7b8545b635
MCU no longer changes to match the converter, resulting in features being disabled unnecessarily on ARM Micros. Check for a non-blank CONVERT_TO instead. |
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keymaps | ||
info.json | ||
readme.md | ||
rules.mk |
Alish40
A budget-friendly 40% Aliceish keyboard with base kit support and stylish silkscreen art.
- Keyboard Maintainer: Reed, Kyle McCreery
- Hardware Supported: Alish40 v1.3
- Hardware Availability: Alish40, fulfilled by MechWild
Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):
make reedskeebs/alish40:default
Flashing example for this keyboard:
make reedskeebs/alish40:default:flash
See the build environment setup and the make instructions for more information. Brand new to QMK? Start with our Complete Newbs Guide.
Bootloader
Enter the bootloader in 3 ways:
- Bootmagic reset: Hold down the top left key and plug in the keyboard. This will also clear EEPROM, so it is a good first step if the keyboard is misbehaving.
- Physical reset: Press the 6x6mm button below the "Alish 40" label, on the underside of the PCB. You may also use your Pro Micro's built-in reset mechanism if that is easier.
- Keycode in layout: There is no key mapped to
QK_BOOT
in the pre-created keymaps, but you may assign this key in any keymaps you create.
As a Pro Micro-compatible board, the Alish40 uses caterina
as its bootloader by default. Many popular Pro Micro alternatives like the Elite-C, Bit-C, Sea-Micro, Puchi-C etc should be flashed with a different bootloader such as atmel-dfu
.
If the incorrect bootloader is specified, bootmagic reset and the QK_BOOT
keycode will not work.
To avoid this problem, set the correct bootloader in your custom keymap's rules.mk
file before compiling, or flash using an appropriate target (e.g. make reedskeebs/alish40:default:dfu
). See flashing instructions and bootloader information for more details.