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KMK: Clackety Keyboards Powered by Python

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KMK is a feature-rich and beginner-friendly firmware for computer keyboards written and configured in CircuitPython.

For asynchronous support and chatter about KMK, join our Zulip community! In particular, swing by the Zulip chat before opening a GitHub Issue about configuration, documentation, etc. concerns.

The former Matrix and Discord rooms once linked to in this README are no longer officially supported, please do not use them!

Features

Getting Started

KMK requires CircuitPython version 7.0 or higher. Our getting started guide can be found here.

Code Style

KMK uses Black with a Python 3.6 target and, (controversially?) single quotes. Further code styling is enforced with isort and flake8 with several plugins. make fix-isort fix-formatting before a commit is a good idea, and CI will fail if inbound code does not adhere to these formatting rules. Some exceptions are found in setup.cfg loosening the rules in isolated cases, notably user_keymaps (which is also not subject to Black formatting for reasons documented in pyproject.toml).

Tests

Unit tests within the tests folder mock various CircuitPython modules to allow them to be executed in a desktop development environment.

Execute tests using the command python -m unittest.

License, Copyright, and Legal

All software in this repository is licensed under the GNU Public License, version 3. All documentation and hardware designs are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 license. Contributions to this repository must use these licenses unless otherwise agreed to by the Core team.

Due to ethical and legal concerns, any works derived from GitHub Copilot or similar artificial intelligence tooling are unacceptable for inclusion in any first-party KMK repository or other code collection. We further recommend not using GitHub Copilot while developing anything KMK-related, regardless of intent to submit upstream.