From 32bb8f6b8af104c4a64b029820a4c7014eaf825d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Arialdo Martini Date: Wed, 1 Nov 2017 16:21:54 +0100 Subject: Improvements to documentation (#1919) * Typo: Github => GitHub * Typo: windows => Windows, docker => Docker, and some punctuations * "QMK Introduction" links to the right file * "Unix" rather than "UNIX", which is a trademark * Directory name is "keyboards", not "keyboard" * "handwired" is a subdirectory of "keyboards" * Punctuation and minor fixes * macOS rather than Mac * Punctuation and other minor fixes * Vagrant Guide links to an existing file * Jun Wako referenced with his name rather than his nickname * Saxon genitive 's outside the link --- docs/faq_general.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'docs/faq_general.md') diff --git a/docs/faq_general.md b/docs/faq_general.md index fcc40e0a1..7647b1c2a 100644 --- a/docs/faq_general.md +++ b/docs/faq_general.md @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ ## What Differences Are There Between QMK and TMK? -TMK was originally designed and implemented by [Jun Wako](https://github.com/tmk). QMK started as [Jack Humbert's](https://github.com/jackhumbert) fork of TMK for the Planck. After a while Jack's fork had diverged quite a bit from TMK, and in 2015 Jack decided to rename his fork to QMK. +TMK was originally designed and implemented by [Jun Wako](https://github.com/tmk). QMK started as [Jack Humbert](https://github.com/jackhumbert)'s fork of TMK for the Planck. After a while Jack's fork had diverged quite a bit from TMK, and in 2015 Jack decided to rename his fork to QMK. From a technical standpoint QMK builds upon TMK by adding several new features. Most notably QMK has expanded the number of available keycodes and uses these to implement advanced features like `S()`, `LCTL()`, and `MO()`. You can see a complete list of these keycodes in [Keycodes](keycodes.md). -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2