Kaleidoscope
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If you ever wanted a key that works like keys on old cell phones, when you press a key and it cycles through a number of options in a sequence, then the cycling key is what you are looking for. It is a bit different than on cell phones of old, as it is a separate key, that works in combination of other keys: you press a key, then the cycle key, and the cycle key will replace the previously input symbol with another. Keep tapping the cycle key, and it will replace symbols with new ones, in a loop.
To use the plugin, we need to include the header, and declare the behaviour used. Then, we need to place a cycle key or two on the keymap. And finally, we need to implement the cycleAction
function that gets called each time the cycling key triggers.
Key_Cycle
The key code for the cycle key. There can be as many of this on the keymap, as many one wants, but they all behave the same. There is little point in having more than one on each side.
The plugin provides a Cycle
object, but to implement the actions, we need to define a function (cycleAction
) outside of the object. A handler, of sorts. The object also provides a helper method to replace the previous symbol with another. The plugin also provides one macro that is particularly useful, and in most cases, should be used over the .replace()
method explained below.
cycleThrough(keys...)
Cycles through all the possibilities given in
keys
(starting from the beginning once it reached the end). This should be used from thecycleAction
function, once it is determined what sequence to cycle through.To make the cycling loop complete, the first element of the
keys
list should be the one that - when followed by the Cycle key - triggers the action.
.replace(key)
Deletes the previous symbol (by sending a
Backspace
), and inputs the new one. This is used bycycleThrough()
above, behind the scenes.The recommended method is to use the macro, but in special circumstances, this function can be of direct use as well.
cycleAction(previous_key, cycle_count)
The heart and soul of the plugin, that must be defined in the Sketch. It will be called whenever the cycling key triggers, and the two arguments are the last key pressed (not counting repeated taps of the cycling key itself), and the number of times the cycling key has been pressed.
It is up to us to decide what to do, and when. But the most common - and expected - action is to call
cycleThrough()
with a different sequence for each key we want to use together with the cycling key.
Starting from the example is the recommended way of getting started with the plugin.