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qmk_firmware/docs/quantum_keycodes.md
Drashna Jaelre 02655690f4
[Core] Add compile/make macro to core (#15959)
* [Core] Add KC_MAKE keycode to core

fix linting

fix testing error

work around test idiocyncracies

fix more lint

something something stupid tests

add doc

* updates based on feedback

* Add bad names

* Fixup docs

* semantics but cleaner

Co-authored-by: precondition <57645186+precondition@users.noreply.github.com>

* Hide oneshot checks behind preprocessors

* Move no-compile option around

* Fix formatting

* make shift optional

* Make opt in

* fix formatting

* update send string function name

Co-authored-by: Joel Challis <git@zvecr.com>

Co-authored-by: precondition <57645186+precondition@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Joel Challis <git@zvecr.com>
2022-03-17 21:19:34 +00:00

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Quantum Keycodes

Quantum keycodes allow for easier customization of your keymap than the basic ones provide, without having to define custom actions.

All keycodes within quantum are numbers between 0x0000 and 0xFFFF. Within your keymap.c it may look like you have functions and other special cases, but ultimately the C preprocessor will translate those into a single 4 byte integer. QMK has reserved 0x0000 through 0x00FF for standard keycodes. These are keycodes such as KC_A, KC_1, and KC_LCTL, which are basic keys defined in the USB HID specification.

On this page we have documented keycodes between 0x00FF and 0xFFFF which are used to implement advanced quantum features. If you define your own custom keycodes they will be put into this range as well.

QMK Keycodes :id=qmk-keycodes

Key Aliases Description
QK_BOOTLOADER QK_BOOT Put the keyboard into bootloader mode for flashing
QK_DEBUG_TOGGLE DB_TOGG Toggle debug mode
QK_CLEAR_EEPROM EE_CLR Reinitializes the keyboard's EEPROM (persistent memory)
QK_MAKE Sends qmk compile -kb (keyboard) -km (keymap), or qmk flash if shift is held