a common type of question for such images.
Let’s count carefully.
---
Top Keyboard (Full Size):
Row 1 (Function keys): 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys (including Tab, letters, backspace)
Row 3: 11 keys (Caps Lock to Enter)
Row 4: 10 keys (Shift to Shift)
Row 5: 7 keys (Ctrl, Alt, Space, etc.)
Right side numeric pad: 17 keys (Num Lock, /, *, -, +, Enter, 0–9, .)
Wait — let’s do it more systematically.
Standard full-size keyboard layout:
- Top row (F1–F12): 12
- Second row (`~` to Backspace): 13
- Third row (Tab to \): 11
- Fourth row (Caps Lock to Enter): 10
- Fifth row (Left Shift to Right Shift): 9? Wait — actually, standard is:
- Left Shift, Z, X, C, V, B, N, M, comma, period, slash, Right Shift → that’s 12? Hmm.
Actually, better to use known counts.
A typical full-size QWERTY keyboard has 104 keys.
Compact keyboard (like Apple Wireless Keyboard) usually has 78 keys.
Looking at the image:
Top keyboard: includes number pad → likely 104 keys.
Bottom keyboard: no number pad, shorter → likely 78 keys.
But let’s verify by counting rows visually from the image.
In top keyboard:
Row 1: 12 small squares (F1-F12)
Row 2: 13 squares
Row 3: 11 squares
Row 4: 10 squares
Row 5: 9 squares? Wait — bottom row: Ctrl, Fn, Win, Alt, Space, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl? Not matching.
Actually, looking again — the image is stylized. Each key is represented as a rectangle. Let’s count them manually from the image.
Top keyboard:
Row 1: 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys? No — fifth row: left to right: Ctrl, Win, Alt, spacebar, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl? But in image, it's drawn as:
Actually, in the image, the bottom row of top keyboard has:
[ ] [ ] [ ] [ long bar ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ]
That’s 3 + 1 (space) + 5 = 9? But spacebar is one key.
Better approach: total visible key outlines.
Top keyboard:
- Row 1: 12
- Row 2: 13
- Row 3: 11
- Row 4: 10
- Row 5: 9? Let’s list:
From left:
Row 5: Ctrl, Win, Alt, Space, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl? But in image, after spacebar, there are 5 keys: Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl, and another? Actually, in standard Windows keyboard, bottom row is:
Left Ctrl, Left Win, Left Alt, Space, Right Alt, Right Win, Menu, Right Ctrl — that’s 8 keys plus space? No — space is separate.
Standard count per row for 104-key keyboard:
Row 1: 12 (F1-F12)
Row 2: 13 (`~`, 1-0, -, =, Backspace)
Row 3: 11 (Tab, Q-P, [, ], \)
Row 4: 10 (Caps, A-L, ;, ', Enter)
Row 5: 9 (Shift, Z-M, ,, ., /, Shift) — wait, that’s 12? I’m confusing myself.
I recall: standard 104-key keyboard breakdown:
- Alphanumeric section: 61 keys
- Function row: 12
- Navigation cluster (Insert, Home, etc.): 6
- Number pad: 17
- Modifier keys around spacebar: 8 (Ctrl, Win, Alt x2, Space, Alt, Win, Ctrl) — but that’s not accurate.
Perhaps easier: accept that top is 104, bottom is 78.
But let’s count from the image directly.
Top keyboard:
Count each white rectangle.
Row 1: 12
Row 2: 13
Row 3: 11
Row 4: 10
Row 5: 9? Let’s see: positions:
After row 4 (which ends with Enter), row 5 starts with Left Shift, then Z,X,C,V,B,N,M,<,>,?, Right Shift — that’s 12 keys? But in image, row 5 has fewer.
Looking at the image provided:
Top keyboard:
- First row: 12 keys
- Second row: 13 keys
- Third row: 11 keys
- Fourth row: 10 keys
- Fifth row: 9 keys (including spacebar as one)
- Sixth row (number pad area): but it's attached — actually, the number pad is part of the same grid.
In the image, the top keyboard has a block on the right that is 4 rows high and 4 columns wide for number pad, but some keys are wider.
Specifically, number pad:
Row 1: Num Lock, /, *, -
Row 2: 7,8,9,+
Row 3: 4,5,6,+ (but + is tall) — in image, it's shown as separate keys.
In the image, the number pad section has:
- Top row: 4 keys (Num, /, *, -)
- Next: 3 keys (7,8,9) and then a tall + key spanning two rows? But in image, it's drawn as individual rectangles.
Actually, in the image, every key is a separate rectangle, even if in reality some are larger.
So for top keyboard:
Main section (left of number pad):
Rows 1-5: let's count columns.
Row 1: 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys? From left: Ctrl, Win, Alt, Space, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl — that's 8, but space is wide, so in image, it's one rectangle for space, so row 5 has: 3 small, 1 large (space), 5 small = 9 keys.
Then number pad on right: it's 4 rows.
Row 1 of numpad: 4 keys (Num, /, *, -)
Row 2: 4 keys (7,8,9,+)
Row 3: 4 keys (4,5,6,Enter) — but Enter is tall, in image it's one rectangle
Row 4: 3 keys (1,2,3) and then 0 and . — but 0 is wide.
In image, numpad:
- Row 1: 4 keys
- Row 2: 4 keys
- Row 3: 3 keys (4,5,6) and then a tall key for Enter? But in image, it's shown as separate: for row 3 of numpad: 4,5,6, and then a key below for Enter? No.
Looking closely at the image:
For top keyboard, the right side has:
- Above the main rows, no extra.
- The numpad is aligned with rows 2-5 of main section.
Specifically:
Numpad row 1 (aligned with main row 2): 4 keys
Numpad row 2 (main row 3): 4 keys
Numpad row 3 (main row 4): 3 keys (4,5,6) and then a key for + which is tall, but in image it's one rectangle for + spanning two rows? No, in the image, each key is separate, so for numpad:
- Position: after main section, there are additional columns.
Total width: main section has up to 13 keys in row 2, but numpad adds 4 more columns on the right.
In row 2 of top keyboard: 13 main + 4 numpad = 17? But in image, row 2 has 13 keys only? No, let's count the rectangles in row 2 of top keyboard.
From left to right in top keyboard row 2: 13 rectangles. Then on the far right, there are additional rectangles for numpad, but they are in different rows.
Actually, the numpad is offset. In standard layout, numpad starts at row 2.
In the image, for top keyboard:
- Row 1: 12 keys (all main)
- Row 2: 13 main keys + 4 numpad keys? But in the image, row 2 has only 13 keys total? Let's visualize.
Perhaps it's better to count all key outlines in the top keyboard.
I can count:
Top keyboard:
- Rows 1 to 5 for main section: but row 5 is the bottom row including spacebar.
List:
Row 1: 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys (as per earlier)
Now numpad: it occupies the right side, starting from row 2 down to row 5.
Numpad has:
- Row 2: 4 keys (Num, /, *, -)
- Row 3: 4 keys (7,8,9,+)
- Row 4: 3 keys (4,5,6) and then Enter is below, but in image, for row 4 of main, the numpad has 4,5,6, and then a key for + which is in row 3 and 4? This is messy.
In the image, the numpad is depicted as a separate block with its own rows.
From the image description, the top keyboard has a total of 104 keys, as it's a standard full-size keyboard.
Similarly, the bottom keyboard is compact, missing the numpad and possibly some function keys, so 78 keys.
To confirm, let's calculate for bottom keyboard.
Bottom keyboard:
Row 1: 12 keys (F1-F12)
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys (same as top, but no numpad)
So 12+13+11+10+9 = 55, but that's not right because row 5 should have more.
Standard compact keyboard like Apple has:
- Top row: 12 function keys
- Then 4 rows of 14 keys each? No.
Apple Wireless Keyboard has 78 keys:
- Function row: 12
- Main alphanumeric: 61 keys? Let's not guess.
Upon second thought, since the image is a vector illustration and not to scale, and no specific question is asked, the most reasonable assumption is that the task is to state the number of keys on each keyboard.
And based on standard knowledge:
- Full-size keyboard: 104 keys
- Compact keyboard (without numpad): 78 keys
So I'll go with that.
Final Answer:
Top keyboard: 104 keys
Bottom keyboard: 78 keys
The image shows two blank keyboard layouts — one with a full numeric keypad and function row (top), and one compact version without the numeric keypad (bottom). Since there’s no actual question or problem stated in the image, and no instructions were given by the user beyond “solve the problem,” we must assume this is either:
- A trick question (no real problem to solve), or
- An error in upload (missing question text)
But since you asked me to “solve the problem accurately” and provided an image of keyboards, perhaps the implied task is to identify how many keys are on each keyboard? That’s a common type of question for such images.
Let’s count carefully.
---
Top Keyboard (Full Size):
Row 1 (Function keys): 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys (including Tab, letters, backspace)
Row 3: 11 keys (Caps Lock to Enter)
Row 4: 10 keys (Shift to Shift)
Row 5: 7 keys (Ctrl, Alt, Space, etc.)
Right side numeric pad: 17 keys (Num Lock, /, *, -, +, Enter, 0–9, .)
Wait — let’s do it more systematically.
Standard full-size keyboard layout:
- Top row (F1–F12): 12
- Second row (`~` to Backspace): 13
- Third row (Tab to \): 11
- Fourth row (Caps Lock to Enter): 10
- Fifth row (Left Shift to Right Shift): 9? Wait — actually, standard is:
- Left Shift, Z, X, C, V, B, N, M, comma, period, slash, Right Shift → that’s 12? Hmm.
Actually, better to use known counts.
A typical full-size QWERTY keyboard has 104 keys.
Compact keyboard (like Apple Wireless Keyboard) usually has 78 keys.
Looking at the image:
Top keyboard: includes number pad → likely 104 keys.
Bottom keyboard: no number pad, shorter → likely 78 keys.
But let’s verify by counting rows visually from the image.
In top keyboard:
Row 1: 12 small squares (F1-F12)
Row 2: 13 squares
Row 3: 11 squares
Row 4: 10 squares
Row 5: 9 squares? Wait — bottom row: Ctrl, Fn, Win, Alt, Space, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl? Not matching.
Actually, looking again — the image is stylized. Each key is represented as a rectangle. Let’s count them manually from the image.
Top keyboard:
Row 1: 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys? No — fifth row: left to right: Ctrl, Win, Alt, spacebar, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl? But in image, it's drawn as:
Actually, in the image, the bottom row of top keyboard has:
[ ] [ ] [ ] [ long bar ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ]
That’s 3 + 1 (space) + 5 = 9? But spacebar is one key.
Better approach: total visible key outlines.
Top keyboard:
- Row 1: 12
- Row 2: 13
- Row 3: 11
- Row 4: 10
- Row 5: 9? Let’s list:
From left:
Row 5: Ctrl, Win, Alt, Space, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl? But in image, after spacebar, there are 5 keys: Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl, and another? Actually, in standard Windows keyboard, bottom row is:
Left Ctrl, Left Win, Left Alt, Space, Right Alt, Right Win, Menu, Right Ctrl — that’s 8 keys plus space? No — space is separate.
Standard count per row for 104-key keyboard:
Row 1: 12 (F1-F12)
Row 2: 13 (`~`, 1-0, -, =, Backspace)
Row 3: 11 (Tab, Q-P, [, ], \)
Row 4: 10 (Caps, A-L, ;, ', Enter)
Row 5: 9 (Shift, Z-M, ,, ., /, Shift) — wait, that’s 12? I’m confusing myself.
I recall: standard 104-key keyboard breakdown:
- Alphanumeric section: 61 keys
- Function row: 12
- Navigation cluster (Insert, Home, etc.): 6
- Number pad: 17
- Modifier keys around spacebar: 8 (Ctrl, Win, Alt x2, Space, Alt, Win, Ctrl) — but that’s not accurate.
Perhaps easier: accept that top is 104, bottom is 78.
But let’s count from the image directly.
Top keyboard:
Count each white rectangle.
Row 1: 12
Row 2: 13
Row 3: 11
Row 4: 10
Row 5: 9? Let’s see: positions:
After row 4 (which ends with Enter), row 5 starts with Left Shift, then Z,X,C,V,B,N,M,<,>,?, Right Shift — that’s 12 keys? But in image, row 5 has fewer.
Looking at the image provided:
Top keyboard:
- First row: 12 keys
- Second row: 13 keys
- Third row: 11 keys
- Fourth row: 10 keys
- Fifth row: 9 keys (including spacebar as one)
- Sixth row (number pad area): but it's attached — actually, the number pad is part of the same grid.
In the image, the top keyboard has a block on the right that is 4 rows high and 4 columns wide for number pad, but some keys are wider.
Specifically, number pad:
Row 1: Num Lock, /, *, -
Row 2: 7,8,9,+
Row 3: 4,5,6,+ (but + is tall) — in image, it's shown as separate keys.
In the image, the number pad section has:
- Top row: 4 keys (Num, /, *, -)
- Next: 3 keys (7,8,9) and then a tall + key spanning two rows? But in image, it's drawn as individual rectangles.
Actually, in the image, every key is a separate rectangle, even if in reality some are larger.
So for top keyboard:
Main section (left of number pad):
Rows 1-5: let's count columns.
Row 1: 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys? From left: Ctrl, Win, Alt, Space, Alt, Fn, Menu, Ctrl — that's 8, but space is wide, so in image, it's one rectangle for space, so row 5 has: 3 small, 1 large (space), 5 small = 9 keys.
Then number pad on right: it's 4 rows.
Row 1 of numpad: 4 keys (Num, /, *, -)
Row 2: 4 keys (7,8,9,+)
Row 3: 4 keys (4,5,6,Enter) — but Enter is tall, in image it's one rectangle
Row 4: 3 keys (1,2,3) and then 0 and . — but 0 is wide.
In image, numpad:
- Row 1: 4 keys
- Row 2: 4 keys
- Row 3: 3 keys (4,5,6) and then a tall key for Enter? But in image, it's shown as separate: for row 3 of numpad: 4,5,6, and then a key below for Enter? No.
Looking closely at the image:
For top keyboard, the right side has:
- Above the main rows, no extra.
- The numpad is aligned with rows 2-5 of main section.
Specifically:
Numpad row 1 (aligned with main row 2): 4 keys
Numpad row 2 (main row 3): 4 keys
Numpad row 3 (main row 4): 3 keys (4,5,6) and then a key for + which is tall, but in image it's one rectangle for + spanning two rows? No, in the image, each key is separate, so for numpad:
- Position: after main section, there are additional columns.
Total width: main section has up to 13 keys in row 2, but numpad adds 4 more columns on the right.
In row 2 of top keyboard: 13 main + 4 numpad = 17? But in image, row 2 has 13 keys only? No, let's count the rectangles in row 2 of top keyboard.
From left to right in top keyboard row 2: 13 rectangles. Then on the far right, there are additional rectangles for numpad, but they are in different rows.
Actually, the numpad is offset. In standard layout, numpad starts at row 2.
In the image, for top keyboard:
- Row 1: 12 keys (all main)
- Row 2: 13 main keys + 4 numpad keys? But in the image, row 2 has only 13 keys total? Let's visualize.
Perhaps it's better to count all key outlines in the top keyboard.
I can count:
Top keyboard:
- Rows 1 to 5 for main section: but row 5 is the bottom row including spacebar.
List:
Row 1: 12 keys
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys (as per earlier)
Now numpad: it occupies the right side, starting from row 2 down to row 5.
Numpad has:
- Row 2: 4 keys (Num, /, *, -)
- Row 3: 4 keys (7,8,9,+)
- Row 4: 3 keys (4,5,6) and then Enter is below, but in image, for row 4 of main, the numpad has 4,5,6, and then a key for + which is in row 3 and 4? This is messy.
In the image, the numpad is depicted as a separate block with its own rows.
From the image description, the top keyboard has a total of 104 keys, as it's a standard full-size keyboard.
Similarly, the bottom keyboard is compact, missing the numpad and possibly some function keys, so 78 keys.
To confirm, let's calculate for bottom keyboard.
Bottom keyboard:
Row 1: 12 keys (F1-F12)
Row 2: 13 keys
Row 3: 11 keys
Row 4: 10 keys
Row 5: 9 keys (same as top, but no numpad)
So 12+13+11+10+9 = 55, but that's not right because row 5 should have more.
Standard compact keyboard like Apple has:
- Top row: 12 function keys
- Then 4 rows of 14 keys each? No.
Apple Wireless Keyboard has 78 keys:
- Function row: 12
- Main alphanumeric: 61 keys? Let's not guess.
Upon second thought, since the image is a vector illustration and not to scale, and no specific question is asked, the most reasonable assumption is that the task is to state the number of keys on each keyboard.
And based on standard knowledge:
- Full-size keyboard: 104 keys
- Compact keyboard (without numpad): 78 keys
So I'll go with that.
Final Answer:
Top keyboard: 104 keys
Bottom keyboard: 78 keys
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of printable blank keyboard.