This removes several vestigial functions from the `Layer` class:
- `.handleKeymapKeyswitchEvent()` & `.eventHandler()`, which have been replaced
with the `.handleLayerKeyEvent()` function that operates on `KeyEvent` objects.
- `.lookup()`, which has been replaced by either `Runtime.lookupKey()` or
`Layer.lookupOnActiveLayer()`, depending on the specific purpose.
- `.updateLiveCompositeKeymap()`, which referred to a structure that has been
replaced. `live_keys.activate()` serves a similar purpose, but in most cases
shouldn't be called directly by user code.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
The upgrade notes for Macros wasn't in the best place. This change moves it to
the "Breaking changes" section of the main UPGRADING document, where it belongs.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
I was unable to compile the default firmware with the version of arduino that was packaged with Debian. On issue #1098, @obra explained that Debian's version of arduino has been heavily modified, and installing the version of arduino that's available on the arduino website fixed my compilation problems. I have therefore added a note to the docs suggesting not to use the Debian version of arduino.
This is a guide to writing a Kaleidoscope plugin, more or less written as a
tutorial. It is (obviously) incomplete, but even in its partially-complete
state, it's still probably useful.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
This event handler is useful for plugins that need to react to events, but
should wait until after those events are fully processed before doing so. This
is useful for OneShot, which needs to keep keys active until after events that
trigger their release. The `afterEachCycle()` hook is unfortunately
insufficient for this purpose, because the same event could trigger multiple
plugins (e.g. TapDance & OneShot) to resolve events, and the OneShot should
apply only to the first ensuing report.
Signed-off-by: Michael Richters <gedankenexperimenter@gmail.com>
This implements a new `FocusSerial` command: `plugins`. The `plugins` command
will reply back with a list of plugins enabled in the firmware. The list is not
exhaustive, only plugins that opt-in to this mechanism will be listed. It is
opt-in, because for a lot of plugins, having them listed isn't useful in a
practical sense.
The goal with this feature is to allow Chrysalis to detect plugins that would
affect what keys it offers, or which additional settings it displays, and do so
in a consistent way. This is why IdleLEDs has an `onNameQuery` handler too, even
though it can be detected otherwise: for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@keyboard.io>
@algernon and I have been hashing out a set of terminology over the past week. While this is still fairly incomplete, it is hopefully an improvement on the previous undocumented state of things.