macOS Ventura expands its language support for keyboard layouts. Apache (a Native American language), Dzongkha (the official language of Bhutan), Samoan (spoken in the Samoan Islands) and Yiddish (spoken by Ashkenazi Jews) are natively supported by the new system.
Oddly, Apple also present Dvorak support as new to Ventura, but this provision has been built into macOS for several releases. Dvorak is not a language, but a layout that is supposed to make typing faster by grouping the most used letters of the alphabet on the center line of the keyboard, thus minimizing travel. Only English versions of Dvorak are natively supported by macOS, there is no its French derivatives can Bépo which can be considered as its equivalent thought from the start for French.
Speaking of French keyboard layouts, they have not changed in Ventura, they are still seven in number, but some of their icons have been revised.
The “French — PC” keyboard icon now includes the acronym “FRPC” instead of “FR” and the “French — Numeric” keyboard icon compresses the acronym “FR123” on the same line. These two new icons are less readable than those of macOS Monterey.
In general, language support is more complete in macOS Ventura and iOS 16: autocorrect applies to three additional languages (English New Zealand, English South Africa and Kazakh), search in emojis is available with 19 additional languages, etc.