Use `static_assert` instead of `#error` to report an API mismatch, resulting in
a much more informative error message.
Thanks to @cdisselkoen for the request, and @noseglasses for the `static_assert`
idea!
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
As we guarantee backwards compatibility throughout a major version, it helps if
we have that version available, so plugins / sketches can check if they are
compatible, and issue a helpful error if they are not. As further convenience,
defining `KALEIDOSCOPE_REQUIRED_API_VERSION` before including `Kaleidoscope.h`
will result in a check being done by Kaleidoscope, and an error printed if it
does not match the API shipped.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
Instead of hardcoding defaults for `VID`, `SKETCH_PID`, and `BOOTLOADER_PID`,
use `arduino-builder -dump-prefs` to pull these out of `boards.txt`.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
The boolean wasOn was unnecessary, and there was no need to call
bitSet() (or bitClear(), in the case of Layer.off()) if the test
passed. Mostly, I just added a few explanatory comments.
(Aslo reversed the sense of the on/off test in Layer.on() and .off())
@algernon likes it better this way, and I agree.
`updateActiveLayers()` makes it impossible to turn off the default
layer, so there's no point searching past it for the highest layer,
and `defaultLayer` can be set to numbers higher than zero.
Now that `layer_count` is (potentially) available, we can start
looking for active layers at the top _defined_ layer instead of the
top _possible_ layer. This ought to be more efficient, especially for
sketches that don't have lots of layers defined.
Also introduced the `MAX_LAYERS` constant (#define).
Instead of sending a press & release for the consumer key when the physical key
is released, send a press each cycle it is held, a report along with the
keyboard report, and clear the consumer report each cycle too.
This will prevent these keys getting stuck, or sending multiple presses in the
same report.
Fixes#176.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
On some locales awk will generate commas instead of dots in the percentage. This will mess up the sed command. Instead of forcing awk to always generate dots we can simply cange the sed command to treat commas as regular text.