README update to reflect the latest changes, included screenshots

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Maarten van Gompel 2021-08-27 00:22:24 +02:00 committed by John Sullivan
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# wvkbd - On-screen keyboard for wlroots that sucks less
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jjsullivan5196/wvkbd/master/contrib/grab.png" width=350 />
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/proycon/wvkbd/master/contrib/wvkbd-mobintl.jpg" width=300 /> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/proycon/wvkbd/master/contrib/wvkbd-mobintl-cyrillic.jpg" width=300 />
This project aims to deliver a minimum implementation of a wlroots on-screen
This project aims to deliver a minimal but practically usable implementation of a wlroots on-screen
keyboard in legible C. This will **only** be a keyboard, not a feedback buzzer,
led blinker, or anything that requires more than what's needed to input text
quickly. The end product should be a static codebase that can be patched to add
new features.
At the moment work still needs to be done to make the keyboard fully functional
and determine a minimum feature set. As of now, the following works:
## Features
- Typing, modifier locking, layout switching
- Positive visual feedback on key presses
- Custom layouts
- Custom layouts and underlying keymaps
- On-the-fly layout and keymap switching
- Custom color schemes
- Proper font drawing
- Intuitive layouts
- International layouts (cyrillic, arabic)
- Support for 'Copy' keys which are not on the keymap
- Emoji support
- Compose key for character variants (e.g. diacritics)
- Show/hide keyboard on signals (SIGUSR1 = hide, SIGUSR2 = show)
- Automatic portrait/landscape detection and subsequent layout switching
There are some relatively critical areas that still need work:
- Proper drawing of font glyphs/fontconfig alternatives (unknown glyphs for the
configured font are not drawn)
<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/proycon/wvkbd/master/contrib/wvkbd-mobintl-landscape.jpg" width=640 />
There are some areas that still need work:
- Make sure the virtual input method in wayland is working as best as it can
- Customize keyboard window docking
- Nicer layout drawing/padding
- Determine if some dependencies are really needed (fontconfig is VERY
annoying, and wld may not be strictly necessary)
And some nice to haves:
- Daemon mode (hide/show keyboard on signals)
- Support for input method protocol in wayland, ability to respond to text
fields
- Alt input modes for things like emojis
- Typical international layouts in the repository
Of course there's probably some more I'm forgetting, everything here is very
much early WIP so things will change very quickly.
## Install
You'll need the following developer packages
- fontconfig
- pangocairo
- wayland-client
- xkbcommon
- pixman
After cloning this repo, run `git submodule update --init --recursive`
Make any customizations you would like in `config.def.h` and run `make`
Make any customizations you would like in `config.h` and run `make`, then `./wvkbd`
The default set of layouts is called `mobintl` *(mobile international)*, which groups various layouts aimed at mobile devices
and also attempts to accommodate various international users. The resulting binary is called `wvkbd-mobintl`.
You can, however, define your own layouts by copying and and modifying `layout.mobintl.h` and `keymap.mobintl.h`
(replace `mobintl` for something like `yourlayout`). Then make your layout set using `make LAYOUT=yourlayout`, and
the resulting binary will be `wvkbd-yourlayout`
## Usage
Run `wvkbd-mobintl` (or the binary for your custom layout set).
You can switch between the layouts/layers of the keyboard by pressing the Abc/Sym key in the bottom-left. If you only
want a subset of the available layers, you can define which wants you want and in what order you want to cycle through
them using the `-l` parameter. This takes takes a ordered comma separated list of
layout names that are defined in your layout set.
The keyboard can be hidden by sending it a `SIGUSR1` signal and shown again by sending it `SIGUSR2`. This saves some
start up time and may be appropriate in some low-resource environments.
Wvkbd has an output mode `-o` that will echo its output to standard output. This facility can be used if users want
audio/haptic feedback, a feature explicitly out of scope for wvkbd. To achieve this, simply pipe wvkbd's output through the external tool
[clickclack](https://git.sr.ht/~proycon/clickclack):
`$ wvkbd-mobileintl -l simple,special,emoji -o | clickclack -V -f keypress.wav`
## Contribute
@ -60,3 +76,11 @@ PRs. I could also use some nice branding if that tickles your fancy.
For code contributions, all I ask for now is you run `make format` (requires
`clang-format`) before opening a PR and include as much relevant detail as
possible.
## Related projects
* [clickclack](https://git.sr.ht/~proycon/clickclack) - Audio/haptic feedback (standalone)
* [Sxmo](https://sxmo.org) - A hackable mobile interface environment for Linux phones that adopted wvkbd as its keyboard
* [svkbd](https://tools.suckless.org/x/svkbd/) - A similar project as wvkbd but for X11 rather than Wayland
* [squeekboard](https://gitlab.gnome.org/World/Phosh/squeekboard) - The virtual keyboard developed for the Librem5 (used
by Phosh)

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