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authorFabian Topfstedt2017-07-25 09:48:58 +0200
committerFabian Topfstedt2017-07-25 09:48:58 +0200
commit4ee571b25734561ce44c0f22e9bff72f4a822cc3 (patch)
tree51f3b6d438e10df6f716ce58268d29319104fb8c /docs/custom_quantum_functions.md
parentee43856ff7ba37ea89d1a8a4700efba4e4f69571 (diff)
parentcefc09ae7dd88cd6b92412881888404da1abdfcb (diff)
Merge https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware
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@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ enum my_keycodes {
## Programming The Behavior Of Any Keycode
-When you want to override the behavior of an existing key, or define the behavior for a new key, you should use the `process_record_kb()' and `process_record_user()` functions. These are called by QMK during key processing before the actual key event is handled. If these functions return `true` QMK will process the keycodes as usual. That can be handy for extending the functionality of a key rather than replacing it. If these functions return `false` QMK will skip the normal key handling, and it will be up you to send any key up or down events that are required.
+When you want to override the behavior of an existing key, or define the behavior for a new key, you should use the `process_record_kb()` and `process_record_user()` functions. These are called by QMK during key processing before the actual key event is handled. If these functions return `true` QMK will process the keycodes as usual. That can be handy for extending the functionality of a key rather than replacing it. If these functions return `false` QMK will skip the normal key handling, and it will be up you to send any key up or down events that are required.
These function are called every time a key is pressed or released.