X-Git-Url: https://git.donarmstrong.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Fquantum_keycodes.md;h=1d7fc0e12706fc399bfe6f9e3a56205d57884b21;hb=48913153c33c52cf95ab6ea8032894f3fc60206a;hp=4b7ee93846a71f72155a1226400656b5f2e9e130;hpb=4c675a83ba1d3561bfd6baad57a250066f5db4d3;p=qmk_firmware.git diff --git a/docs/quantum_keycodes.md b/docs/quantum_keycodes.md index 4b7ee9384..1d7fc0e12 100644 --- a/docs/quantum_keycodes.md +++ b/docs/quantum_keycodes.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ Quantum keycodes allow for easier customisation 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. +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.