* for initial commit
* for initial commit
* for initial commit
* Update led_update_kb example (#7451)
* Update led_update_kb example
* Update comment to explain pin behavior
* wordsmith
* wordsmithing 2
* Remove CR when computing BOOTLOADER_SIZE. (#7453)
* Set up language fallback for docs, and update translation guidelines (#7403)
* Set up language fallback for docs, and update translation guidelines
* Title Case
* Add ID example
* Link to emoji flag cheatsheet
* Move docs preview section to contributing.md
* Point to docs preview in the readme
* [Keyboard] Added Cans12er keyboard (#7455)
* added cans12er keyboard
* updated readme
Updated the readme to conform with the provided template from the qmk_firmware githubpage
* Update keyboards/cans12er/README.md
Co-Authored-By: James Young <18669334+noroadsleft@users.noreply.github.com>
* Changed configuration
Changed the configuration based on the Change Request from PR #7455 made by github user noroadsleft
* [Keyboard] Update ATmega32A readme files to match template (#7462)
* Update atmega32a readme files to match template
* Update atmega32a readme files to match template - fixes
* Apply suggestions from code review
* update files based on comments
* update files based on comments
* update files based on comments
* update files based on comments
* update files based on comments
* update files based on comments
* update files based on comments
Co-Authored-By: Takeshi ISHII <2170248+mtei@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-Authored-By: shela <shelaf@users.noreply.github.com>
QMK (Quantum Mechanical Keyboard) is an open source community that maintains QMK Firmware, QMK Toolbox, qmk.fm, and these docs. QMK Firmware is a keyboard firmware based on the tmk_keyboard with some useful features for Atmel AVR controllers, and more specifically, the OLKB product line, the ErgoDox EZ keyboard, and the Clueboard product line. It has also been ported to ARM chips using ChibiOS. You can use it to power your own hand-wired or custom keyboard PCB.
How to Get It
If you plan on contributing a keymap, keyboard, or features to QMK, the easiest thing to do is fork the repo through Github, and clone your repo locally to make your changes, push them, then open a Pull Request from your fork.
Otherwise, you can clone it directly with git clone https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware. Do not download the zip or tar files; a git repository is required to download the submodules in order to compile.
How to Compile
Before you are able to compile, you'll need to install an environment for AVR or/and ARM development. Once that is complete, you'll use the make command to build a keyboard and keymap with the following notation:
make planck/rev4:default
This would build the rev4 revision of the planck with the default keymap. Not all keyboards have revisions (also called subprojects or folders), in which case, it can be omitted:
make preonic:default
How to Customize
QMK has lots of features to explore, and a good deal of reference documentation to dig through. Most features are taken advantage of by modifying your keymap, and changing the keycodes.