Does anyone know if swapping the locking switch on the capslock switch for a non-locking switch, would let that key behave like a normal key?
Reason being, I really like to map capslock to control.
m3501 locking switch question
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- Location: Scotland
- Main keyboard: A zoom TKL B) (not vintage, i know)
- Main mouse: some wacky £20 sideyways one
- Favorite switch: Honestly, probably white alps
I'm just speculating, but i don't think so.
Reason being, when programming a converter you have to bind a locking switch to a specific key-code with a name along the lines of "locking caps" instead of "caps lock" , meaning they're treated differently to regular caps-lock. There's a chance you could swap the keys if you swapped their keycodes in your converter keymap, but i'm not sure enough to suggest you do it. Please read Muir's below
Last edited by podgen on 11 Aug 2023, 02:15, edited 1 time in total.
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
I shall speculate otherwise.
“Locking caps lock” is a feature in QMK etc. as a (hacky) way to support mapping other (better) mods to an unmodified latching Caps Lock. There is no inherent magic to latching switches: they’re switches, which latch. Interpreting them, controller side, is where the optional woo-woo begins.
Beware that some latching switches aren’t the same dimensions as their latch-less brothers. I believe the Apple M0110 is one such example. With those you’re better to mod the switch than replace it, else its cap won’t work. There may be other examples.
“Locking caps lock” is a feature in QMK etc. as a (hacky) way to support mapping other (better) mods to an unmodified latching Caps Lock. There is no inherent magic to latching switches: they’re switches, which latch. Interpreting them, controller side, is where the optional woo-woo begins.
Beware that some latching switches aren’t the same dimensions as their latch-less brothers. I believe the Apple M0110 is one such example. With those you’re better to mod the switch than replace it, else its cap won’t work. There may be other examples.
-
- Location: Scotland
- Main keyboard: A zoom TKL B) (not vintage, i know)
- Main mouse: some wacky £20 sideyways one
- Favorite switch: Honestly, probably white alps
Ohh ok, please ignore me!Muirium wrote: ↑10 Aug 2023, 23:42I shall speculate otherwise.
“Locking caps lock” is a feature in QMK etc. as a (hacky) way to support mapping other (better) mods to an unmodified latching Caps Lock. There is no inherent magic to latching switches: they’re switches, which latch. Interpreting them, controller side, is where the optional woo-woo begins.
Beware that some latching switches aren’t the same dimensions as their latch-less brothers. I believe the Apple M0110 is one such example. With those you’re better to mod the switch than replace it, else its cap won’t work. There may be other examples.
- matt-taco
- Location: USA, Md
- Main keyboard: IBM 4704 107
- Main mouse: M-2/PC Mouse (modded)
- Favorite switch: Model F
- DT Pro Member: -
Muirium wrote: ↑10 Aug 2023, 23:42I shall speculate otherwise.
“Locking caps lock” is a feature in QMK etc. as a (hacky) way to support mapping other (better) mods to an unmodified latching Caps Lock. There is no inherent magic to latching switches: they’re switches, which latch. Interpreting them, controller side, is where the optional woo-woo begins.
Beware that some latching switches aren’t the same dimensions as their latch-less brothers. I believe the Apple M0110 is one such example. With those you’re better to mod the switch than replace it, else its cap won’t work. There may be other examples.