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>
The virtual hardware device, unlike others, was calling `handleKeyswitchEvent()`
for every keyswitch, every cycle. It should suppress calls corresponding to idle
keyswitches, just like the other devices.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
The code for guarding against integer overflow on the prior interval timestamp
was in the wrong place, and wouldn't get executed on cycles when the keyboard
was idle, leading to a very slim chance of getting the wrong qukey value if all
keys were idle long enough (65 seconds).
Also fixed the same problem in the first quarter-second after the keyboard power
on. Not likely to ever be observed, but costs nothing extra to fix.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
Macros was still using its own bit in the `Key.flags_` byte to define Macros
keys, unlike all the other plugins that define their own special `Key`
values. This standardizes Macros to make it more like other plugins.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
Some users have pointed out that certain keys (in particular, `space` &
`backspace`) are inconvenient to require the minimum prior interval to make a
qukey resolve to a modifier (especially `shift`). We could blacklist those keys,
but it's hard to predict what they all might be. The problem is mainly one for
very fast typists, and therefore I expect it to show up when following the
"normal" printable keys, not often other keys.
This could also be made into a configurable list, but I'd prefer not to do so
unless there's serious demand for it, as Qukeys already has too many settings.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
Unintended modifiers are becoming an increasingly big problem among users of
Qukeys. This change adds yet another configuration option to prevent this from
happening while users are typing fast. It introduces a new requirement to make a
qukey eligible to become a qukey; a minimum amount of time that must pass
between the keypress event for a non-modifier key and the subsequent keypress
event of the qukey.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
When starting up, we correctly set the active layer counter to one, and the
active layer stack will therefore correctly contain layer 0 as an active layer.
However, we weren't setting the `layer_state_` bitmap up properly, and as such,
`Layer.isActive(0)` was returning false, despite the layer being active as far
as lookups were concerned.
To fix this, we explicitly flip the 0th bit on in the newly introduced
`Layer.setup()` method, where the initial keymap cache update was moved to, too.
Fixes#951.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
When rollover occurs from a non-modifier key to a qukey, if we delay the release
event of that key until after the qukey's state is resolved, and if the hold
timeout is set to a fairly large value (on the order of 500ms), unintended
repeats would occur for a key that was actually only tapped. To prevent this, if
there's only one event in the queue (the press of the qukey), and we see a
release of a non-modifier key that's not the qukey, it's okay to allow that
release event to skip the queue and simply proceed as if it had been released
before the qukey was pressed.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>