7fbe6c3594
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> |
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.. | ||
6ball | ||
9key | ||
acr60 | ||
alps64 | ||
amj40 | ||
amj60 | ||
amjpad | ||
atomic | ||
atreus | ||
atreus62 | ||
bananasplit | ||
bantam44 | ||
bfake | ||
bmini | ||
chibios_test | ||
chimera_ortho | ||
clueboard | ||
converter | ||
daisy | ||
deltasplit75 | ||
dichotemy | ||
dk60 | ||
dz60 | ||
eco | ||
ergodone | ||
ergodox/keymaps/narze | ||
ergodox_ez | ||
ergodox_infinity | ||
fc980c | ||
felix | ||
four_banger | ||
frosty_flake | ||
gh60 | ||
gherkin | ||
gonnerd | ||
hadron | ||
handwired | ||
hhkb | ||
infinity60 | ||
iris | ||
jc65 | ||
jd40 | ||
jd45 | ||
jj40 | ||
jm60 | ||
kbd75 | ||
kc60 | ||
kinesis | ||
kitten_paw | ||
kmac | ||
knops | ||
kona_classic | ||
lets_split | ||
levinson | ||
m10a | ||
maxipad | ||
mechmini | ||
mf68 | ||
minidox | ||
mitosis | ||
miuni32 | ||
mt40 | ||
nano | ||
niu_mini | ||
nyquist | ||
obelus | ||
org60 | ||
orthodox | ||
pearl | ||
pegasushoof | ||
phantom | ||
planck | ||
preonic | ||
ps2avrGB | ||
roadkit | ||
s60_x | ||
s65_x | ||
satan | ||
sixkeyboard | ||
subatomic | ||
sweet16 | ||
tada68 | ||
tiger_lily | ||
tomato | ||
tv44 | ||
uk78 | ||
v60_type_r | ||
vision_division | ||
viterbi | ||
whitefox | ||
xd60 | ||
xd75 | ||
ymd96 | ||
readme.md |
Included Keyboards
QMK runs on a diverse range of keyboards. Some of these keyboards are officially supported and see constant community contributions, while others are part of the repository for historical reasons.
Official QMK Keyboards
These keyboards are manufactured by the maintainers of QMK.
Ortholinear Keyboards - Jack Humbert
What makes OLKB keyboards shine is a combo of lean aesthetics, compact size, and killer tactile feel. These are available through olkb.com as well as through Massdrop from time to time, as easy to assemble kits.
- Planck — A 40% DIY powerhouse of customizability and modification capability. It's a lean, mean, typing machine.
- Preonic — Like the Planck, but bigger. 50%.
- Atomic — Imagine the size of the Planck. Now imagine the size of the Preonic. Now imagine bigger. That is the Atomic. A 60% keyboard.
ErgoDox EZ - Erez Zukerman
Made in Taiwan using advanced robotic manufacturing, the ErgoDox EZ is a fully-assembled, premium ergonomic keyboard. Its split design allows you to place both halves shoulder width, and its custom-made wrist rests and tilt/tent kit make for incredibly comfortable typing. Available on ergodox-ez.com.
- ErgoDox EZ — Our one and only product. Yes, it's that awesome. Comes with either printed or blank keycaps, and 7 different keyswitch types.
Clueboard - Zach White
Designed and built in Felton, CA, Clueboards keyboard emphasize quality and locally sourced components, available on clueboard.co
- Clueboard — The 66% custom keyboard.
- Cluecard — A small board to help you hack on QMK.
- Cluepad — A mechanical numpad with QMK superpowers.
Community-supported QMK Keyboards
These keyboards are part of the QMK repository, but their manufacturers are not official maintainers of the repository.
- 9key — A 9-key minipad sold by Bishop Keyboards.
- Alps64 — A 60% keyboard for Alps keyswitches.
- AMJ60 — DIY/Assembled compact 60% keyboard.
- Arrow Pad — A custom creation by IBNobody.
- Atreus — Made by Technomancy.
- Bantam44 — It is a 44-key 40% staggered keyboard.
- Ergodox Infinity - Ergonomic Split Keyboard by Input Club.
- GH60 — A 60% Geekhack community-driven project.
- GON NerD — Korean custom 60% PCB
- Happy Hacking Keyboard — The Happy Hacking keyboard can be hacked with a custom controller to run QMK.
- Infinity 60% - — Compact community keyboard by Input Club.
- JD45 — Another Geekhack community project, designed by jdcarpe.
- KBD75 — A 75% keyboard made by made by KBDFans.
- KC60 — A programmable Chinese-made keyboard, lost in the mists of time.
- Kinesis Advantage — Contoured ergonomic keyboard by Kinesis Computer Ergonomics.
- KMAC — Korean custom keyboard.
- The Kitten Paw — A replacement controller (2016 revision) for the Filco Majestouch by Bathroom Epiphanies.
- Lets Split - Split ortholinear 40% keyboard.
- Phantom — A tenkeyless kit by Teel, also from Geekhack.
- Retro Refit — Another creation by IBNobody.
- S60-x — DIY compact keyboard designed by VinnyCordeiro for Sentraq.
- Satan — A GH60 variant.
- SixKeyBoard — A 6-key keyboard made by TechKeys.
- TheVan 44 — A 44-key staggered keybard by Evangs.
- WhiteFox — A 65% keyboard designed as a partnership by matt3o, Massdrop and Input Club
- Vision Division — Full Size / Split Linear Keyboard by IBNobody.
- XD75 — 15x5 ortholinear keyboard by XIUDI.