Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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cases (#15889)
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shift state. (#20092)
Co-authored-by: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>
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Which is just a syntactic sugar for
testing::Mock::VerifyAndClearExpectations to reduce the visual clutter
in unit-tests.
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messages (#17028)
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* `UC_MOD`/`UC_RMOD` -> `UC_NEXT`/`UC_PREV`
* `UNICODE_MODE_*` -> `QK_UNICODE_MODE_*`
* `UC_MAC` -> `UNICODE_MODE_MACOS`
* `UC_LNX` -> `UNICODE_MODE_LINUX`
* `UC_WIN` -> `UNICODE_MODE_WINDOWS`
* `UC_BSD` -> `UNICODE_MODE_BSD`
* `UC_WINC` -> `UNICODE_MODE_WINCOMPOSE`
* `UC_EMACS` -> `UNICODE_MODE_EMACS`
* `UC__COUNT` -> `UNICODE_MODE_COUNT`
* `UC_M_MA` -> `UC_MAC`
* `UC_M_LN` -> `UC_LINX`
* `UC_M_WI` -> `UC_WIN`
* `UC_M_BS` -> `UC_BSD`
* `UC_M_WC` -> `UC_WINC`
* `UC_M_EM` -> `UC_EMAC`
* Docs
* Update quantum/unicode/unicode.h
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* Fix Caps Word to treat mod-taps more consistently.
Previously, holding any mod-tap key while Caps Word is active stops Caps
Word, and this happens regardless of `caps_word_press_user()`. Yet for
regular mod keys, AltGr (KC_RALT) is ignored, Shift keys are passed to
`caps_word_press_user()` to determine whether to continue, and
similarly, a key `RSFT(KC_RALT)` representing Right Shift + Alt is
passed to `caps_word_press_user()` to determine whether to continue.
This commit makes held mod-tap keys consistent with regular mod keys:
* Holding a `RALT_T` mod-tap is ignored.
* When holding a shift mod-tap key, `KC_LSFT` or `KC_RSFT` is passed to
`caps_word_press_user()` to determine whether to continue.
* When holding a Right Shift + Alt (`RSA_T`) mod-tap, `RSFT(KC_RALT)` is
passed to `caps_word_press_user()`.
Particularly, with this fix a user may choose to continue Caps Word when
a shift mod-tap key is held by adding `KC_LSFT` and `KC_RSFT` cases in
`caps_word_press_user()`. For instance as
```
bool caps_word_press_user(uint16_t keycode) {
switch (keycode) {
// Keycodes that continue Caps Word, with shift applied.
case KC_A ... KC_Z:
case KC_MINS:
add_weak_mods(MOD_BIT(KC_LSFT)); // Apply shift to the next key.
return true;
// Keycodes that continue Caps Word, without shifting.
case KC_1 ... KC_0:
case KC_BSPC:
case KC_DEL:
case KC_UNDS:
case KC_LSFT: // <<< Added here.
case KC_RSFT:
return true;
default:
return false; // Deactivate Caps Word.
}
}
```
* Fix Caps Word to treat mod-taps more consistently.
Previously, holding any mod-tap key while Caps Word is active stops Caps
Word, and this happens regardless of `caps_word_press_user()`. Yet for
regular mod keys, AltGr (KC_RALT) is ignored, Shift keys are passed to
`caps_word_press_user()` to determine whether to continue, and
similarly, a key `RSFT(KC_RALT)` representing Right Shift + Alt is
passed to `caps_word_press_user()` to determine whether to continue.
This commit makes held mod-tap keys consistent with regular mod keys:
* Holding a `RALT_T` mod-tap is ignored.
* When holding a shift mod-tap key, `KC_LSFT` or `KC_RSFT` is passed to
`caps_word_press_user()` to determine whether to continue.
* When holding a Right Shift + Alt (`RSA_T`) mod-tap, `RSFT(KC_RALT)` is
passed to `caps_word_press_user()`.
Particularly, with this fix a user may choose to continue Caps Word when
a shift mod-tap key is held by adding `KC_LSFT` and `KC_RSFT` cases in
`caps_word_press_user()`. For instance as
```
bool caps_word_press_user(uint16_t keycode) {
switch (keycode) {
// Keycodes that continue Caps Word, with shift applied.
case KC_A ... KC_Z:
case KC_MINS:
add_weak_mods(MOD_BIT(KC_LSFT)); // Apply shift to the next key.
return true;
// Keycodes that continue Caps Word, without shifting.
case KC_1 ... KC_0:
case KC_BSPC:
case KC_DEL:
case KC_UNDS:
case KC_LSFT: // <<< Added here.
case KC_RSFT:
return true;
default:
return false; // Deactivate Caps Word.
}
}
```
* Update quantum/process_keycode/process_caps_word.c
Co-authored-by: Joel Challis <git@zvecr.com>
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Retro Shift. (#17284)
* Fix Caps Word and Unicode Map
* Tests for Caps Word + Auto Shift and Unicode Map.
* Fix formatting
* Add additional keyboard report expectation macros
This commit defines five test utilities, EXPECT_REPORT, EXPECT_UNICODE,
EXPECT_EMPTY_REPORT, EXPECT_ANY_REPORT and EXPECT_NO_REPORT for use with
TestDriver.
EXPECT_REPORT sets a gmock expectation that a given keyboard report will
be sent. For instance,
EXPECT_REPORT(driver, (KC_LSFT, KC_A));
is shorthand for
EXPECT_CALL(driver,
send_keyboard_mock(KeyboardReport(KC_LSFT, KC_A)));
EXPECT_UNICODE sets a gmock expectation that a given Unicode code point
will be sent using UC_LNX input mode. For instance for U+2013,
EXPECT_UNICODE(driver, 0x2013);
expects the sequence of keys:
"Ctrl+Shift+U, 2, 0, 1, 3, space".
EXPECT_EMPTY_REPORT sets a gmock expectation that a given keyboard
report will be sent. For instance
EXPECT_EMPTY_REPORT(driver);
expects a single report without keypresses or modifiers.
EXPECT_ANY_REPORT sets a gmock expectation that a arbitrary keyboard
report will be sent, without matching its contents. For instance
EXPECT_ANY_REPORT(driver).Times(1);
expects a single arbitrary keyboard report will be sent.
EXPECT_NO_REPORT sets a gmock expectation that no keyboard report will
be sent at all.
* Add tap_key() and tap_keys() to TestFixture.
This commit adds a `tap_key(key)` method to TestFixture that taps a
given KeymapKey, optionally with a specified delay between press and
release.
Similarly, the method `tap_keys(key_a, key_b, key_c)` taps a sequence of
KeymapKeys.
* Use EXPECT_REPORT, tap_keys, etc. in most tests.
This commit uses EXPECT_REPORT, EXPECT_UNICODE, EXPECT_EMPTY_REPORT,
EXPECT_NO_REPORT, tap_key() and tap_keys() test utilities from the
previous two commits in most tests. Particularly the EXPECT_REPORT
macro is frequently useful and makes a nice reduction in boilerplate
needed to express many tests.
Co-authored-by: David Kosorin <david@kosorin.net>
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This is a minor bug fix for Caps Word. Currently, Caps Word turns off
whenever a non-shift mod becomes active. This is done to avoid
interfering with hotkeys.
This commit makes an exception to continue Caps Word when AltGr (right
Alt) is held. Outside the US, the AltGr key is used to type additional
symbols (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AltGr_key). Depending on the
language, these may include symbols used within words like accented
letters where it would be desirable to continue Caps Word.
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Co-authored-by: precondition <57645186+precondition@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Drashna Jaelre <drashna@live.com>
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