qmk_firmware/keyboards/just60
James Young 4b453dca92
Remove MIDI Configuration boilerplate (#11151)
* remove keyboard-level instances of `MIDI_ENABLE = no`

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e  '/^[ #]*MIDI_ENABLE[ \t]*=[ \t]*no/d' {} +
```

Co-Authored-By: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>

* fix case-sensitivity issues on MIDI_ENABLE

Change instances of `MIDI_ENABLE = YES` to `MIDI_ENABLE = yes`.

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;MIDI_ENABLE[ \t]*=[ \t]*[Yy][Ee][Ss];MIDI_ENABLE = yes;g' {} +
```

* replace `# MIDI controls` with `# MIDI support`

Replace `# MIDI controls` with `# MIDI support` in keyboard-level `rules.mk` files.

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;#[ \t]*MIDI[ \t]*\(controls\|support\).*;# MIDI support;g' {} +
```

* align inline comments

Aligns the inline comments to the length used by the QMK AVR rules.mk template.

Command:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;MIDI_ENABLE *= *yes.*;MIDI_ENABLE = yes           # MIDI support;g'  {} +
```

* remove commented instances of `MIDI_ENABLE` from keyboard `rules.mk` files

Commands:

```
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;#\([ \t]*MIDI_ENABLE\) = yes; \1 = no ;' {} +
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e 's;^\([ \t]*\)\(MIDI_ENABLE = no\);\2\1;' {} +
find keyboards/ -type f -name 'rules.mk' -and -not -path '*/keymaps/*' -exec sed -i -e '/^[ #]\+MIDI_ENABLE *= *no/d' {} +
```

* remove MIDI configuration boilerplate from keyboard config.h files

Co-authored-by: Nick Brassel <nick@tzarc.org>
2021-08-16 06:51:13 +10:00
..
keymaps
.noci
config.h
info.json
just60.h
readme.md
rules.mk

readme.md

Just60

Just60 keyboard produced by Yang. The keyboard comes with a custom Mass Storage Device bootloader and a TMK based firmware from ydkb.io.

To use a QMK based firmware, you might want to install a QMK bootloader. The PCB exposes 6 pins for ISP(In-System Programming), and they are located just under the ATMega32U4 chip. From left to right, the pins are VCC, SCLK, MOSI, MISO, RESET, GND. The GND is the square one. You could program the flash with any AVR programmer, or a Raspberry Pi with avrdude.

Backlight LEDs and Bluetooth are not working yet.

Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):

make just60:default

See the build environment setup and the make instructions for more information. Brand new to QMK? Start with our Complete Newbs Guide.