This is a pretty geek revealing question, but has anyone ever seen a truly transcendent, beautiful example of a class structure, where inheretence and polymorphism where structured in such and effortless, clear way that it changed your coding style?
I can say a pretty interesting usage of encapsulation is in the Crypto++ library
He definitely took the concepts of sources and sinks to the next level; the first time I used it I thought it was pretty obtuse, until I realized it was pretty efficient way to "pipeline" a bunch of transformations
@portforwardpodcast Yeah, I'm still trying to figure out a cool project for it
@JShoe You could probably buy a cheap USB numeric keypad, strip out the circuitry, and wire up a switch to the contact pad. Put the whole thing in a little project box, call it a day.
@JShoe The advantage with the KB is you could test it out with a little console program or the mac equivalent of notepad. You wouldn't have to write USB specific software at the same time you were hardware hacking for the first time.
@Josh All I want is to make x = 1. Do I really need to strip a keypad, rewire it, and test it? I just want to change a sibngle value. How would I do that?
@JShoe I think, unfortunately, you are missing a lot of foundational knowledge to answer that question. I don't want to come across as condescending, but if you are asking me how to hook up a peripheral to your mac to change a local variable in an arbitrary program, there is a LOT you are missing in between.
@Josh Okay how do I learn that? I don't take it as condescending at all, I have no idea what I'm doing, but you just described it perfectly. So where do I learn?
At like a 10000 foot level, you need some way to communicate with the hardware, and then you have to have some way of setting the variable in your code (which you probably wouldn't want to do, I think what you are trying to accomplish is responding to an event)
@JShoe you want a button in the physical world. A keyboard already has a chip onboard which has input switches on one side, and a usb port on the other. It's perfect