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					148 lines
				
				5.5 KiB
			
		
		
			
		
	
	
					148 lines
				
				5.5 KiB
			| 
								 
											8 years ago
										 
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								Dactyl manuform
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								======
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								the [Dactyl-Manuform](https://github.com/tshort/dactyl-keyboard) is a split curved keyboard based on the design of [adereth dactyl](https://github.com/adereth/dactyl-keyboard) and thumb cluster design of the [manuform](https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=46015.0) keyboard, the hardware is similar to the let's split keyboard. all information needed for making one is in the first link.
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								## First Time Setup
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								Download or clone the `qmk_firmware` repo and navigate to its top level directory. Once your build environment is setup, you'll be able to generate the default .hex using:
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								```
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								$ make dactyl_manuform:dvorak
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								```
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								You will see a lot of output and if everything worked correctly you will see the built hex file:
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								```
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								dactyl_manuform_dvorak.hex
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								```
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								If you would like to use one of the alternative keymaps, or create your own, copy one of the existing [keymaps](keymaps/) and run make like so:
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								```
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								$ make dactyl_manuform:YOUR_KEYMAP_NAME
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								```
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								If everything worked correctly you will see a file:
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								```
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								dactyl_manuform_YOUR_KEYMAP_NAME.hex
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								```
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								For more information on customizing keymaps, take a look at the primary documentation for [Customizing Your Keymap](/docs/faq_keymap.md) in the main readme.md.
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								Required Hardware
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								-----------------
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								Apart from diodes and key switches for the keyboard matrix in each half, you
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								will need:
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								* 2 Arduino Pro Micros. You can find these on AliExpress for ≈3.50USD each.
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								* 2 TRRS sockets and 1 TRRS cable, or 2 TRS sockets and 1 TRS cable
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								Alternatively, you can use any sort of cable and socket that has at least 3
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								wires. If you want to use I2C to communicate between halves, you will need a
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								cable with at least 4 wires and 2x 4.7kΩ pull-up resistors
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								Optional Hardware
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								-----------------
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								A speaker can be hooked-up to either side to the `5` (`C6`) pin and `GND`, and turned on via `AUDIO_ENABLE`.
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								Wiring
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								------
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								The 3 wires of the TRS/TRRS cable need to connect GND, VCC, and digital pin 3 (i.e.
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								PD0 on the ATmega32u4) between the two Pro Micros.
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								Next, wire your key matrix to any of the remaining 17 IO pins of the pro micro
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								and modify the `matrix.c` accordingly.
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								The wiring for serial:
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								The wiring for i2c:
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								The pull-up resistors may be placed on either half. It is also possible
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								to use 4 resistors and have the pull-ups in both halves, but this is
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								unnecessary in simple use cases.
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								You can change your configuration between serial and i2c by modifying your `config.h` file.
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								Notes on Software Configuration
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								-------------------------------
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								the keymaps in here are for the 4x5 layout of the keyboard only.
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								Flashing
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								-------
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								From the top level `qmk_firmware` directory run `make KEYBOARD:KEYMAP:avrdude` for automatic serial port resolution and flashing.
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								Example: `make lets_split/rev2:default:avrdude`
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								Choosing which board to plug the USB cable into (choosing Master)
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								--------
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								Because the two boards are identical, the firmware has logic to differentiate the left and right board.
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								It uses two strategies to figure things out: looking at the EEPROM (memory on the chip) or looking if the current board has the usb cable.
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								The EEPROM approach requires additional setup (flashing the eeprom) but allows you to swap the usb cable to either side.
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								The USB cable approach is easier to setup and if you just want the usb cable on the left board, you do not need to do anything extra.
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								### Setting the left hand as master
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								If you always plug the usb cable into the left board, nothing extra is needed as this is the default. Comment out `EE_HANDS` and comment out `I2C_MASTER_RIGHT` or `MASTER_RIGHT` if for some reason it was set.
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								### Setting the right hand as master
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								If you always plug the usb cable into the right board, add an extra flag to your `config.h`
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								```
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								 #define MASTER_RIGHT
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								```
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								### Setting EE_hands to use either hands as master
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								If you define `EE_HANDS` in your `config.h`, you will need to set the
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								EEPROM for the left and right halves.
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								The EEPROM is used to store whether the
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								half is left handed or right handed. This makes it so that the same firmware
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								file will run on both hands instead of having to flash left and right handed
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								versions of the firmware to each half. To flash the EEPROM file for the left
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								half run:
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								```
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								avrdude -p atmega32u4 -P $(COM_PORT) -c avr109 -U eeprom:w:eeprom-lefthand.eep
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								// or the equivalent in dfu-programmer
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								```
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								and similarly for right half
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								```
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								avrdude -p atmega32u4 -P $(COM_PORT) -c avr109 -U eeprom:w:eeprom-righhand.eep
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								// or the equivalent in dfu-programmer
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								```
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								NOTE: replace `$(COM_PORT)` with the port of your device (e.g. `/dev/ttyACM0`)
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								After you have flashed the EEPROM, you then need to set `EE_HANDS` in your config.h, rebuild the hex files and reflash.
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								Note that you need to program both halves, but you have the option of using
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								different keymaps for each half. You could program the left half with a QWERTY
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								layout and the right half with a Colemak layout using bootmagic's default layout option.
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								Then if you connect the left half to a computer by USB the keyboard will use QWERTY and Colemak when the
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								right half is connected.
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								Notes on Using Pro Micro 3.3V
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								-----------------------------
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								Do update the `F_CPU` parameter in `rules.mk` to `8000000` which reflects
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								the frequency on the 3.3V board.
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								Also, if the slave board is producing weird characters in certain columns,
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								update the following line in `matrix.c` to the following:
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								```
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								// _delay_us(30);  // without this wait read unstable value.
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								_delay_us(300);  // without this wait read unstable value.
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								```
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