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
This commit is contained in:
Arialdo Martini 2017-11-01 16:21:54 +01:00 committed by Jack Humbert
parent 1683d3a559
commit 32bb8f6b8a
4 changed files with 19 additions and 16 deletions

View file

@ -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).