X-Git-Url: https://git.donarmstrong.com/?p=qmk_firmware.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Ffaq_general.md;h=7647b1c2a1407cb6bd4d5b495afdc3158236825e;hp=fcc40e0a1fe02602ba7c5b49f402ad098436b878;hb=32bb8f6b8af104c4a64b029820a4c7014eaf825d;hpb=9d1a08e38ac9937cff4e61abfd0acc26ad5fdf4a diff --git a/docs/faq_general.md b/docs/faq_general.md index fcc40e0a1..7647b1c2a 100644 --- a/docs/faq_general.md +++ b/docs/faq_general.md @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ ## What Differences Are There Between QMK and TMK? -TMK was originally designed and implemented by [Jun Wako](https://github.com/tmk). QMK started as [Jack Humbert's](https://github.com/jackhumbert) fork of TMK for the Planck. After a while Jack's fork had diverged quite a bit from TMK, and in 2015 Jack decided to rename his fork to QMK. +TMK was originally designed and implemented by [Jun Wako](https://github.com/tmk). QMK started as [Jack Humbert](https://github.com/jackhumbert)'s fork of TMK for the Planck. After a while Jack's fork had diverged quite a bit from TMK, and in 2015 Jack decided to rename his fork to QMK. From a technical standpoint QMK builds upon TMK by adding several new features. Most notably QMK has expanded the number of available keycodes and uses these to implement advanced features like `S()`, `LCTL()`, and `MO()`. You can see a complete list of these keycodes in [Keycodes](keycodes.md).