# String Substitution The String Substitution module lets a user replace one typed sequence of characters with another. If a string of characters you type matches an entry in your dictionary, it gets deleted and replaced with the corresponding replacement string. Potential uses: - Rudimentary auto-correct: replace `yuo` with `you` - Text expansion, à la [espanso](https://github.com/federico-terzi/espanso): when `:sig` is typed, replace it with `John Doe`, or turn `idk` into `I don't know` ## Usage The String Substitution module takes a single argument to be passed during initialization: a user-defined dictionary where the keys are the text to be replaced and the values are the replacement text. Example is as follows: ```python from kmk.modules.string_substitution import StringSubstitution my_dictionary = { 'yuo': 'you', ':sig': 'John Doe', 'idk': "I don't know" } string_substitution = StringSubstitution(dictionary=my_dictionary) keyboard.modules.append(string_substitution) ``` ### Recommendations 1. Consider prefixing text expansion entries with a symbol to prevent accidental activations: `:sig`, `!email`, etc. 2. If you want multiple similar replacements, consider adding a number to prevent unreachable matches: `replaceme1`, `replaceme2`, etc. ### Limitations 1. Currently supports characters for which there is a corresponding keycode in KMK - support for international characters is not implemented. 2. Since this runs on your keyboard, it is not context-aware. It can't tell if you are typing in a valid text field or not. 3. In the interest of a responsive typing experience, the first valid match will be used as soon as it is found. If your dictionary contains "abc" and "abcd", "abcd" will not be matchable.