qmk_firmware/keyboards/rgbkb/zen
James Young 4b453dca92
Remove MIDI Configuration boilerplate (#11151)
* remove keyboard-level instances of `MIDI_ENABLE = no`

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e  '/^[ #]*MIDI_ENABLE[ \t]*=[ \t]*no/d' {} +
```

Co-Authored-By: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>

* fix case-sensitivity issues on MIDI_ENABLE

Change instances of `MIDI_ENABLE = YES` to `MIDI_ENABLE = yes`.

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;MIDI_ENABLE[ \t]*=[ \t]*[Yy][Ee][Ss];MIDI_ENABLE = yes;g' {} +
```

* replace `# MIDI controls` with `# MIDI support`

Replace `# MIDI controls` with `# MIDI support` in keyboard-level `rules.mk` files.

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;#[ \t]*MIDI[ \t]*\(controls\|support\).*;# MIDI support;g' {} +
```

* align inline comments

Aligns the inline comments to the length used by the QMK AVR rules.mk template.

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;MIDI_ENABLE *= *yes.*;MIDI_ENABLE = yes           # MIDI support;g'  {} +
```

* remove commented instances of `MIDI_ENABLE` from keyboard `rules.mk` files

Commands:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;#\([ \t]*MIDI_ENABLE\) = yes; \1 = no ;' {} +
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;^\([ \t]*\)\(MIDI_ENABLE = no\);\2\1;' {} +
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e '/^[ #]\+MIDI_ENABLE *= *no/d' {} +
```

* remove MIDI configuration boilerplate from keyboard config.h files

Co-authored-by: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>
2021-08-16 06:51:13 +10:00
..
common
rev1
rev2
.noci
config.h
readme.md
rules.mk
zen.c
zen.h

Zen Keyboard

A split ergo keyboard with a few goals in mind:

  • Be as thin as possible. Other split KBs (Let's Split, Nyquist, Iris) are 15.2mm thick. The Zen rev2 is only 13.2mm thick including switches and caps when using Kailh Choc low-profile switches, and 22.1mm using standard MX switches and DSA keycaps.
  • Layout designed for gaming. 1.5u pinky keys, ortho alphas, and angled thumb keys. After trying Ortholinear, Atreus62, and Ergodox, this is the best layout for gaming and typing.
  • Per-key RGB lighting. 34 WS2812b LEDs per side make it exceptionally bright
  • Price. Using Arduino Pro Micro, SK6812 LEDs, and PCB FR4 for the case, the cost of each half without switches or caps can be reduced to under $20 when purchased at volume.
  • Options. The Zen rev2 comes with rotary encoder support, SSD1306 OLED pinout, USB-C or TRRS interconnect, and jumpers to enable compatibility with the QMK Proton-C and the Keeb.io Elite-C

Keyboard Maintainer: Legonut Hardware Supported: Zen rev1, Zen rev2 Hardware Availability: RGBKB.net

A build guide and more info for this keyboard can be found here: Zen Build Guide.

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

make rgbkb/zen/rev2:default

To build for a Proton-C:

make rgbkb/zen/rev2:default CTPC=yes

Note: The Proton-C does not have split keyboard, or encoder support. Also OLED driver support is untested. Will update as status changes.

See build environment setup then the make instructions for more information.