I am located in the bottom row, and you use your right pinky finger (R1), to key my letter.

Group of answer choices

No answer text provided.

No answer text provided.

Right Shift

Left shift

1 answer

It sounds like you are referencing keyboard layout and finger positioning for typing.

If you're in the bottom row of a standard QWERTY keyboard, the letters you could be typing with your right pinky finger (R1) would include:

  • 'A' (bottom row)
  • 'Z' (bottom row)
  • 'X' (bottom row)
  • 'C' (bottom row)
  • 'V' (bottom row)
  • 'B' (bottom row)

The right pinky finger (R1) is generally used for typing the letters 'P', ';', 'L', 'K', and so on in the top and middle rows, whereas it does not type directly from the bottom row beyond 'B' without modifiers.

For the question posed, if "using your right pinky finger to key my letter" refers to shifting (and interpreting the input from the context given), you might be linking it to the Letter produced when using the Right Shift key.

So, the answer option that relates to this context would likely be Right Shift, since it represents a function that one could perform with the pinky and relates to input of capital letters.

Let me know if you have any further queries!