I'm in the early stages of planning a board and am thinking about things which look useful, but aren't used in any designs that I've seen. This makes me wonder why not, so I'll ask some people who have some experience - you lot

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Firstly there is the issue of the left handed numberpad. If a PCB was made with two holes for each switch pin in a figure 8 you could simply flip the PCB over and have a left handed version. If I'm thinking straight it would only need two plated through holes (as normal) plus one extra pad per switch on each side of the PCB so shouldn't add much to the cost.
The other thing is diodes. There are holes in the switches for them and most designs use through hole as they're cheaper, but they are always outside the switches. If they were in the switch they would be better protected (I'm thinking Swill case - PCB in contact with the casing) and the height of the assembled PCB would be reduced, albeit slightly. Filling all the switches with diode pointing the same way is easier than positioning them correctly at random angles on a PCB and the reduced footprint will leave more empty space to make seeing the routing easier - the only disadvantage I can think of is if you need to remove the switch, which is rare. So why aren't they used?
Thanks for any thoughts
