#N canvas 0 26 773 596 10; #X text 5 29 "HID" stands for "Human Interface Device". A HID is any device that is meant to allow humans to interact with a computer. Usually \, HIDs are mice \, keyboards \, joysticks \, tablets \, gamepads \, etc. There a number of unusual HIDs \, like the Griffin PowerMate on the low end \, or the SensAble PHANTOM 6DOF on the high end.; #X obj 545 437 gemmouse; #X text 0 214 KEYBOARDS; #X obj 11 233 key; #X obj 43 233 keyup; #X obj 381 437 gemkeyboard; #X obj 467 437 gemkeyname; #X obj 88 233 keyname; #N canvas 0 22 671 475 deprecated 0; #X text 35 38 The use of these objects is deprecated since the functionality that they provide is available in the [hid] object \, which is a unified \, cross-platform approach.; #X text 23 14 DEPRECATED HID OBJECTS; #X text 22 148 CYCLONE; #X text 22 346 J. SARLO'S [joystick]; #X text 31 374 only works with Windows and GNU/Linux; #X text 26 163 meant for porting Max/MSP patches to Pd.; #X text 21 218 RAWHID; #X text 28 230 incomplete \, first stab at creating [hid]; #X text 26 293 These have been replaced by [linuxhid] and [joystick] ; #X text 22 278 LINUXEVENT; #X text 108 181 [mousefilter]; #X text 27 181 [MouseState]; #X text 26 250 [rawmouse]; #X text 103 250 [rawjoystick]; #X text 158 312 [linuxevent]; #X text 32 312 [linuxjoystick]; #X text 26 97 GEM; #X obj 33 117 gemtablet; #X obj 104 117 gemorb; #X restore 388 533 pd deprecated HID objects; #X text 375 415 USING HIDs WITH GEM; #X text 385 478 There are quite a few objects that support HIDs from many different sources. Here are a bunch whose functionality is available in the [hid] object \, so it is recommended that you do not use these objects any more.; #X text 386 176 device type; #X text 624 160 latency; #X text 715 176 (Hz); #X text 635 176 (ms); #X text 385 186 -------------------------------------------------------- ; #X text 635 201 15.5; #X text 715 201 64; #X text 635 216 8-10; #X text 715 216 100-125; #X text 385 231 USB mice on GNU/Linux; #X text 635 231 1-10; #X text 715 231 100-1000; #X text 385 246 USB wireless mice; #X text 635 246 12-20; #X text 715 246 50-80; #X text 384 334 While it does not make sense to use a poll rate that is much faster than the refresh rate of the device \, it does make sense to make the poll rate somewhat faster. If you poll at the same rate as the device refreshes \, you could get up to double the latency \, i.e. if [hid] polls right before the event is reported.; #X text 375 461 DEPRECATED OBJECTS; #X text 5 117 When talking about HIDs \, "DOF" is often mentioned. "DOF" stands for "degrees of freedom". A degree of freedom is one dimension in which that HID can give information. A mouse generally had 2DOFs: X-axis and Y-axis \, though a wheel could be considered another DOF. The PHANTOM 6DOF device has six degrees of freedom: X \, Y \, Z movement \; X \, Y \, Z rotation.; #X text 0 325 GENERAL HIDs; #X text 96 424 [mouse]; #X text 159 424 [joystick]; #X text 243 424 [tablet]; #X text 313 424 [gamepad]; #X text 385 201 ADB (Apple Desktop Bus) devices; #X text 385 303 P5 Glove; #X text 635 303 22; #X text 715 303 45; #X text 715 289 40; #X text 635 289 25; #X text 12 424 [keyboard]; #X text 635 275 5-25; #X text 715 275 40-200; #X text 385 261 Generic USB Devices; #X text 635 261 10; #X text 715 261 100; #X text 385 275 PS/2 mice; #X text 385 289 Serial mice; #X text 375 25 LATENCY AND POLLING; #X text 375 156 REFRESH RATES OF VARIOUS DEVICES; #X text 11 369 Basically any device that is supported by the various HID layers on each OS is supported by the [hid] object. So any of those devices can be used as controllers with Pd. There already exists a number of objects for more common HIDs:; #X text 384 39 An essential detail to making an usable instrument is the latency between when you perform an action and the sound it produces. If the latency is too large \, it will make the instrument annoying to play \, or even unplayable. So the aim is to have as low latency as possible. To put it into perspective \, if you were playing an electric guitar and the amp was 3m (10ft) away from you \, there would be a 9ms delay between when you plucked the string and when you heard the sound.; #X text 385 314 -------------------------------------------------------- ; #X text 3 453 PLATFORM-SPECIFIC HID OBJECTS; #X text 15 470 To get full access to some devices \, you need to use the platform-specific objects. The objects have dummy versions on the other platforms so that you open the patches on other platforms and edit them without breaking them.; #X text 5 254 These objects are quite simple to use \, but are limited. They only receive key events when Pd has focus \; they output alternating 1s and 0s to represent auto-repeat \; [key] and [heyup] are limited to the 'printing' characters. [keyname] reports Shift \, Ctrl \, Alt \, Meta \, etc.; #X text 385 216 USB mice on Windows or MacOS X; #X text 85 527 [darwinhid]; #X text 166 527 [windowshid]; #X text 692 160 refresh rate; #X text 12 527 [linuxhid]; #X obj 11 347 hid; #X obj 1 1 cnv 15 770 20 empty \$0-pddp.cnv.header hid 20 10 1 18 -261106 -33289 0; #X obj 737 2 pddp/pddplink http://puredata.info/dev/pddp -text pddp ; #X obj 1 566 cnv 15 770 20 empty \$0-pddp.cnv.footer empty 20 12 0 14 -233017 -33289 0; #N canvas 44 246 494 344 META 0; #X text 12 85 HELP_PATCH_AUTHORS Dave Sabine \, May 5 \, 2003 . Jonathan Wilkes revised the patch to conform to the PDDP template for Pd version 0.42.; #X text 12 65 LIBRARY PDDP; #X text 12 5 GENRE all_about_pd; #X text 12 25 KEYWORDS needs_work; #X text 12 45 DESCRIPTION definition of haptics; #X restore 722 568 pd META; #N canvas 151 430 428 155 Related_objects 0; #X obj 1 1 cnv 15 425 20 empty \$0-pddp.cnv.subheading empty 3 12 0 14 -261106 -33289 0; #X text 7 2 hid - Related Objects; #X obj 19 38 key; #X obj 19 69 keyname; #X obj 19 99 keyup; #X restore 303 568 pd Related_objects; #X obj 6 568 pddp/pddplink all_about.pd -text All About Pd; #X obj 209 332 linuxhid;