qmk_firmware/quantum/dynamic_keymap.h

74 lines
3.4 KiB
C

/* Copyright 2017 Jason Williams (Wilba)
*
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#pragma once
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
uint8_t dynamic_keymap_get_layer_count(void);
void * dynamic_keymap_key_to_eeprom_address(uint8_t layer, uint8_t row, uint8_t column);
uint16_t dynamic_keymap_get_keycode(uint8_t layer, uint8_t row, uint8_t column);
void dynamic_keymap_set_keycode(uint8_t layer, uint8_t row, uint8_t column, uint16_t keycode);
#ifdef ENCODER_MAP_ENABLE
uint16_t dynamic_keymap_get_encoder(uint8_t layer, uint8_t encoder_id, bool clockwise);
void dynamic_keymap_set_encoder(uint8_t layer, uint8_t encoder_id, bool clockwise, uint16_t keycode);
#endif // ENCODER_MAP_ENABLE
bool dynamic_keymap_is_valid(void);
void dynamic_keymap_reset(void);
// These get/set the keycodes as stored in the EEPROM buffer
// Data is big-endian 16-bit values (the keycodes)
// Order is by layer/row/column
// Thus offset 0 = 0,0,0, offset MATRIX_COLS*2 = 0,1,0, offset MATRIX_ROWS*MATRIX_COLS*2 = 1,0,0
// Note the *2, because offset is in bytes and keycodes are two bytes
// This is only really useful for host applications that want to get a whole keymap fast,
// by reading 14 keycodes (28 bytes) at a time, reducing the number of raw HID transfers by
// a factor of 14.
void dynamic_keymap_get_buffer(uint16_t offset, uint16_t size, uint8_t *data);
void dynamic_keymap_set_buffer(uint16_t offset, uint16_t size, uint8_t *data);
// This overrides the one in quantum/keymap_common.c
// uint16_t keymap_key_to_keycode(uint8_t layer, keypos_t key);
// Note regarding dynamic_keymap_macro_set_buffer():
// The last byte of the buffer is used as a valid flag,
// so macro sending is disabled during writing a new buffer,
// should it happen during, or after an interrupted transfer.
//
// Users writing to the buffer must first set the last byte of the buffer
// to non-zero (i.e. 0xFF). After (or during) the final write, set the
// last byte of the buffer to zero.
//
// Since the contents of the buffer must be a list of null terminated
// strings, the last byte must be a null when at maximum capacity,
// and it not being null means the buffer can be considered in an
// invalid state.
//
// The buffer *may* contain less macro strings than the maximum.
// This allows a higher maximum number of macros without requiring that
// number of nulls to be in the buffer.
// Note: dynamic_keymap_macro_get_count() returns the maximum that *can* be
// stored, not the current count of macros in the buffer.
uint8_t dynamic_keymap_macro_get_count(void);
uint16_t dynamic_keymap_macro_get_buffer_size(void);
void dynamic_keymap_macro_get_buffer(uint16_t offset, uint16_t size, uint8_t *data);
void dynamic_keymap_macro_set_buffer(uint16_t offset, uint16_t size, uint8_t *data);
void dynamic_keymap_macro_reset(void);
void dynamic_keymap_macro_send(uint8_t id);