- Improved "Colemak[eD]" AltGr mappings (lv3-4), placing dead keys on AltGr+symbol keys
- Powerful Extend layers using Caps Lock as a lv5 modifier for navigation/editing from the home position and more!
- Comfy Angle/Wide ergo modifications to improve wrist angles(!), hand spacing and right pinky movement+load
- The Curl-DH ergo mod to allow a more natural finger curvature and avoid lateral stretches
- The Colemak-DH layout on normal row-staggered keyboards, is a combination of the Curl-DH and Angle mods
- The Sym ergo mod to improve access to often-used symbol keys
- For several locales, a 'Unified Symbols' layout with only a few necessary changes from the standard Colemak[eD]
- Also, a layout to 'Keep Local Symbols' like their default (QWERTY-type) counterparts for that locale
- Intuitive phonetic layouts for Cyrillic, Greek and Hebrew scripts
- Mirrored Colemak that allows one-handed typing with practically no re-learning (if I ever break an arm...)
- The 4 Tarmak transitional Colemak layouts for learning Colemak(-DH) in smaller steps if so desired
The main Big Bag pages are found at https://dreymar.colemak.org/. To see XKB info boxes there, select the Tux platform icon.
- First, run the install script. This copies my modified files into the system X11 directory. Original files are backed up by default.
- You can now probably use the system's layout settings to choose a setup.
- For info on what your choices are, consult the Big Bag pages.
- However, some layout settings won't let you set the model component that I use for some ergo mods.
- The setkb script activates a Big Bag layout setup (model, layout and option components) using a
setxkbmap
command. - The setkb script can write its command to a file that gets sourced at startup, like
~/.bashrc
; check your distro for which file(s) to use. - Run the install and setkb scripts with -h (or look inside them) for more help and info about their workings!
- Learn about
setkb.sh "model locale variant"
shortstring syntax in the BigBag.- The default is
"5caw us us"
: PC105(ISO) board with Curl(DH)AngleWide mods, US locale, Cmk-eD UniversalSymbols variant. - To switch to, say, an ANSI board without ergo mods, that's
4n
instead of5caw
. Look in the scripts.
- The default is
- NOTE: It may be necessary to select "Use system defaults" if you have changed anything in the OS GUI layout settings.
- Before trying out the BigBag, you may want to find out what your current XKB settings are. One way of seeing what you use is
setxkbmap -v 9
.- To get the standard US default layout back, you can use
setkb 4n
for ANSI keyboards;5n
for ISO. What you want depends on your locale. - Generally, use
setkb 4n/5n [loc [var]]
to get back your locale layout/model. The[var]
is for variant; omit it for the default/basic one.
- To get the standard US default layout back, you can use
- Due to complaints from new users that Extend on F# keys interferes with
Ctrl+Alt+F#
TTY shortcuts, FKey Extend is now disabled by default.- You can enable FKey Extend by activating the include "extend(lv5_fk)" bit (delete the trailing slashes) in the
symbols/extend
file. - If you had already installed the BigBag you must either edit the file in its target X11 directory, or edit and then reinstall the files.
- In theory, we could make such shortcuts part of Extend so you can have both them and the Multimedia key shortcuts. I'll think about it.
- You can enable FKey Extend by activating the include "extend(lv5_fk)" bit (delete the trailing slashes) in the
- To just get Extend with the currently active layout, use
setxkbmap -v 9 -option "" -option "misc:extend,lv5:caps_switch_lock,compose:menu"
.- The first
-option ""
clears any existing option settings, while the one with non-empty arguments add to existing options.
- The first
- The 'Keep Symbols' layouts are intended for those who aren't ready to give up their symbol mappings. Not the best option, but "training wheels".
- The Unified 'us' variants are usually much better. The 'ks' ones will miss out on some symbols and many dead keys.
- The
xkb-data
package is very consistent between distros. I've use Debian xkb-data, sometimes with some Ubuntu updates. - Any .deb package may be opened using
dpkg -x
orar -xv
(frombinutils
) on Linux- On Windows, you can use any decent zip manager such as PeaZip.
- To change your logon keyboard layout, use the
dpkg-reconfigure
command:sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration
- NOTE: Be sure you know how to type your password afterwards!
- You can use the
localectl set-x11-keymap
command to make changes persistent; you may have to run it withsudo
privileges - Syntax:
[sudo] localectl [--no-convert] set-x11-keymap layout [model [variant [options]]]
- Example:
sudo localectl set-x11-keymap us pc105awide cmk_ed_us "lv5:caps_switch_lock,misc:extend"
- For
layout
and[variant]
, you can use for instance"us,us"
and"cmk_ed_us,"
to switch between Cmk-eD and the default us layout - Unfortunately, you can't switch between multiple models nor options this way – so your QWERTY may have the Angle (and Curl!) mods...
- Add
--no-convert
to not convert between closest matching console and X11 keyboard mappings; this precludes applying as system console mapping - Note that XKB options may be overridden by the settings tools used with desktop environments like GNOME and KDE
- More info on setting keyboard layouts is found in the Arch Manual and Wiki, at:
- Thanks to: Daniele, i-c-u-p, Flomza and others at the Cmk Discord for helping find this out
Wayland has a somewhat different tack: It uses xkb-data files, but not an X server. So the setkb script won't work there, but the BigBag as such will.
It depends on which Wayland Compositor you're using. Sorry, but I don't know them all. See its docs for more info?
For the popular Sway compositor, add a piece like this example to your ~/.config/sway/config
file:
input * {
xkb_model pc105awide
xkb_layout us
xkb_variant cmk_ed_us
xkb_options lv5:caps_switch_lock,misc:extend,compose:menu
}
And here's one for Hyprland's ~/.config/hypr/hyprland
file:
input {
kb_rules=evdev
kb_model=pc105awide
kb_layout=us
kb_variant=cmk_ed_dh
kb_options=misc:extend,lv5:caps_switch_lock,compose:menu
repeat_rate=40
repeat_delay=200
}
The repeat settings are of course optional. Some like a higher repeat rate and a lower delay, and this is how to get that.
Here's a KDE Settings ~/.config/kxkbrc
file. It can be set via the Settings GUI, or edited directly:
[$Version]
update_info=kxkb_variants.upd:split-variants,kxkb.upd:remove-empty-lists,kxkb.upd:add-back-resetoptions
[Layout]
DisplayNames=,
LayoutList=us,us
LayoutLoopCount=-1
Model=pc104awide
Options=grp:alt_shift_toggle,grp:win_space_toggle,caps:backspace,lv3:ralt_switch_multikey,compose:menu
ResetOldOptions=true
ShowFlag=false
ShowLabel=true
ShowLayoutIndicator=true
ShowSingle=true
Use=true
VariantList=cmk_ed_dh,
This one uses Caps as a Backspace. See the example above to upgrade it to an Extend key.
In NixOS without Wayland/Sway, services.xserver should work:
services.xserver = {
layout = "us";
xkbVariant = "cmk_ed_dh";
xkbModel = "pc105awide";
xkbOptions = "misc:extend,lv5:caps_switch_lock,compose:menu";
};
To get the xserver layout in your console as well, use console.useXkbConfig
in your configuration.nix
file.
I guess the solution will be quite similar for other compositors, but I don't know more at the moment.
See DREYMAR'S BigBag XKB topic on the Colemak Forums.
There are plenty of explanations and further links in there.
TODO/DONE for this repo are found in the xmod folder README.
One good source of info on the xkb-data
package is the xkeyboard-config repository itself, and its docs
folder. The repo is found at GitLab.
Or, have a look in the X.Org Wiki.
https://www.x.org/wiki/XKB/
Arch has good documentation on all things XKB.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/X_keyboard_extension
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Xorg/Keyboard_configuration
Ivan Pascal is a grandmaster of XKB; to learn it better you should definitely consult his site. Though maybe a bit less complete for us who can't read Russian, it's well worth it.
http://pascal.tsu.ru/en/xkb
http://pascal.tsu.ru/en/xkb/gram-symbols.html
Happy XKB hacking!
DreymaR