#Ultimate fox simulator use keyboard to move Pc#
"Ghosting is when you press two keys on the keyboard, and a 3rd key - which you didn't press - gets sent to the PC as well. Note: Although this is how the term anti-ghosting is usually used, ghosting on a keyboard actually refers to something else. In some ways, you can think of anti-ghosting as an attempt by manufacturers to improve functionality of cheaply made rubber dome keyboards, without having to implement proper n-key rollover functionality.
#Ultimate fox simulator use keyboard to move full#
The main thing to point out is that anti-ghosting usually implies that there is a limit on which combinations of keys and how many of them can be pressed simultaneously, while n-key rollover keyboards have no such limit (except when using USB, see 'PS/2 vs USB Technical Limitations' below). The number of simultaneously recognized key presses varies between each model of keyboard that does not have full n-key rollover.
Most keyboards providing n-key rollover are of the mechanical key switch type as opposed to the rubber dome style keyboards which are, unfortunately, cheaply made and distributed with desktop PC's these days. N-key rollover relates to the ability of a keyboard to correctly recognize multiple key presses at once (in the case, the ability to press as many keys as you want) and is a feature that is needed among the following areas of computing:Įven if you are not in either one of these categories, this article may still be of interest to you since keyboards with n-key rollover are generally of higher quality. In this article, I'll explain what n-key rollover is and some of the available methods for testing your keyboard's level of rollover support.