diff options
author | Hugo Gayosso <tribrhy@gmail.com> | 2017-12-20 11:33:34 -0500 |
---|---|---|
committer | Jack Humbert <jack.humb@gmail.com> | 2017-12-20 14:38:24 -0500 |
commit | d8f0faabdad2e2bc80d2258bda80e6b9e9918b63 (patch) | |
tree | 46a21331cfaf853562d070228ca2ff519062ded3 /docs/custom_quantum_functions.md | |
parent | 818042b2c3820f4ca5ae25d5de82851ca8405f06 (diff) | |
download | qmk_firmware-d8f0faabdad2e2bc80d2258bda80e6b9e9918b63.tar.gz qmk_firmware-d8f0faabdad2e2bc80d2258bda80e6b9e9918b63.zip |
Fixed typo
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/custom_quantum_functions.md')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/custom_quantum_functions.md | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/docs/custom_quantum_functions.md b/docs/custom_quantum_functions.md index 3df1d73a2..e7a45e0bf 100644 --- a/docs/custom_quantum_functions.md +++ b/docs/custom_quantum_functions.md | |||
@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ enum my_keycodes { | |||
36 | 36 | ||
37 | ## Programming the Behavior of Any Keycode | 37 | ## Programming the Behavior of Any Keycode |
38 | 38 | ||
39 | 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. | 39 | 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 to you to send any key up or down events that are required. |
40 | 40 | ||
41 | These function are called every time a key is pressed or released. | 41 | These function are called every time a key is pressed or released. |
42 | 42 | ||