To properly retrigger hold-taps when a combo is not activated, some
position down events are reraised instead of released. The corresponding
position up events were never reraised, causing a potential stuck key.
This is an improvement on retro-tap, solving the 'flashing hold' issue
users people experience.
When the tapping-term expires, the hold key is normally pressed. When
retro-tap is enabled, this is undesirable; only an interrupted hold-tap
should trigger the hold behavior.
This change disables the hold behavior for the 'STATUS_HOLD_TIMER'
state when retro-tap is enabled, and makes sure the
'STATUS_HOLD_INTERRUPT' state will be triggered when appropriate.
Tap-and-hold a hold-tap to hold the tap behavior so it can repeat.
After a tap, if the same key is pressed within `quick_tap_ms`, the
tap behavior is always picked.
This is useful for things like `&ht LSHFT BACKSPACE` where holding
the backspace is required.
Implements #288.
this makes LS(LEFT_CONTROL) work as if shift and control were both
pressed explicitly. Previously, the left shift would have been released
as soon as another key was pressed. The implicit behavior is useful in
case of LS(NUMBER_1) when rolling over to other keys.
Also see #361.
Aligns *.h and *.c to underscore naming convention.
These were kept (with warnings) for backwards compatibility with external boards/shields:
- kscan-mock.h
- matrix-transform.h
They should be removed in the future.
PR: #523
Key release events released keys on the wrong layer if the 'top layer'
was not &trans above the &mo key.
base <&mo 1>
layer 1 <&kp B>
This was caused by overwriting
`zmk_keymap_active_behavior_layer[position]` after the &mo key was
handled.
* Add timestamps to position events and behaviors.
- Take original event timestamps into consideration so nested tap-holds have proper timing.
- Add position and timestamp to keycode state changed event so the one-shot behavior can properly identify other keypresses and timings.
- Add timestamp to position events received from peripheral
* reduce number of arguments to behaviors