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Kaleidoscope/plugins/Kaleidoscope-Unicode
Jesse Vincent efeea31589
More library tweaking to comply with arduino requirements
4 years ago
..
src Migrate Kaleidoscope-Unicode to the plugins directory 4 years ago
README.md Move most plugin READMEs back into the plugins 4 years ago
library.properties More library tweaking to comply with arduino requirements 4 years ago

README.md

Unicode

The Unicode extension makes it easier to write plugins that input Unicode symbols on the host. Because inputting Unicode varies from OS to OS, this helper library was made to hide most of the differences. All one has to do, is set up the HostOS singleton properly, and the Unicode library will handle the rest, by providing an easy interface for inputting Unicode symbols by their 32-bit codepoints.

Using the extension

Using the extension is as simple as including the header, registering it with Kaleidoscope.use(), and then using any of the methods provided by the Unicode singleton object.

#include <Kaleidoscope.h>
#include <Kaleidoscope-EEPROM-Settings.h>
#include <Kaleidoscope-HostOS.h>
#include <Kaleidoscope-Unicode.h>

KALEIDOSCOPE_INIT_PLUGINS(EEPROMSettings, HostOS, Unicode);

void setup() {
  Kaleidoscope.setup();

  Unicode.type(0x2328);
}

Extension methods

The extension provides a number of methods on the Unicode object, but also has symbols that can be overridden, to add custom functionality.

.type(code_point)

Starts the Unicode input method using the .start() method, inputs the code_point using .typeCode(), and finishes up with the .end() method. For each hexadecimal digit sent to the host, the .input() method will also be called.

This method is most useful when one knows the code point of the Unicode symbol to enter ahead of time, when the code point does not depend on anything else.

.typeCode(code_point)

Inputs the hex codes for code_point, and the hex codes only. Use when the input method is to be started and ended separately.

For example, a macro that starts Unicode input, and switches to a layer full of macros that send the hex codes is one scenario where this function is of use.

.start()

Starts the Unicode input method. The way it starts it, depends on the host operating system.

.input()

If the host operating system requires keys being held during the Unicode input, this function will hold them for us.

.end()

Finishes the Unicode input method, in an OS-specific way.

.input_delay([delay])

Sets or returns (if called without an argument) the number of milliseconds to wait between inputting each part of the sequence. In some cases, inputting too fast does not give the host enough time to process, and a delay is needed.

Defaults to zero, no delay.

Overrideable methods

hexToKey(hex_digit)

A function that returns a Key struct, given a 8-bit hex digit. For most uses, the built-in version of this function is sufficient, but if the keymap on the OS-side has any of the hexadecimal symbols on other scancodes than QWERTY, this function should be overridden to use the correct scan codes.

unicodeCustomStart()

If the host OS type is set to kaleidoscope::hostos::Custom, then this function will be called whenever the .start() method is called. The default implementation does nothing, and should be overridden to implement the custom magic needed to enter unicode input mode.

unicodeCustomInput()

If the host OS type is set to kaleidoscope::hostos::Custom, then this function will be called whenever the .input() method is called. The default implementation does nothing, and should be overridden to implement the custom magic needed while inputting the hex code itself (such as holding additional keys).

unicodeCustomEnd()

If the host OS type is set to kaleidoscope::hostos::Custom, then this function will be called whenever the .end() method is called. The default implementation does nothing, and should be overridden to implement the custom magic needed to leave unicode input mode.

Dependencies

Other Configuration

On OS X/macOS, you'll need to change the input method to be "Unicode Hex Input". You can do this by going to System Preferences > Keyboard > Input Sources, clicking the + button, selecting it from the list, then setting it as the active input method.

Further reading

Starting from the example is the recommended way of getting started with the plugin.