If we call updateLiveCompositeKeymap() on key release the keymap gets
updated before the release event occurs, and any ShiftToLayer(N) key
with a different definition on layer N won't work properly. Before its
release event is processed, it gets updated to the new value, and
layer N doesn't get turned off. If we only update the live keymap on
key press events, we don't have this problem.
Update key_events.cpp (IS_INTERNAL Handling)
I'm merging this for now, even though I know it's not the 'right' solution. But I'd like Mute to work correctly for MP2 keyboards and we're on deadline
Reordered if chain in handleSyntheticKeyswitchEvent to fix a bug preventing some Consumer and System Control HID functions from being sent due to bit overload/collision with the IS_INTERNAL flag.
Make Kaleidoscope_ a friend class, so that it can access .begin. The
reason behind this is that .begin is an interface towards
Kaleidoscope.use(), and that function should be the only user. To
discourage its use, make it protected.
This does not break any existing - and valid - code, but allows us to
slowly migrate the plugins to a protected begin() method.
Fixes#177.
As discussed in #196, if we are making `KaleidoscopePlugin.begin` protected, we
might as well give it a better name. That name is `initialSetup`, and this
change is the first step towards the migration. It introduces `initialSetup`
which will call `begin` for now, and deprecate `begin`, which is no longer an
abstract function.
Once everyone migrated to the new name, we can remove `.begin`, and turn
`.initialSetup` into an abstract function.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
Make `Kaleidoscope_` a friend class, so that it can access `.begin`. The reason
behind this is that `.begin` is an interface towards `Kaleidoscope.use()`, and
that function should be the only user. To discourage its use, make it protected.
This does not break any existing - and valid - code, but allows us to slowly
migrate the plugins to a protected `begin()` method.
Fixes#177.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
`Kaleidoscope.use` is a much better interface, therefore deprecate USE_PLUGINS.
We do this by creating a wrapper function, `__USE_PLUGINS` that will call
`Kaleidoscope.use` under the hood, but has a deprecated attribute attached. We
then make the `USE_PLUGINS` macro call this function.
We do this because we want to make sure that the list is NULL-terminated, and
for that, we need the macro.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
This was only ever used for `Kaleidoscope.setup()`, and while the variant that
takes an argument is deprecated, and emits a warning already, we can do the same
for `KEYMAP_SIZE` too.
This does set the const to 0, so if used anywhere else than
`Kaleidoscope.setup()`, it will have undesired side-effects. But as far as I
saw, it was never used elsewhere, thus, this change should be safe.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
We do not use `keymap_count` anymore, so deprecate this variant of the setup
function, with a message that also tells the user that `KEYMAP_SIZE` is
deprecated too.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
Turn `event_handler_hook_use` and `loop_hook_use` into real functions, so that
we can apply a `deprecated` attribute, which in turn will emit a compile-time
warning when either of these functions are used.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
Neither of these are used in any plugin, within Arduino-Boards or outside of it.
We keep the `_hook_use` aliases, because there are a few users of it outside of
Arduino-Boards.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
Use `LAYER_SHIFT_OFFSET` instead of `MOMENTARY_OFFSET`, which will start
emitting compile-time warnings now.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
As discussed in #190, and later on IRC, this renames ToggleLayer to
LockLayer (updating the documentation at the same time), and introduces
the UnlockLayer alias, for clarity.
MomentaryLayer also got a new name: ShiftToLayer, and new documentation
to go with it.
Signed-off-by: Csilla Nagyné Martinák <csilla@csillger.hu>
This introduces `ToggleLayer(n)` and `MomentaryLayer(n)`, which make it
easier to switch to layers higher than five, and allow one to use enum
values in place of `n`, such as: `ToggleLayer(NUMPAD)`,
`MomentaryLayer(FUNCTION)`.
Signed-off-by: Csilla Nagyné Martinák <csilla@csillger.hu>
We want to start with a pre-cached state, so we have both less work to do when
keys are first pressed, and so that plugins that rely on the live composite
state will work reliably too.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
For all cases outside of Kaleidoscope itself, we are good with the value of
`highestLayer`, and do not need to re-scan the layer state. For this reason -
upon @obra's suggestion - rename `Layer.highest()` to `Layer.top()`, and the old
`Layer.top()` to `Layer.updateHighestLayer()`, and make the latter private, and
update the `highestLayer` member variable instead of returning the number.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
`layer_getKey` was introduced in 6d641e7fc5, by
mistake, it was never implemented. Remove it now to avoid any possible
confusion.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
Sometimes we would like to know the highest active layer, which is available in
the `highestLayer` private variable, and via `.top()` too. We do not want to
make `highestLayer` public, because we want to be the only ones changing it. And
while `top()` gets us roughly the same information, it does so at a cost. For a
lot of purposes, the cached `highestLayer` would be perfectly adequate.
The new `Layer.highest()` accessor does just this.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <kaleidoscope@gergo.csillger.hu>
Refactor the momentary layer handling part of `handleKeymapKeyswitchEvent`.
Instead of a bunch of ifs that are increasingly hard to follow, use a switch
based on the target layer, and branch out depending on `keyState` from there.
Makes it easier to follow what happens.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>
If we have two keys on our keymap that momentarily go to the same layer (which
is the case for the factory firmware), we hold both, and release one, we want
the layer to remain active still.
To this effect, in `handleKeymapKeyswitchEvent` we will handle the case when a
momentary layer key is pressed, but not toggled on (that is, it is held): if it
is not a next/previous switch, we re-activate the layer if it wasn't on.
This fixes#154, thanks to @ToyKeeper for the report.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>
With the new implementation, there are two lookup functions, because we have two
caches, and different parts of the firmware will want to use either this or
that (or perhaps both, in rare cases).
First of all, we use caches because looking up a key through all the layers
is costy, and the cost increases dramatically the more layers we have.
Then, we have the `effectiveKeymapCache`, because to have layer behaviours
we want, that is, if you hold a key on a layer, release the layer key but
continue holding the other, we want for the layered keycode to continue
repeating. At the same time, we want other keys to not be affected by the
now-turned-off layer. So we update the keycode in the cache on-demand, when
the key is pressed or released. (see the top of `handleKeyswitchEvent`).
On the other hand, we also have plugins that scan the whole keymap, and do
things based on that information, such as highlighting keys that changed
between layers. These need to be able to look at a state of where the
keymap *should* be, not necessarily where it is. The `effectiveKeymapCache`
is not useful here. So we use a `keymapCache` which we update whenever
layers change (see `Layer.on` and `Layer.off`), and it updates the cache to
show how the keymap should look, without the `effectiveKeymapCache`-induced
behaviour.
Thus, if we are curious about what a given key will do, use `lookup`. If we
are curious what the active layer state describes the key as, use
`lookupUncached`.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>
Only update the keymap cache if the layer state changed for real. If we turn a
layer that was already on, on again, we do not need to update. Same for turning
them off.
This results in a tiny speedup if we have code that calls `Layer.on()` or
`Layer.off()` often.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>