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Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Ong
17e7762de7 Eager Per Row Debouncing added (added to Ergodox) (#5498)
* Implemented Eager Per Row debouncing algorithm.

Good for when fingers can only press one row at a time (e.g. when keyboard is wired so that "rows" are vertical)

* Added documentation for eager_pr

* Ported ergodox_ez to eager_pr debouncing.

* Removed check for changes in matrix_scan.

* Added further clarification in docs.

* Accidental merge with ergodox_ez

* Small cleanup in eager_pr

* Forgot to debounce_init - this would probably cause seg-faults.
2019-04-03 14:45:55 -07:00
James Churchill
37932c293c Next set of split_common changes (#4974)
* Update split_common to use standard i2c drivers

* Eliminate RGB_DIRTY/BACKLIT_DIRTY

* Fix avr i2c_master error handling

* Fix i2c_slave addressing

* Remove unneeded timeout on i2c_stop()

* Fix RGB I2C transfers

* Remove incorrect comment
2019-03-12 10:23:28 -07:00
Erez Zukerman
48262bdce0
Merge pull request #4454 from trunneml/improveddebounce
Adaptive debounce logic
2018-11-22 10:51:20 -05:00
Drashna Jaelre
8837b9d99e
Fix row 11 2018-11-21 07:49:28 -08:00
Michael Graf
ad91454574 Adaptive debounce logic
The debounce filtering reports a key/switch change directly, without any extra delay. After that the debounce logic will filter all further changes, until the key/switch reports the same state for the given count of scans.
So a perfect switch will get a short debounce period and a bad key will get a much longer debounce period. The result is an adaptive debouncing period for each switch.

This value defines how often the same key/switch state has to be detected in successive reads until the next key state can be reported.
In other words this value defines the minimum debouncing period for a switch.
2018-11-20 15:55:35 +01:00
Jack Humbert
7a44ad83fc adds immediate i2c return, fixes ez matrix code 2018-06-23 14:18:47 -04:00
Jack Humbert
6380f83190 refactor, non-working 2018-06-22 21:26:30 -04:00
Jack Humbert
b8564f5dd0 revert some attempts, update i2c 2018-06-12 14:27:22 -04:00
Erez Zukerman
c0095710a7 a failed attempt at hot-plugging 2018-05-24 09:18:36 -04:00
Jack Humbert
682555faac i2c fix 2018-05-15 22:30:58 -04:00
Seebs
d1feb8744a Don't "unselect" left-hand rows
"unselecting" left-hand rows is a wasted i2c transaction.

On the left-hand side, the ergodox uses a GPIO expander. It
does *not* change "direction" (input/output) of pins, it just
sets pins high or low.

But all the pins are written at once. There's no way to
change just one pin's value; you send a full byte of all eight
row pins. (Not all of them are in use, but that doesn't matter.)
So every pin is either +V or ground. This is in contrast
with the right-hand side, which is using input mode to make pins
be neutral.

So there's no need to "deselect" the rows on the left side
at all. To select row 0, you set the GPIO register for the
rows to 0xFE. The previous code would then set it back to
0xFF, then set it to 0xFD on the next cycle. But we can just
omit the intervening step, and set it to 0xFD next cycle,
and get the same results.

And yes, I tested that the keyboard still works.

On my system, scan rate as reported by DEBUG_SCAN_RATE goes
from 445 or so to 579 or so, thus, from ~2.24ms to ~1.73ms.

Signed-off-by: seebs <seebs@seebs.net>
2017-12-10 00:40:41 -05:00
Seebs
7fbe6c3594 improve ergodox ez performance
With these changes, the ergodox ez goes from 315 scans per second
when no keys are pressed (~3.17ms/scan) to 447 (~2.24ms/scan).

The changes to the pin read are just condensing the logic, and
replacing a lot of conditional operations with a single bitwise
inversion.

The change to row scanning is more significant, and merits
explanation. In general, you can only scan one row of a keyboard
at a time, because if you scan two rows, you no longer know
which row is pulling a given column down. But in the Ergodox
design, this isn't the case; the left hand is controlled by an
I2C-based GPIO expander, and the columns and rows are *completely
separate* electrically from the columns and rows on the right-hand
side.

So simply reading rows in parallel offers two significant
improvements. One is that we no longer need the 30us delay after
each right-hand row, because we're spending more than 30us
communicating with the left hand over i2c. Another is that we're
no longer wastefully sending i2c messages to the left hand
to unselect rows when no rows had actually been selected in the
first place. These delays were, between them, coming out to
nearly 30% of the time spent in each scan.

Signed-off-by: seebs <seebs@seebs.net>
2017-11-26 02:07:06 -05:00
Don Armstrong
2e3b99f7f1 update left led support 2017-10-27 13:24:30 -07:00
Jack Humbert
d2ff66a985 Creates a layouts/ folder for keymaps shared between keyboards (#1609)
* include variables and .h files as pp directives

* start layout compilation

* split ergodoxes up

* don't compile all layouts for everything

* might seg fault

* reset layouts variable

* actually reset layouts

* include rules.mk instead

* remove includes from rules.mk

* update variable setting

* load visualizer from path

* adds some more examples

* adds more layouts

* more boards added

* more boards added

* adds documentation for layouts

* use lowercase names for LAYOUT_

* add layout.json files for each layout

* add community folder, default keymaps for layouts

* touch-up default layouts

* touch-up layouts, some keyboard rules.mk

* update documentation for layouts

* fix up serial/i2c switches
2017-08-23 22:29:07 -04:00
Fred Sundvik
9af995c59b Initial structure for Ergodox as subprojects
Only the EZ default keymaps compiles at the moment though.
2016-07-29 20:48:04 +03:00
Jack Humbert
3577e26fd9 fix/annotate wait_us lines 2016-07-06 00:24:31 -04:00
Jack Humbert
86a7b060ef Adds wait to i2c (debounce) 2016-07-04 12:13:41 -04:00
Jack Humbert
eafaba6b53 Improves debounce 2016-07-04 12:01:10 -04:00
Jack Humbert
65faab3b89 Moves features to their own files (process_*), adds tap dance feature (#460)
* non-working commit

* working

* subprojects implemented for planck

* pass a subproject variable through to c

* consolidates clueboard revisions

* thanks for letting me know about conflicts..

* turn off audio for yang's

* corrects starting paths for subprojects

* messing around with travis

* semicolon

* travis script

* travis script

* script for travis

* correct directory (probably), amend files to commit

* remove origin before adding

* git pull, correct syntax

* git checkout

* git pull origin branch

* where are we?

* where are we?

* merging

* force things to happen

* adds commit message, adds add

* rebase, no commit message

* rebase branch

* idk!

* try just pull

* fetch - merge

* specify repo branch

* checkout

* goddammit

* merge? idk

* pls

* after all

* don't split up keyboards

* syntax

* adds quick for all-keyboards

* trying out new script

* script update

* lowercase

* all keyboards

* stop replacing compiled.hex automatically

* adds if statement

* skip automated build branches

* forces push to automated build branch

* throw an add in there

* upstream?

* adds AUTOGEN

* ignore all .hex files again

* testing out new repo

* global ident

* generate script, keyboard_keymap.hex

* skip generation for now, print pandoc info, submodule update

* try trusty

* and sudo

* try generate

* updates subprojects to keyboards

* no idea

* updates to keyboards

* cleans up clueboard stuff

* setup to use local readme

* updates cluepad, planck experimental

* remove extra led.c [ci skip]

* audio and midi moved over to separate files

* chording, leader, unicode separated

* consolidate each [skip ci]

* correct include

* quantum: Add a tap dance feature (#451)

* quantum: Add a tap dance feature

With this feature one can specify keys that behave differently, based on
the amount of times they have been tapped, and when interrupted, they
get handled before the interrupter.

To make it clear how this is different from `ACTION_FUNCTION_TAP`, lets
explore a certain setup! We want one key to send `Space` on single tap,
but `Enter` on double-tap.

With `ACTION_FUNCTION_TAP`, it is quite a rain-dance to set this up, and
has the problem that when the sequence is interrupted, the interrupting
key will be send first. Thus, `SPC a` will result in `a SPC` being sent,
if they are typed within `TAPPING_TERM`. With the tap dance feature,
that'll come out as `SPC a`, correctly.

The implementation hooks into two parts of the system, to achieve this:
into `process_record_quantum()`, and the matrix scan. We need the latter
to be able to time out a tap sequence even when a key is not being
pressed, so `SPC` alone will time out and register after `TAPPING_TERM`
time.

But lets start with how to use it, first!

First, you will need `TAP_DANCE_ENABLE=yes` in your `Makefile`, because
the feature is disabled by default. This adds a little less than 1k to
the firmware size. Next, you will want to define some tap-dance keys,
which is easiest to do with the `TD()` macro, that - similar to `F()`,
takes a number, which will later be used as an index into the
`tap_dance_actions` array.

This array specifies what actions shall be taken when a tap-dance key is
in action. Currently, there are two possible options:

* `ACTION_TAP_DANCE_DOUBLE(kc1, kc2)`: Sends the `kc1` keycode when
  tapped once, `kc2` otherwise.
* `ACTION_TAP_DANCE_FN(fn)`: Calls the specified function - defined in
  the user keymap - with the current state of the tap-dance action.

The first option is enough for a lot of cases, that just want dual
roles. For example, `ACTION_TAP_DANCE(KC_SPC, KC_ENT)` will result in
`Space` being sent on single-tap, `Enter` otherwise.

And that's the bulk of it!

Do note, however, that this implementation does have some consequences:
keys do not register until either they reach the tapping ceiling, or
they time out. This means that if you hold the key, nothing happens, no
repeat, no nothing. It is possible to detect held state, and register an
action then too, but that's not implemented yet. Keys also unregister
immediately after being registered, so you can't even hold the second
tap. This is intentional, to be consistent.

And now, on to the explanation of how it works!

The main entry point is `process_tap_dance()`, called from
`process_record_quantum()`, which is run for every keypress, and our
handler gets to run early. This function checks whether the key pressed
is a tap-dance key. If it is not, and a tap-dance was in action, we
handle that first, and enqueue the newly pressed key. If it is a
tap-dance key, then we check if it is the same as the already active
one (if there's one active, that is). If it is not, we fire off the old
one first, then register the new one. If it was the same, we increment
the counter and the timer.

This means that you have `TAPPING_TERM` time to tap the key again, you
do not have to input all the taps within that timeframe. This allows for
longer tap counts, with minimal impact on responsiveness.

Our next stop is `matrix_scan_tap_dance()`. This handles the timeout of
tap-dance keys.

For the sake of flexibility, tap-dance actions can be either a pair of
keycodes, or a user function. The latter allows one to handle higher tap
counts, or do extra things, like blink the LEDs, fiddle with the
backlighting, and so on. This is accomplished by using an union, and
some clever macros.

In the end, lets see a full example!

```c
enum {
 CT_SE = 0,
 CT_CLN,
 CT_EGG
};

/* Have the above three on the keymap, TD(CT_SE), etc... */

void dance_cln (qk_tap_dance_state_t *state) {
  if (state->count == 1) {
    register_code (KC_RSFT);
    register_code (KC_SCLN);
    unregister_code (KC_SCLN);
    unregister_code (KC_RSFT);
  } else {
    register_code (KC_SCLN);
    unregister_code (KC_SCLN);
    reset_tap_dance (state);
  }
}

void dance_egg (qk_tap_dance_state_t *state) {
  if (state->count >= 100) {
    SEND_STRING ("Safety dance!");
    reset_tap_dance (state);
  }
}

const qk_tap_dance_action_t tap_dance_actions[] = {
  [CT_SE]  = ACTION_TAP_DANCE_DOUBLE (KC_SPC, KC_ENT)
 ,[CT_CLN] = ACTION_TAP_DANCE_FN (dance_cln)
 ,[CT_EGG] = ACTION_TAP_DANCE_FN (dance_egg)
};
```

This addresses #426.

Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>

* hhkb: Fix the build with the new tap-dance feature

Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>

* tap_dance: Move process_tap_dance further down

Process the tap dance stuff after midi and audio, because those don't
process keycodes, but row/col positions.

Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>

* tap_dance: Use conditionals instead of dummy functions

To be consistent with how the rest of the quantum features are
implemented, use ifdefs instead of dummy functions.

Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>

* Merge branch 'master' into quantum-keypress-process

# Conflicts:
#	Makefile
#	keyboards/planck/rev3/config.h
#	keyboards/planck/rev4/config.h

* update build script
2016-06-29 17:49:41 -04:00
Jack Humbert
b68b722325 updates ez's matrix to spec 2016-06-23 23:14:21 -04:00
Jack Humbert
649b33d778 Renames keyboard folder to keyboards, adds couple of tmk's fixes (#432)
* fixes from tmk's repo

* rename keyboard to keyboards
2016-06-21 22:39:54 -04:00
Renamed from keyboard/ergodox_ez/matrix.c (Browse further)