You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
Kaleidoscope/plugins/Kaleidoscope-LEDEffects
Michael Richters 1f965da243
Remove C-style `void` parameter for functions that don't take args
3 years ago
..
src Remove C-style `void` parameter for functions that don't take args 3 years ago
README.md Remove C-style `void` parameter for functions that don't take args 3 years ago
library.properties More library tweaking to comply with arduino requirements 4 years ago

README.md

LEDEffects

The LEDEffects plugin provides a selection of LED effects, each of them fairly simple, simple enough to not need a plugin of their own.

Using the plugin

There are a number of different effects included in the package, all of them are available once including the header, and one's free to choose any number of them.

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

KALEIDOSCOPE_INIT_PLUGINS(LEDControl, JukeBoxEffect);

void setup() {
  Kaleidoscope.setup();
}

Included effects

All of these effects will scan the active layers, and apply effects based on what keys are active on each position, thus, it needs no hints or configuration to figure out our layout!

MiamiEffect

Applies a color effect to the keyboard, inspired by the popular Miami keyset:

Miami

Alphas, punctuation, numbers, the space bar, the numbers and the dot on the keypad, and half the function keys will be in a cyan-ish color, the rest in magenta.

JukeboxEffect

Applies a color effect to the keyboard, inspired by the JukeBox keyset:

Jukebox

Alphas, punctuation, numbers, the space bar, the numbers and the dot on the keypad, and half the function keys will be in a beige-ish color, the rest in light green, except for the Esc key, which will be in red.

An alternative color scheme exists under the JukeboxAlternateEffect name, where the light green and red colors are swapped.

TriColor

TriColor is a class that can be used to create LED effects that all follow a similar pattern: alphas and similar in one color; modifiers, special keys, and half the function keys in another, and Esc in a third (this latter being optional). If we have a color scheme that follows this pattern, the TriColor extension can make it a lot easier to implement it.

Using the extension

Because the extension is part of the LEDEffects library, we need to include that header:

#include <Kaleidoscope-LEDEffects.h>

Then, we simply create a new instance of the TriColor class, with appropriate colors set for the constructor:

kaleidoscope::plugin::TriColor BlackAndWhiteEffect (CRGB(0x00, 0x00, 0x00),
                                                    CRGB(0xff, 0xff, 0xff),
                                                    CRGB(0x80, 0x80, 0x80));

The first argument is the base color, the second is for modifiers and special keys, the last one is for the Esc key. If the last one is omitted, the extension will use the modifier color for it.

Plugin methods

The plugin provides a single method on each of the included effect objects:

.activate()

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

Dependencies

Further reading

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