i don't know how i can disable it; but i've analysed the situation and found that the code is more consistent if I removed the boolean variables and simply read and returned values like you have
if i declare two private variables in my Application class, called pMousePosition and pMouseWheel, then if I pass them as a pointer to two other variables in InputHandler, then I could change their values without having another class interfering with its affairs
one of the reasons i created a mouseMove criteria within my class is to prevent my camera from moving when the left button is only pressed
i want the camera to rotate only when the mouse is moving AND the left button is pressed; but i did an if condition along those lines but it still won't give.
imagine a model on your window. if you were to zoom out then you would scroll down. now imagine that even when you're not scrolling down the camera is still zooming out from the model
pCamera.zoom(float y) takes just one parameter, and it needs the value from the vertical scrolling of the mousewheel. Because we get the value from the mousewheel in the inputHandle() function through getMouseWheelScroll() there's no need to check for a condition because the only way for the camera zoom to work is for it to receive the aforesaid variable which can only be obtained through the aforesaid function