From c5f1e9797ac905c24edc39d1bb12ed2e5537f00a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: peepeetee <43021794+peepeetee@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2021 05:37:23 +0800 Subject: rename kprepublic bm keyboards to have a standardized naming format (#15047) * change missed kprepublic readmes * fix xiudi readmes * initial change, see pr description * change readmes * changes names in readmes and device descriptors --- keyboards/xiudi/xd60/keymaps/yuuki/README.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'keyboards/xiudi/xd60/keymaps/yuuki') diff --git a/keyboards/xiudi/xd60/keymaps/yuuki/README.md b/keyboards/xiudi/xd60/keymaps/yuuki/README.md index ebb2f8c1c9..ba0de049ee 100644 --- a/keyboards/xiudi/xd60/keymaps/yuuki/README.md +++ b/keyboards/xiudi/xd60/keymaps/yuuki/README.md @@ -4,11 +4,11 @@ Customized xd60 keymap with inspirations from HHKB and the layout I used on my V ## Programming Instructions -Change the layout in `keymap.c` then run `make xd60:yuuki`. The compiled file will be located in `.build/xd60_yuuki.hex` relative to the project root. To flash it onto your keyboard, use whatever program works on your OS. I personally use `dfu-programmer`, and run: +Change the layout in `keymap.c` then run `make xiudi/xd60:yuuki`. The compiled file will be located in `.build/xiudi_xd60_yuuki.hex` relative to the project root. To flash it onto your keyboard, use whatever program works on your OS. I personally use `dfu-programmer`, and run: * reset keyboard by pressing the reset button on the back of the PCB * `sudo dfu-programmer atmega32u4 erase` -* `sudo dfu-programmer atmega32u4 flash .build/xd60_yuuki.hex` +* `sudo dfu-programmer atmega32u4 flash .build/xiudi_xd60_yuuki.hex` * `sudo dfu-programmer atmega32u4 start` ## Layout -- cgit v1.2.3