Added clear instructions to which line you should modify to generate a key

Addition to the README and a slight change in formatting to accommodate
the extra information
This commit is contained in:
Will Harris 2020-06-12 16:07:31 -06:00
parent fa49ee0c70
commit 654874fb5f

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@ -17,7 +17,16 @@ If you are technically inclined at all, this is definitely the best way to run t
First, you'll need OpenSCAD: http://www.openscad.org/downloads.html. I highly recommend installing the development snapshot, as they generally support more features and are relatively stable. Development snapshots are listed in their own section on the downloads page.
After you have openSCAD installed, you need to download the code and run it. running `git clone https://github.com/rsheldiii/openSCAD-projects.git` if you have git, or downloading [this zip](https://github.com/rsheldiii/openSCAD-projects/archive/master.zip) and extracting the directory should do it. Then all you need to do is open `keys.scad` with openSCAD and you are set! It is possible to edit this project with an external editor by checking off Design => 'Automatic Reload and Preview' in OpenSCAD.
After you have openSCAD installed, you need to download the code and run it. running `git clone https://github.com/rsheldiii/openSCAD-projects.git` if you have git, or downloading [this zip](https://github.com/rsheldiii/openSCAD-projects/archive/master.zip) and extracting the directory should do it.
To make your own key, all you need to do is open `keys.scad` with openSCAD and [modify this line](https://github.com/rsheldiii/KeyV2/blob/master/keys.scad#L12)! (Line 12)
Here is an example you can replace the line with to get started. This is for a ctrl key on an OEM keyboard:
`u(1.25) oem_row(3) legend("ctrl", size=4.5) key();`
It is possible to edit this project with an external editor by checking off Design => 'Automatic Reload and Preview' in OpenSCAD.
All examples below assume you are running the library on your computer with OpenSCAD.