In an effort to move towards a single repository and library we use, merge
KeyboardioHID as driver/hid/keyboardio/HID.
For a cleaner, saner history, KeyboardioHID's history has not been kept, the
files were copied as of dccbd8782ebc2c035a200c97abca9f0f3782d96f.
Apart from changing the included paths, no other changes were made.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
In the process of moving towards a single repository for everything
Kaleidoscope, integrate KeyboardioScanner as a driver. This is a direct copy of
KeyboardioScanner as of 2090cd426cae25b07c0ce3a6b7365b95c21dd87b, renamed and
namespaced to fit into Kaleidoscope.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
We're going to merge KeyboardioScanner into Kaleidoscope as a driver, but we
can't name that model01::Hand, because then we have a filename conflict due to
our use of static archiving during linking. To avoid that, both will use a
similar, but unique naming pattern, and raise::Hand becomes raise::RaiseSide
instead.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
This change adds test methods to the `Key` class for the builtin variants for
the different HID types (Keyboard, Consumer Control, and System Control), and
layer change keys:
- `key.isKeyboardKey()`
- `key.isConsumerControlKey()`
- `key.isSystemControlKey()`
- `key.isLayerKey()`
In addition, a few useful sub-variants are called out. These will probably be
more commonly used by plugins:
- `key.isKeyboardModifier()` returns `true` if `key` is a HID Keyboard key, and
its keycode is a modifier. Note that this includes modifiers with modifier
flags, so it will also return `true` for `Key_Meh`, for example.
- `key.isKeyboardShift()` returns true if `key` both above tests pass, and
either the base keycode is a modifier, or the shift mod flag is set.
Shift is a special case, even among modifiers, because it is more often of
concern by plugins (e.g. TopsyTurvy, ShapeShifter) than others.
- `key.isLayerShift()` returns `true` if `key` is a layer shift key.
Layer shifts are tested more often than other types of layer changing keys
because they, like HID Keyboard modifiers, are used chorded, rather than simply
having an effect that completes when they toggle on.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
This is a convenience only, but it's much more straightforward than the
expression `key_addr = KeyAddr(KeyAddr::invalide_state)` or the overly enigmatic
`key_addr = KeyAddr()`.
`KeyAddr::none()` is meant to be useful for initialization of variables:
`KeyAddr my_addr = KeyAddr::none()`
`KeyAddr::clear()` is meant to be the counterpart of the `isValid()` test, to
set an existing variable to an invalid address:
`my_addr.clear()` vs `if (my_addr.isValid()) ...`
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>