Keymon.refresh
Calling Pattern
Call
local km = sl.keymon(t)
later
keymon.refresh()
Example
local t = { ['ALT SHIFT J']= function() print('ALT SHIFT J') end, ['CTRL J'] = function() print('CTRL J') end, } local km = sl.keymon(t) while true do km.refresh() wait(30) end
-> CTRL J ALT SHIFT J ALT SHIFT J
Description
The keymon refresh method checks the state of every key necessary to determine which, if any, hotkey combination is currently pressed. The keymon generator creates a string from the given table of hotkey=handlerfunction values to quickly assess if any handler should be called and passes this to loadstring. In the example above, the created internal function used by refresh looks like:
local gk = {getkey("ALT"),getkey("SHIFT"),getkey("CTRL"),getkey("J"),}; if gk[1] == true and gk[2] == true and gk[3] == false and gk[4] == true then return 1 elseif gk[1] == false and gk[2] == false and gk[3] == true and gk[4] == true then return 2 end;
The result of calling this function is used to look up and invoke the appropriate user supplied handler. Refresh takes no arguments and normally returns no values.
Upon Error
If one of the hotkey handler functions throws an error during evaluation, an unhandled exception will occur. In versions 0.09+, any errors thrown will be caught at the keymon.refresh level and handled according to the operant error redirection mode.