Almost nobody calls it AltGr, it's just the goddamn "right Alt key" :) ...and yes, it has a different key code from the left one, even if in most software it works just like another Alt.
The clever thing is how some international keyboard layouts use it like some kind of "second shift" for typing character with accents/decorations: like AltGr+a => "ă", AltGr+q => "â", AltGr+s => "ș" etc. ...but not even these keyboard layouts are popular, and usually marked as "alternative" or "programmers' layout for language XYZ", because people are stupid and refuse to learn how to use this and prefer instead a funky layout national language keyboard instead of an US English keyboard with an AltGr that would just solve 99% of special characters problems.
If all the keyboards in the world would just be US English Standard keyboards with an AltGr (most US English keyboards I've seen do have an AltGr!), all latin-alphabet languages with special characters would be easy to type, we polyglots could easily use the same keyboard for typing in multiple languages without having to remember what keys' positions have radically changed on each layout... but people are stupid and refuse to learn even simple key combinations.
Oh, and somebody should shoot the British (and French) for adding that annoying extra key to the right of the left Shift that I always have to disable (and making the Shift much smaller), and for creating extra confusion by branding them as "british international" or "us english business" keyboards.
The clever thing is how some international keyboard layouts use it like some kind of "second shift" for typing character with accents/decorations: like AltGr+a => "ă", AltGr+q => "â", AltGr+s => "ș" etc. ...but not even these keyboard layouts are popular, and usually marked as "alternative" or "programmers' layout for language XYZ", because people are stupid and refuse to learn how to use this and prefer instead a funky layout national language keyboard instead of an US English keyboard with an AltGr that would just solve 99% of special characters problems.
If all the keyboards in the world would just be US English Standard keyboards with an AltGr (most US English keyboards I've seen do have an AltGr!), all latin-alphabet languages with special characters would be easy to type, we polyglots could easily use the same keyboard for typing in multiple languages without having to remember what keys' positions have radically changed on each layout... but people are stupid and refuse to learn even simple key combinations.
Oh, and somebody should shoot the British (and French) for adding that annoying extra key to the right of the left Shift that I always have to disable (and making the Shift much smaller), and for creating extra confusion by branding them as "british international" or "us english business" keyboards.