* Refactor steno into STENO_ENABLE_[ALL|GEMINI|BOLT]
* Update stenography documentation
* STENO_ENABLE_TXBOLT → STENO_ENABLE_BOLT
TXBOLT is a better name but BOLT is more consistent with the
pre-existing TX Bolt related constants, which all drop the "TX " prefix
* Comments
* STENO_ENABLE_[GEMINI|BOLT|ALL] → STENO_PROTOCOL = [geminipr|txbolt|all]
* Add note on lacking V-USB support
* Clear chord at the end of the switch(mode){send_steno_chord} block
* Return true if NOEVENT
* update_chord_xxx → add_xxx_key_to_chord
* Enable the defines for all the protocols if STENO_PROTOCOL = all
* Mention how to use `steno_set_mode`
* Set the default steno protocol to "all"
This is done so that existing keymaps invoking `steno_set_mode` don't
all suddenly break
* Add data driver equivalents for stenography feature
* Document format of serial steno packets
(Thanks dnaq)
* Add missing comma
Some values that can never, ever, change were held in local
variables, rather than in PROGMEM. Fixed.
Change "pressed" to a signed int so the test for < 0 makes
sense, and to avoid possible weird failure modes in the
case where a key release comes in when pressed is already
zero. (Shouldn't happen, sure, but computers are weird.)
A lot of things in process_steno had external linkage for no
particular reason. They've been marked static. Stuff still
builds.
Distinguish between currently-held keys and keys that have
been held, and expose these values through a nicely-named API
so other code could, say, check on the current set of steno
chording in order to make displays. Also in passing fix up the
"state" value having external linkage so it could clash with
other people's variable declarations.
The API also provides hooks for key processing and steno chord
events, so you can monitor those events without having to
run in matrix_scan_user and recheck the values directly. Also
document these.
There is no path through processing a key that doesn't
end with a return false, so the nested return foo() are
gone and we just return false.
This protocol breaks out "duplicate" keys into their own entry in the packet so that more complicated logic can be done on the software side, including support for additional languages and alternative theories.
Requires virtser; Allows QMK to speak the TX BOlt protocol used by stenography machines and software (such as Plover). The upside is that Plover can be configured to listen only to TX Bolt allow the keyboard to switch layers without need to enable/disable the Plover software, or to have a second non-Steno keyboard work concurrently.