Update NEWS.md for new layer change key handling

Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
pull/1039/head
Michael Richters 4 years ago
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@ -12,6 +12,40 @@ See [UPGRADING.md](UPGRADING.md) for more detailed instructions about upgrading
## New features
### Layer changes updated
Layer change key handling has been updated to be more consistent with activation
ordering. In most common cases there will be no obvious difference; layer move,
lock, and shift keys still generally function the same way. The details now
vary by type in the edge cases, however.
Layer lock keys (i.e. `LockLayer(N)`) will change slightly. Whenever a layer
lock key toggles on, it will put the target layer on the top of the active layer
stack, unless that layer is already at the top of the stack, in which case it
will be deactivated. This means that if layers `A`, `B`, and `C` are on the
stack, with `A` on top, pressing `LockLayer(B)` will move layer `B` to the top
of the stack, above `A`, rather than deactivating it. As a result, if you use
layers that have no transparent entries, every press of a layer lock key will
result in a user-visible change.
Layer shift keys will now work independently of locked layers. This means that
if layers `A`, `B` and `C` are (locked) on the stack, with `A` on top, pressing
`ShiftToLayer(B)` will keep a temporary version of layer `B` on top, but when
that layer shift key is released, the layer stack will leave the stack in the
same state as before it was pressed, with layers `A`, `B`, and `C` still active,
and in the same order. However, since it is assumed that users won't forget
about keys that they are holding, pressing a second layer shift key for the same
target layer will not result in promoting of that shifted layer to the top of
the stack.
A consequence of this is that releasing a layer shift key will no longer
deactivate a layer that is locked, either from pressing a `LockLayer()` or
`MoveToLayer()` key. This allows users to configure keymaps such that layer `N`
could be reached by holding `ShiftToLayer(N)`, then kept active and on top by
tapping `LockLayer(N)` or `MoveToLayer(N)`, which could set on Layer `N`. That
layer would continue to stay active after the release of the `ShiftToLayer(N)`
key.
### OneShot public functions
The OneShot plugin now allows other plugins to control the OneShot state of

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