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#X text 12 85 LIBRARY internal;
#X text 12 125 WEBSITE http://crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/;
#X text 12 25 LICENSE SIBSD;
#X text 12 105 AUTHOR Miller Puckette;
#X text 12 165 HELP_PATCH_AUTHORS Dave Sabine \, July 11 \, 2003 Jonathan
Wilkes revised the patch to conform to the PDDP template for Pd version
0.42.;
#X text 12 45 DESCRIPTION get input from the keyboard;
#X text 12 65 OUTLET_0 float;
#X text 12 5 KEYWORDS control user_input;
#X text 12 145 RELEASE_DATE 1997;
#X restore 500 597 pd META;
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#X obj 21 42 keyup;
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#X text 19 72 Externals and other object libraries;
#X text 7 1 [key] Related Objects;
#X obj 18 94 pddp/helplink Gem/gemkeyboard;
#X obj 18 114 pddp/helplink Gem/gemkeyname;
#X restore 102 598 pd Related_objects;
#X text 98 293 float;
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#X text 98 261 (none);
#X text 98 411 Also note that key combinations \, such as SHIFT+7 produce
a different result than SHIFT or 7 alone.;
#X text 168 346 Some keys \, such as SHIFT or the F1-F12 series all
produce a zero \, but we can see by the [bng] that the event is not
ignored completely...but the numeric "ID" of the key is not captured
successfully. (This may produce different results on different systems.)
;
#X text 168 293 - the number received at the outlet represents the
numeric "ID" of a key on the computer's keyboard. This event occurs
when the key is pressed down. Only one event is captured at a time.
;
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#X text 132 137 Type something on the keyboard to send input to Pd
;
#X text 100 95 [key] reports the (system dependent) numbers of "printing"
keys of the keyboard.;
#X text 99 477 Caveat - this only works if Pd actually gets the key
events which can depend on the stacking order of windows and/or the
pointer location. This is dependent on the system.;
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#X text 19 37 Most \, if not all \, programming environments provide
us with tools to capture 'user initiated' events from the operating
system. Keyboard input \, mouse clicks \, and mouse movements are the
most common events in this 'user event' category.;
#X text 19 103 Pd's [key] \, [keyup] \, and [keyname] are complimented
by the externals such as [gemmouse] and [nimouse] to provide us with
a full range of tools to gleen a user's activities at the computer.
;
#X text 33 240 onKeyUp;
#X text 33 221 onKeyDown;
#X text 33 259 onKeyPress;
#X text 20 290 hmmm...wouldn't it be great if Pd also gave us onChange
\, onBlur \, onFocus \, onClick \, onDblClick \, onDragDrop \, onLoad
\, onMouseDown \, onMouseOver \, onMouseOut \, onMouseMove \, onUnload...?
;
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#X text 7 1 [key] Reacing to User Input;
#X text 20 169 It's interesting to note that with these tools \, PD
can mimic some of the functions in other languages - Javascript for
example has:;
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#X text 71 17 Click here to start...;
#X msg 62 131 tempo 0.8;
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#X text 11 23 get input from the keyboard;
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