# The Leader Key: A New Kind of Modifier If you've ever used Vim, you know what a Leader key is. If not, you're about to discover a wonderful concept. :) Instead of hitting Alt+Shift+W for example (holding down three keys at the same time), what if you could hit a _sequence_ of keys instead? So you'd hit our special modifier (the Leader key), followed by W and then C (just a rapid succession of keys), and something would happen. That's what `KC_LEAD` does. Here's an example: 1. Pick a key on your keyboard you want to use as the Leader key. Assign it the keycode `KC_LEAD`. This key would be dedicated just for this -- it's a single action key, can't be used for anything else. 2. Include the line `#define LEADER_TIMEOUT 300` somewhere in your keymap.c file, probably near the top. The 300 there is 300ms -- that's how long you have for the sequence of keys following the leader. You can tweak this value for comfort, of course. 3. Within your `matrix_scan_user` function, do something like this: ``` LEADER_EXTERNS(); void matrix_scan_user(void) { LEADER_DICTIONARY() { leading = false; leader_end(); SEQ_ONE_KEY(KC_F) { // Anything you can do in a macro. SEND_STRING("QMK is awesome."); } SEQ_TWO_KEYS(KC_D, KC_D) { SEND_STRING(SS_LCTRL("a")SS_LCTRL("c")); } SEQ_THREE_KEYS(KC_D, KC_D, KC_S) { SEND_STRING("https://start.duckduckgo.com"SS_TAP(X_ENTER)); } SEQ_TWO_KEYS(KC_A, KC_S) { register_code(KC_LGUI); register_code(KC_S); unregister_code(KC_S); unregister_code(KC_LGUI); } } } ``` As you can see, you have a few function. You can use `SEQ_ONE_KEY` for single-key sequences (Leader followed by just one key), and `SEQ_TWO_KEYS`, `SEQ_THREE_KEYS` up to `SEQ_FIVE_KEYS` for longer sequences. Each of these accepts one or more keycodes as arguments. This is an important point: You can use keycodes from **any layer on your keyboard**. That layer would need to be active for the leader macro to fire, obviously.