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-#N canvas 221 110 894 498 10;
-#N canvas 0 22 450 300 this 0;
-#X obj 192 128 inlet;
-#X obj 192 171 outlet;
-#X text 8 7 If you're looking at this you're just going to confuse
-yourself!;
-#X connect 0 0 1 0;
-#X restore 499 380 pd this is an object;
-#X text 509 358 <- This is a connection;
-#X msg 499 319 10;
-#X text 13 348 Objects are like filters \, they change the way messages
-flow through them.;
-#X text 13 153 You can think of a patch as plumbing. The way water
-flows through the plumbing of your house \, messages flow through the
-connections in your patch. Objects change the flow of the messages
-to allow different things to happen. Messages always go into objects
-at the top \, called the inlet \, and always come out at the bottom
-\, called the outlet. In PD messages flow from top to bottom.;
-#X text 458 236 This is a very simple example of a patch \, the message
-"10" can be sent through the "pd this is an object" and can be seen
-being passed out the outlet.;
-#X floatatom 499 416 5 0 0 0 - - -;
-#X text 539 415 <- This number box shows the float message;
-#X text 553 334 and watch the output!;
-#X obj 8 6 cnv 15 870 30 empty empty empty 20 12 0 14 -233017 -66577
-0;
-#X obj 8 46 cnv 15 430 15 empty empty empty 20 12 0 14 -179884 -66577
-0;
-#X text 13 252 You can work with PD in two ways \, the first is in
-"edit mode". Edit-mode is where you create your patch by adding objects
-and the connections between them. "Run mode" is when you're done with
-the construction of your patch \, and you wish to send messages through
-it. In run-mode your cursor is an arrow (as it is right now since we
-are in run-mode) \, in edit-mode your cursor is a pointing hand.;
-#X text 458 136 Messages are what allow objects to communicate with
-one and other. Messages can change the way an object acts \, and/or
-express the work the object is doing. Messages come in different types.
-They can contain words \, numbers and groups of these. The main types
-of messages we will be dealing with are floats (numbers). You can click
-on a message \, when in run-mode \, to send it through your patch.
-;
-#X obj 448 46 cnv 15 430 15 empty empty empty 20 12 0 14 -179884 -66577
-0;
-#X obj 448 290 cnv 15 430 15 empty empty empty 20 12 0 14 -179884 -66577
-0;
-#X obj 8 447 cnv 15 870 30 empty empty empty 20 12 0 14 -233017 -66577
-0;
-#X text 668 449 Copyright Ben Bogart 2005 \; (See COPYING.TXT for details)
-;
-#X text 12 20 DESCRIPTION: What is a patch? An object? A message?;
-#N canvas 0 22 466 316 META 0;
-#X text 12 5 CATEGORY: tutorial;
-#X text 12 15 KEYWORDS: metaphor object message GUI introduction;
-#X restore 16 453 pd META;
-#X text 457 67 GUI objects allow you to interact with your PD patch
-as it is running. They allow you to change what your patch is doing
-without reconnecting the objects. The simplest GUI object is the "Message"
-that simply contains a message you want to send in your patch.;
-#X text 453 290 A patch that connects a GUI to an object to a second
-GUI.;
-#X text 531 320 <- This GUI sends a float message (click on it);
-#X text 13 66 When working with PD you are dealing primarily with objects
-\, GUI (Graphical User Interface) objects \, connections and messages.
-These are the building blocks of PD programming. When you connect objects
-\, GUI objects \, and messages you are creating a "patch". Patching
-is making something complex out of smaller building blocks.;
-#X text 13 46 The "patch" \, "objects" and "connections";
-#X text 453 46 "GUI objects" and "messages";
-#X text 12 8 1 Introduction to Pure-Data & its Metaphors;
-#X connect 0 0 6 0;
-#X connect 2 0 0 0;