From 8dbec761cf858ea65900c8a094599857208d8c3a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "N.N." Date: Tue, 5 Jan 2010 22:49:36 +0000 Subject: svn path=/trunk/; revision=12907 --- .../doc/2.control.examples/03.connections.pd | 58 ---------------------- 1 file changed, 58 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 desiredata/doc/2.control.examples/03.connections.pd (limited to 'desiredata/doc/2.control.examples/03.connections.pd') diff --git a/desiredata/doc/2.control.examples/03.connections.pd b/desiredata/doc/2.control.examples/03.connections.pd deleted file mode 100644 index 97d32f82..00000000 --- a/desiredata/doc/2.control.examples/03.connections.pd +++ /dev/null @@ -1,58 +0,0 @@ -#N canvas 185 28 660 552 12; -#X floatatom 76 400 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X floatatom 189 401 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X floatatom 76 307 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X floatatom 553 161 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X floatatom 599 162 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X obj 553 135 +; -#X floatatom 553 105 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X obj 599 136 +; -#X floatatom 26 109 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X floatatom 26 17 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X floatatom 48 41 0 0 0 0 - - -; -#X obj 26 85 +; -#X text 3 64 hot; -#X text 53 66 cold; -#X text 232 105 Here's the downside: drag this--->; -#X text 551 180 good; -#X text 600 181 bad; -#X obj 76 376 *; -#X obj 189 377 -; -#X text 15 400 square; -#X text 229 402 first difference; -#X obj 76 330 trigger float float; -#X text 412 526 updated for Pd version 0.33; -#X text 19 433 Trigger takes any number of "bang" and "float" arguments -(among others) and copies its input to its outlets \, in the requested -forms \, in right-to-left order. Hook it to two inputs without crossing -the wires and you get the expected result. Cross the wires and you -get a memory effect.; -#X text 9 136 In Pd you must sometimes think about what order an object -is going to get its messages in. If an outlet is connected to more -than one inlet it's undefined which inlet will get the cookie first. -I've rigged this example so that the left-hand side box gets its inputs -in the good \, right-to-left order \, so that the hot inlet gets hit -when all the data are good. The "bad adder" happens to receive its -inputs in the wrong order and is perpetually doing its addition before -all the data are in. There's an object that exists solely to allow -you to control message order explicitly:; -#X text 114 16 In Pd \, most objects carry out their functions when -they get messages in their leftmost inlets \, and their other inlets -are for storing values that can modify the next action. Here \, the -"+" object does its thing only when the left-hand input changes.; -#X connect 2 0 21 0; -#X connect 5 0 3 0; -#X connect 6 0 7 0; -#X connect 6 0 7 1; -#X connect 6 0 5 1; -#X connect 6 0 5 0; -#X connect 7 0 4 0; -#X connect 9 0 11 0; -#X connect 10 0 11 1; -#X connect 11 0 8 0; -#X connect 17 0 0 0; -#X connect 18 0 1 0; -#X connect 21 0 17 0; -#X connect 21 0 18 1; -#X connect 21 1 17 1; -#X connect 21 1 18 0; -- cgit v1.2.1