Onscreen virtual keyboard for Angular using Angular Material.
npm run build
- Open
dist/demo/index.html
npm run build
- Open
dist/docs/index.html
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { FormsModule } from '@angular/forms';
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { BrowserAnimationsModule } from '@angular/platform-browser/animations';
import { MatButtonModule } from '@angular/material/button';
...
import { MatKeyboardModule } from '@ngx-material-keyboard/core';
@NgModule({
imports: [
// Angular modules
BrowserModule,
BrowserAnimationsModule,
FormsModule,
// Material modules
MatButtonModule,
MatKeyboardModule,
],
...
})
export class AppModule {}
2. Use the [MatKeyboardDirective
] on your input elements or textareas and set the name or locale of the layout.
If not provided the locale will be derieved from the
LOCALE_ID
or the browser.
<input [matKeyboard]="'Azərbaycanca'">
Most of the base configurations are provided as injection tokens. Please read the documentation to understand how to handle it.
All layouts are based on (or directly inherited from) the angular-virtual-keyboard which is based on GreyWyvern VKI. For details on how to structure a layout see the comment derived from the original source code.
Note that this will most likely be changed in the near future. But for now a huge range of layouts is already usable because of the great contribution back then.
But basicly you just provide the configuration of your new layout in your AppModule
:
import { IKeyboardLayouts, keyboardLayouts, MAT_KEYBOARD_LAYOUTS, MatKeyboardModule } from '@ngx-material-keyboard/core';
const customLayouts: IKeyboardLayouts = {
...keyboardLayouts,
'Tölles Läyout': {
'name': 'Awesome layout',
'keys': [
[
['1', '!'],
['2', '@'],
['3', '#']
]
],
'lang': ['de-CH']
}
};
@NgModule({
...
providers: [
{ provide: MAT_KEYBOARD_LAYOUTS, useValue: customLayouts }
],
...
})
export class AppModule {}