# Leader Key The leader key acts as a prefix to a key sequence. These can be used to trigger macros quickly without dedicated keys set to each function. For those of you who dislike key combos, such as Ctrl+Shift+Esc, then this feature is for you. This is very much inspired from vim. Leader key sequences can be as long or short as you like. The action must be a macro, so it can be things like unicode macros, or generic macros. The example below shows how you would trigger task manager in Windows with a leader sequence. By default Leader Mode is ENTER, which means that after your sequence you will hit ENTER to trigger the sequence completion, or ESC to cancel the sequence. 1. Assign a key to KC.LEAD 2. Above your keymap, include a LEADER_DICTIONARY. ```python from kmk.macros.simple import simple_key_sequence # ... keyboard.leader_dictionary = { (KC.T, KC.A, KC.S, KC.K): simple_key_sequence([Modifiers.KC_LCTRL(Modifiers.KC_LSHIFT(Common.KC_ESC))]) } keymap = [...KC.LEAD,...] # ... ``` If defining tuples of keycodes is too obtuse for you, we have a convenience function available for that, too! ```python from kmk.keycodes import generate_leader_dictionary_seq as glds # ... keyboard.leader_dictionary = { glds('task'): simple_key_sequence([Modifiers.KC_LCTRL(Modifiers.KC_LSHIFT(Common.KC_ESC))]) } # ... ``` # Modes 1. LeaderMode.TIMEOUT (the default) 2. LeaderMode.ENTER ### Timeout Mode Will expire after a timer and trigger the sequence that matches if any. This can be enabled with ```python from kmk.consts import LeaderMode keyboard.leader_mode = LeaderMode.TIMEOUT ``` The timeout can be set like this ```python keyboard.leader_timeout = 2000 # in milliseconds-ish ``` The timeout defaults to `1000`, which is roughly a second. ### Enter Mode Has no timeout. To end sequence press the enter key, or cancel and do nothing, press escape. This can be enabled with ```python from kmk.consts import LeaderMode keyboard.leader_mode = LeaderMode.ENTER ```