/* Copyright 2017 Fredric Silberberg * * This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or * (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program. If not, see . */ #include "inttypes.h" #include "stdint.h" #include "process_key_lock.h" #define BV_64(shift) (((uint64_t)1) << (shift)) #define GET_KEY_ARRAY(code) (((code) < 0x40) ? key_state[0] : \ ((code) < 0x80) ? key_state[1] : \ ((code) < 0xC0) ? key_state[2] : key_state[3]) #define GET_CODE_INDEX(code) (((code) < 0x40) ? (code) : \ ((code) < 0x80) ? (code) - 0x40 : \ ((code) < 0xC0) ? (code) - 0x80 : (code) - 0xC0) #define KEY_STATE(code) (GET_KEY_ARRAY(code) & BV_64(GET_CODE_INDEX(code))) == BV_64(GET_CODE_INDEX(code)) #define SET_KEY_ARRAY_STATE(code, val) do { \ switch (code) { \ case 0x00 ... 0x3F: \ key_state[0] = (val); \ break; \ case 0x40 ... 0x7F: \ key_state[1] = (val); \ break; \ case 0x80 ... 0xBF: \ key_state[2] = (val); \ break; \ case 0xC0 ... 0xFF: \ key_state[3] = (val); \ break; \ } \ } while(0) #define SET_KEY_STATE(code) SET_KEY_ARRAY_STATE(code, (GET_KEY_ARRAY(code) | BV_64(GET_CODE_INDEX(code)))) #define UNSET_KEY_STATE(code) SET_KEY_ARRAY_STATE(code, (GET_KEY_ARRAY(code)) & ~(BV_64(GET_CODE_INDEX(code)))) #define IS_STANDARD_KEYCODE(code) ((code) <= 0xFF) // Locked key state. This is an array of 256 bits, one for each of the standard keys supported qmk. uint64_t key_state[4] = { 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0 }; bool watching = false; // Translate any OSM keycodes back to their unmasked versions. static inline uint16_t translate_keycode(uint16_t keycode) { if (keycode > QK_ONE_SHOT_MOD && keycode <= QK_ONE_SHOT_MOD_MAX) { return keycode ^ QK_ONE_SHOT_MOD; } else { return keycode; } } bool process_key_lock(uint16_t *keycode, keyrecord_t *record) { // We start by categorizing the keypress event. In the event of a down // event, there are several possibilities: // 1. The key is not being locked, and we are not watching for new keys. // In this case, we bail immediately. This is the common case for down events. // 2. The key was locked, and we need to unlock it. In this case, we will // reset the state in our map and return false. When the user releases the // key, the up event will no longer be masked and the OS will observe the // released key. // 3. KC_LOCK was just pressed. In this case, we set up the state machine // to watch for the next key down event, and finish processing // 4. The keycode is below 0xFF, and we are watching for new keys. In this case, // we will send the key down event to the os, and set the key_state for that // key to mask the up event. // 5. The keycode is above 0xFF, and we're wathing for new keys. In this case, // the user pressed a key that we cannot "lock", as it's a series of keys, // or a macro invocation, or a layer transition, or a custom-defined key, or // or some other arbitrary code. In this case, we bail immediately, reset // our watch state, and return true. // // In the event of an up event, there are these possibilities: // 1. The key is not being locked. In this case, we return true and bail // immediately. This is the common case. // 2. The key is being locked. In this case, we will mask the up event // by returning false, so the OS never sees that the key was released // until the user pressed the key again. // We translate any OSM keycodes back to their original keycodes, so that if the key being // one-shot modded is a standard keycode, we can handle it. This is the only set of special // keys that we handle uint16_t translated_keycode = translate_keycode(*keycode); if (record->event.pressed) { // Non-standard keycode, reset and return if (!(IS_STANDARD_KEYCODE(translated_keycode) || translated_keycode == KC_LOCK)) { watching = false; return true; } // If we're already watching, turn off the watch. if (translated_keycode == KC_LOCK) { watching = !watching; return false; } if (IS_STANDARD_KEYCODE(translated_keycode)) { // We check watching first. This is so that in the following scenario, we continue to // hold the key: KC_LOCK, KC_F, KC_LOCK, KC_F // If we checked in reverse order, we'd end up holding the key pressed after the second // KC_F press is registered, when the user likely meant to hold F if (watching) { watching = false; SET_KEY_STATE(translated_keycode); // We need to set the keycode passed in to be the translated keycode, in case we // translated a OSM back to the original keycode. *keycode = translated_keycode; // Let the standard keymap send the keycode down event. The up event will be masked. return true; } if (KEY_STATE(translated_keycode)) { UNSET_KEY_STATE(translated_keycode); // The key is already held, stop this process. The up event will be sent when the user // releases the key. return false; } } // Either the key isn't a standard key, or we need to send the down event. Continue standard // processing return true; } else { // Stop processing if it's a standard key and we're masking up. return !(IS_STANDARD_KEYCODE(translated_keycode) && KEY_STATE(translated_keycode)); } } /a> 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185