Firmware for the Keyboardio Model 01 and other keyboards with AVR or ARM MCUs.
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Gergely Nagy a5d3a9ff37
Updated to use Kaleidoscope.use instead of USE_PLUGINS
7 years ago
examples/Heatmap Updated to use Kaleidoscope.use instead of USE_PLUGINS 7 years ago
src Updated to use the new LEDMode/LEDControl API 7 years ago
.gitignore Test the plugin with Travis CI 8 years ago
.travis.yml New build infrastructure 8 years ago
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Makefile Update Makefile to fix OS X build 7 years ago
README.md Updated to use Kaleidoscope.use instead of USE_PLUGINS 7 years ago
library.properties The Big Rename 8 years ago

README.md

Kaleidoscope-Heatmap

status Build Status

The Heatmap plugin provides a LED effect, that displays a heatmap on the keyboard. The LEDs under each key will have a color according to how much use they see. Fewer used keys will have deep blue colors, that gradually turns lighter, then green, to yellow, and finally red for the most used keys. The heatmap is not updated on every key press, but periodically. It's precision is also an approximation, and not a hundred percent exact. Nevertheless, it is a reasonable estimate.

Using the plugin

The plugin comes with reasonable defaults pre-configured, all one needs to do is include the header, and make sure the plugin is in use:

#include <Kaleidoscope.h>
#include <Kaleidoscope-Heatmap.h>

void setup() {
  Kaleidoscope.use(&HeatmapEffect);

  Kaleidoscope.setup ();
}

This sets up the heatmap to update every 500 cycles, which is about 2.5 seconds, and is the default. It also registers a new LED effect, which means that if you have not set up any other effects, then Heatmap will likely be the default. You may not want that, so setting up at least one other LED effect, such as LEDOff is highly recommended.

Plugin methods

The plugin provides a HeatmapEffect object, which has the following methods and properties:

.activate()

When called, immediately activates the Heatmap effect. Mostly useful in the setup() method of the Sketch, or in macros that are meant to switch to the heatmap effect, no matter where we are in the list.

.update_delay

The number of milliseconds to wait between updating the heatmap. Updating the heatmap incurs a significant performance penalty, and should not be done too often. Doing it too rarely, on the other hand, make it much less useful. One has to strike a reasonable balance.

Defaults to 500.

Dependencies

Further reading

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