* experiment with userspace * reorganise * readme * missing oneshot shift from ignored keys * recombine hands in layout macro
A keymap for 34 keys with 4 layers and no mod-tap.
Details
- Hold
sym
to activate the symbols layer. - Hold
nav
to activate the navigation layer. - Hold
sym
andnav
together to activate the numbers layer. - The home row modifiers are oneshot so that it's possible to modify the keys on the base layer, where there are no dedicated modifiers.
swap win
sendscmd-tab
for changing focus in macOS but holdscmd
between consecutive presses.swap lang
behaves similarly but sendsctrl-space
, for changing input language in macOS.
Oneshot modifiers
The home row modifiers can either be held and used as normal, or if no other
keys are pressed while a modifier is down, the modifier will be queued and
applied to the next non-modifier keypress. For example to type shift-cmd-t
,
type sym-o-n
(or nav-a-t
), release, then hit t
.
You can and should hit chords as fast as you like because there are no timers involved.
Cancel unused modifiers by tapping nav
or sym
.
Userspace oneshot implementation
For my usage patterns I was hitting stuck modifiers frequently with OSM
(maybe related to #3963?). I'd like to try to help fix this in QMK proper,
but implementing oneshot mods in userspace first was:
- Fun.
- A good exploration of how I think oneshot mods should work without timers.
So in the meantime, this userspace oneshot implementation is working well for me.
Swapper
swap win
sends cmd-tab
, but holds cmd
between consecutive keypresses.
cmd
is released when some other key is hit or released. For example
nav down, swap win, swap win, nav up -> cmd down, tab, tab, cmd up
nav down, swap win, enter -> cmd down, tab, cmd up, enter
swap lang
sends ctrl-space
to swap input languages in macOS and behaves
similarly.
Why no mod-tap?
Mod-tap seems to be by far the most popular tool among users of tiny keyboards to answer the question of where to put the modifiers, and in the right hands it can clearly work brilliantly, but I've always found myself error prone and inconsistent with it.
With dedicated modifiers, there are three ways one might type ctrl-c
:
ctrl down, ctrl up, c down, c up
ctrl down, c down, ctrl up, c up
ctrl down, c down, c up, ctrl up
Basically, you never have to worry about the keyups, as long as the keydowns
occur in the correct order. Similarly, there are three ways one might type
ac
:
a down, a up, c down, c up
a down, c down, a up, c up
a down, c down, c up, a up
Replace a
with ctrl
and this is exactly what we had before! So if we want
to put a
and ctrl
on the same key we have a problem, because without
considering timing these sequences become ambiguous. So let's consider timing.
The solution to the ambiguity that QMK employs is to configure the
TAPPING_TERM
and consider a key held rather than tapped if it is held for
long enough. My problem with this is that it forces you to slow down to use
modifiers. By its very nature the tapping term must be longer than the longest
you would ever hold a key while typing on the slowest laziest Sunday afternoon.
I'm not typing at 100% speed at all times, but when I am, having to think about
timing and consciously slow down for certain actions never fails to trip me up.
So alas, mod-tap is not for me -- but if it works for you, more power to you. :)