~ruther/qmk_firmware

2557b91644d9565c43f0e5c27d45788d4a47f3eb — Erez Zukerman 9 years ago 9cfc74c
[Erez & Jack] Documents tri-layer and keymap-specific makefile options
1 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)

M README.md
M README.md => README.md +13 -1
@@ 16,13 16,21 @@ The documentation below explains QMK customizations and elaborates on some of th
* If you're looking to customize a keyboard that currently runs QMK or TMK, find your keyboard's directory under `keyboard/` and run the make commands from there.
* If you're looking to apply this firmware to an entirely new hardware project (a new kind of keyboard), you can create your own Quantum-based project by using `./new_project.sh <project_name>`, which will create `/keyboard/<project_name>` with all the necessary components for a Quantum project.

### Makefile Options

You have access to a bunch of goodies! Check out the Makefile to enable/disable some of the features. Uncomment the `#` to enable them. Setting them to `no` does nothing and will only confuse future you.

    BACKLIGHT_ENABLE = yes # Enable keyboard backlight functionality
    MIDI_ENABLE = yes      # MIDI controls
    # UNICODE_ENABLE = yes # Unicode support - this is commented out, just as an example. You have to use #, not //
    UNICODE_ENABLE = no    # <-- This is how you disable an option, just set it to "no"
    BLUETOOTH_ENABLE = yes # Enable Bluetooth with the Adafruit EZ-Key HID

### Customizing Makefile options on a per-keymap basis

If your keymap directory has a file called `makefile.mk` (note the lowercase filename, and the `.mk` extension), any Makefile options you set in that file will take precedence over other Makefile options (those set for Quantum as a whole or for your particular keyboard).

So let's say your keyboard's makefile has `CONSOLE_ENABLE = yes` (or maybe doesn't even list the `CONSOLE_ENABLE` option, which would cause it to revert to the global Quantum default). You want your particular keymap to not have the debug console, so you make a file called `makefile.mk` and specify `CONSOLE_ENABLE = no`.

## Quick aliases to common actions

Your keymap can include shortcuts to common operations (called "function actions" in tmk).


@@ 199,6 207,10 @@ This will clear all mods currently pressed.

This will clear all keys besides the mods currently pressed.

* `update_tri_layer(layer_1, layer_2, layer_3);`

If the user attempts to activate layer 1 AND layer 2 at the same time (for example, by hitting their respective layer keys), layer 3 will be activated. Layers 1 and 2 will _also_ be activated, for the purposes of fallbacks (so a given key will fall back from 3 to 2, to 1 -- and only then to 0).

#### Timer functionality

It's possible to start timers and read values for time-specific events - here's an example: