qmk_firmware/keyboards/ploopyco/mouse
Drashna Jaelre 33074bcbad
[Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573)
Co-authored-by: Ryan <fauxpark@gmail.com>
2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00
..
keymaps [Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573) 2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00
config.h [Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573) 2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00
info.json [Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573) 2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00
mouse.c [Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573) 2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00
mouse.h [Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573) 2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00
readme.md [Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573) 2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00
rules.mk [Keyboard] Bug fixes and improvements to PloopyCo devices (#10573) 2020-10-27 17:09:11 +11:00

Ploopyco Mouse

Ploopyco Mouse

It's a DIY, QMK Powered Trackball!!!!

Everything works. However the scroll wheel has some issues and acts very odd.

Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):

make ploopyco/mouse:default:flash

To jump to the bootloader, hold down "Button 4" (the "forward" button on the left side)

See the build environment setup and the make instructions for more information. Brand new to QMK? Start with our Complete Newbs Guide.

Customzing your PloopyCo Trackball

While the defaults are designed so that it can be plugged in and used right away, there are a number of things that you may want to change. Such as adding DPI control, or to use the ball to scroll while holding a button. To allow for this sort of control, there is a callback for both the scroll wheel and the mouse censor.

The default behavior for this is:

void process_wheel_user(report_mouse_t* mouse_report, int16_t h, int16_t v) {
    mouse_report->h = h;
    mouse_report->v = v;
}

void process_mouse_user(report_mouse_t* mouse_report, int16_t x, int16_t y) {
    mouse_report->x = x;
    mouse_report->y = y;
}

This should allow you to more heavily customize the behavior.

Alternatively, the process_wheel and process_mouse functions can both be replaced too, to allow for even more functionality.

Additionally, you can change the DPI/CPI or speed of the krackball by calling pmw_set_cpi at any time. Additionally, there is a DPI_CONFIG macro that will cycle through an array of options for the DPI. This is set to 1200, 1600, and 2400, but can be changed. 1600 is also set to the default.

To configure/set your own array, there are two defines to use, PLOOPY_DPI_OPTIONS to set the array, and PLOOPY_DPI_DEFAULT.

#define PLOOPY_DPI_OPTIONS { 1200, 1600, 2400 }
#define PLOOPY_DPI_DEFAULT 1

The PLOOPY_DPI_OPTIONS array sets the values that you want to be able to cycle through, and the order they are in. The "default" define lets the firmware know which of these options is the default and should be loaded by default.

The DPI_CONFIG macro will cycle through the values in the array, each time you hit it. And it stores this value in persistent memory, so it will load it the next time the device powers up.

Programming QMK-DFU onto the PloopyCo Mouse

If you would rather have DFU on this board, you can use the QMK-DFU bootloader on the device. To do so, you want to run:

make ploopyco/trackball:default:production

Once you have that, you'll need to ISP Flash the chip with the new bootloader hex file created (or the production hex), and set the fuses:

Fuse Setting
Low 0xDF
High 0xD8 or 0x98
Extended 0xCB

Original (Caterina) settings:

Fuse Setting
Low 0xFF
High 0xD8
Extended 0xFE