If you still don’t see the layout you’re looking for, close the window and press Ctrl + T to open a terminal window. Run the command settings set org. gnome. desktop. input-sources show-all-sources true and then return to the Region and Language tab to try again. Depending on the language, you may have more than one layout from which to choose. For example, for English, you’ll see English (US), English (Australia), English (Canada), English (United Kingdom), etc. Another example is for Cameroon—you’ll find Cameroon Multilingual (Dvorak) and Cameroon Multilingual (QWERTY).
If you still don’t see the layout you’re looking for, close the window and press Ctrl + T to open a terminal window. Run the command settings set org. gnome. desktop. input-sources show-all-sources true and then return to the Region and Language tab to try again. Depending on the language, you may have more than one layout from which to choose. For example, for English, you’ll see English (US), English (Australia), English (Canada), English (United Kingdom), etc. Another example is for Cameroon—you’ll find Cameroon Multilingual (Dvorak) and Cameroon Multilingual (QWERTY).
If you want to assign different layouts for certain windows (ex: You’re writing in Spanish for one project, and English in another), click the Options button above the input list to view your settings for multiple inputs.