Skip to content

thoelze1/kmonad

 
 

Repository files navigation

KMonad

The Onion of Keyboard Management Tools, available on GNU/Linux, Windows, and MacOS!

FeaturesInstallationConfigurationTroubleshootingDisclaimer

Introduction

KMonad is an advanced tool that lets you infinitely customize and extend the functionalities of almost any keyboard. For a detailed list of features, see here.

If you want to get started with the latest, stable binary release, please check out the master branch, if you are interested in the latest additions and tweaks, switch on over to develop and compile your own binary.

Additionally, if you need any help or just want to say hi, you can join our Discord server or jump into our IRC channel (#[email protected]), which is also bridged with matrix (#kmonad:libera.chat).

Features

KMonad offers advanced customization features such as layers, multi-tap, tap-hold, and much more. These features are usually available at the hardware level on the QMK-firmware enabled keyboards. However, KMonad allows you to enjoy such features in virtually any keyboard by low-level system manipulations.

For a good introduction to KMonad, have a look at this Youtube video.

Key Customizations

KMonad lets you map any keyboard button to any keymap. Want to swap the useless Caps Lock key with the Escape key? Want to have your modifiers such as Shift and Control on your home row, without breaking your normal typing flow? Want a modifier that is combination of Alt + Ctrl + Super + Shift? You can do all of those and much more!

Layers

A layer is a set of keymaps assigned to your keyboard's buttons. You can have as many layers on top of your base layer as you want. For instance, you can have your regular QWERTY layout, a Colemak/ Dvorak layout, a numbers and symbols layer, a function keys layer, a layer for mouse navigation and system controls --- all in a 60% keyboard. When a particular layer is active, any keypress is interpreted according to the layout defined in that layer. With proper configurations, you can jump to a specific layer or switch to one for the next keypress, or do various other complex manipulations.

Multi-Use and Multi-Tap Buttons

One of the distinguishing features of KMonad is the vast capabilities with Multi-Use Buttons. You can have a single button do different things based on whether it is pressed quickly in succession, or pressed once, or held. For example, you can configure the Caps Lock key to act as an Escape button when pressed once and released, a Ctrl modifier when held-down, and a button to jump to a layer when pressed twice quickly in succession. You can make the left and right Shift keys to act like left and right parentheses (like the Space Cadet Shift keys) when tapped once, and regular Shift keys when held down. The possibilities are infinite!

Command Buttons

With Command Buttons you can trigger shell commands with a tap of any button.

And More!

There are many more exciting features of KMonad that you can find in the configuration tutorial.

Installation

For more information on how to install KMonad, please refer to:

Configuration

For information on how to configure KMonad, please refer you to:

Want to add your own keyboard configuration to ./keymap? Fork KMonad, create a new subdirectory using your GitHub username and submit a pull request.

Editor Support for the Configuration Language

Startup

There are startup scripts available for different init systems in startup.

Troubleshooting

For several commonly asked questions regarding various configuration issues, please see:

Disclaimer

The original maintainer is chronically ill and currently unable to work on KMonad. Luckily we have a very helpful and pleasant community that is happy to be of assistance. When energy and circumstance permits, the core developer will labour to make progress, but for now this will be sporadically and unpredictably.

About

An advanced keyboard manager

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Haskell 81.8%
  • C++ 5.9%
  • Nix 5.5%
  • C 3.5%
  • Emacs Lisp 2.7%
  • Shell 0.4%
  • Other 0.2%