Can you tell what keyboard layouts you use in your OS and what input methods you use in Emacs? Currently there's not enough information in your post. My problem was, for example, that i used Colemak and Russian-typewriter as OS layouts and Russian-typewriter as a secondary Emacs input method. Combination Colemak(OS)-Russian(Emacs) messed up my input, because Emacs' input method is the mapping of English character, received from OS, to some Russian character, and all input methods in Emacs are based on mapping from QWERTY. For example, what should have been "йцукен" was printed as "йцазпо". I solved it by running the following code:
(require 'quail)
(quail-define-package
"colemak-russian" "Russian" "ru" nil
"Russian-typewriter keyboard layout assuming that your default
keyboard layout is Colemak"
nil t t t t nil nil nil nil nil t)
(quail-define-rules
("1" ?№) ("2" ?-) ("3" ?/) ("4" ?\") ("5" ?:) ("6" ?,) ("7" ?.) ("8" ?_) ("9" ??)
("0" ?%) ("-" ?!) ("=" ?\;) ("q" ?й) ("w" ?ц) ("f" ?у) ("p" ?к) ("g" ?е) ("j" ?н)("l" ?г)
("u" ?ш) ("y" ?щ) (";" ?з) ("[" ?х) ("]" ?ъ) ("\\" ?\)) ("a" ?ф) ("r" ?ы) ("s" ?в)
("t" ?а) ("d" ?п) ("h" ?р) ("n" ?о) ("e" ?л) ("i" ?д) ("o" ?ж) ("'" ?э) ("z" ?я) ("x" ?ч)
("c" ?с) ("v" ?м) ("b" ?и) ("k" ?т) ("m" ?ь) ("," ?б) ("." ?ю) ("/" ?ё) ("~" ?+) ("!" ?1)
("@" ?2) ("#" ?3) ("$" ?4) ("%" ?5) ("^" ?6) ("&" ?7) ("*" ?8) ("\(" ?9) ("\)" ?0) ("_" ?=)
("+" ?\\) ("Q" ?Й) ("W" ?Ц) ("F" ?У) ("P" ?К) ("G" ?Е) ("J" ?Н) ("L" ?Г) ("U" ?Ш) ("Y" ?Щ)
(":" ?З) ("{" ?Х) ("}" ?Ъ) ("|"?\() ("A" ?Ф) ("R" ?Ы) ("S" ?В) ("T" ?А) ("D" ?П) ("H" ?Р)
("N" ?О) ("E" ?Л) ("I" ?Д) ("O" ?Ж) ("\"" ?Э) ("Z" ?Я) ("V" ?Ч) ("X" ?С) ("C" ?М) ("B" ?И)
("K" ?Т) ("M"?Ь) ("<" ?Б) (">" ?Ю) ("?" ?Ё))
and then used colemak-russian
instead of russian-typewriter
. You can change associated pairs with the corresponding to your layouts.
EDIT: Of course, this is not the most correct solution. As Maksim noted, characters common to both languages are translated even when shouldn't. For example, i set system layout to Colemak and Emacs input method to "colemak-russian" - then i can't use commas, which become "б".
To make Emacs ignore system layout, you can integrate it with third-party software like xxkb, SCIM or IBus. As you speak Russian, you may try this tutorial.
I personally use a hacky workaround to translate Russian characters inside key combos and ignore Emacs input methods altogether.