dactyl-manuform-keymap
miryoku
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4.2 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | 3 months ago | |
C | Makefile | |
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dactyl-manuform-keymap
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looking for bespoke solution
Regarding chording, you might find inspiration in the chording schemes in Ikcelaks’ Magic Sturdy, the Ardux project, and precondition's "steno-lite" combos.
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Split Manuform for more than a year
I spent most of the last 2 years using variants of this but more recently I’ve switch from home row mods to one shot mods and modifier positions similar to Xah. https://github.com/precondition/dactyl-manuform-keymap
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New and exciting forearm pain
Something that made a big difference for me was home row mods. If you can use QMK to embed ctrl, shift, alt, gui into ‘long press’ on the home row it will reduce strain from overusing the pinky finger. After about 1 year of using a variation of this setup I think home row mods reducing pinky finger strain has been the most noticeable improvement although there are many more benefits to switching to something like this dactyl manuform kb. https://github.com/precondition/dactyl-manuform-keymap
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Keymap Tinkering
How did I arrive to this keymap? It's been a journey. I used home row mods for a few months. This felt great, but with my sloppy typing I routinely got false triggers (despite IGNORE_MOD_TAP_INTERRUPT) and struggled to get my typing speed much above 60 wpm. In an attempt to reduce false triggers, I wrote my own (not very good) mod-tap implementation, then realized this is a hard problem. I tried Precondition "steno lite" (see the system of combos in his keymap), and worked through some lessons from Zack Brown's excellent Learn Plover site to learn a little about real steno. I've dabbled with RSTHD and BEAKL15 before going back to Dvorak.
miryoku
- Principles for Keyboard Layouts (2022)
- Been at this for 6 months, need advice
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Idea: script for generating QMK keymap and diagram
I've seen https://github.com/manna-harbour/miryoku but it doesn't appear to be easily modified.
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Recommendations for laptop user
A 75% keyboard still require quite a lot of wrist movement, which is not ideal in your situation. It's better to learn to use layers, you could still have all the function keys and such with a 36 or 34 keys. With with such a small keyboard you don't need to move your wrist while typing. A Corne or even a Ferris Sweep can do the job with a proper keymap, like Miryoku.
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Dvorak map in Miryoku
If you prefer to have semicolon on Base you'd substitute custom Base, Nav, and Sym layers, swapping semicolon and slash, with https://github.com/manna-harbour/miryoku/discussions/85.
- Miryoku: An ergonomic, minimal, orthogonal, and universal keyboard layout
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My Unhealthy Relationship with Keyboards ⌨
The Miryoku layout [1] has a dedicated number layer which turns the left half into a number pad. Practical (once you get used to it) and portable.
[1] https://github.com/manna-harbour/miryoku
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ZSA Voyager: Low profile split keyboard
It's understandable if some people would prefer a larger layout. I wouldn't argue people should be using smaller keyboards.
It's "I don't mind moving my hand to hit the key" vs "I don't mind holding down some Fn key to hit the key". (Or with F1-F12 on Macbooks, you need to both hold down a Fn key and move your hand).
For an example of "36 keys ... how", I think the popular miryoku layout is fascinating. https://github.com/manna-harbour/miryoku/tree/master/docs/re... -- Often, mnemonics for particular keys aren't all that complicated.
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Split kb symbol layer for dev/vim user
Except for those who use Miryoku, which is not optimized for software development, probably every single person here will have its own custom keymap.
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My new work setup, and a repurposing of my old setup
The keyboard on the other desk is a wireless Corne low profile kit I built up a while back using a couple nice!nano controllers and their low power display too. For general typing I don't have much of a problem going back and forth between the two, but the Corne is only 34 keys and I use a complex layout called Miryoku to get access to most symbols and functions I have by default on my 360.
What are some alternatives?
qmk - My fork of QMK firmware (see https://github.com/joric/qmk/wiki)
keyboard-layout - keyboard-layout pools all the needed files to set up my custom XKB keyboard layout (takbl) on Linux Ubuntu.
qmk
ferris - A low profile split keyboard designed to satisfy one single use case elegantly
Teensy3.2-CherryStream-QMK - QMK Firmware for handwired Cherry Stream keyboard with OLED running Teensy 3.2
corne - QMK files for my 36-key Corne keyboard
zmk-config
halmak - The final version of the AI designed keyboard layout
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
vim-unimpaired - unimpaired.vim: Pairs of handy bracket mappings
YampadV2-Updated - This is the updated version of CustomKBD's variant of Matt's Yampad. CustomKBD's Yampad has an encoder incorporated into the design. I simply updated CustomKBD's firmware files for the new QMK firmware stucture. It complies and produces the default hex file through QMK MSYS.
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families