Programming Interactivity: A Designer's Guide to Processing, Arduino, and Openframeworks
- Publisher: O'Reilly Media
- Since: 2009-07-21
- Media: Paperback
- ISBN-10: 0596154143
Users who read this book
1 books read
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jkoba0512 7 months ago |
Programming Interactivity |
1 books read
Reviews on Amazon
- Pros: Great overview and really useful especially for beginning. I'm kind of a give me diagrams of what it's supposed to look like and label what everything in the code or what is doing. This doesn't have much but more than enough information to figure it out.
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>Cons: This kind of gives a broad overview and skips easy to pick up details. Maybe you need a more specialized book if you really want to code something good. Likewise, code examples could be a little stronger/prevalent although the ones they have are great. <
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>Also, I have the digital version. I recommend after all you need a computer to use the information in it anyways. The printed version is a bit thick. - I got this book to learn openframeworks. A very good and complete guide, but a little difficult to read and understand because the author mixes three different languages: arduino, processing and openframeworks. I would have found more interesting a simple openframeworks book, a lot of information about the other two is already published.
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>I have also found some mistakes in code which have made me become crazy. <
>I recommend this book because i think it's the only openframeworks book option by now (FEB/2010). <
>I really liked the way that theory is explained, but codelines in this book aren't as good as i had expected. <
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> - When I began reading (studying?) this book, I was a bit disappointed because of its emphasis on Processing and OpenFrameWorks which are two programming languages closely related to the Arduino programming language. I had purchased the book specifically to gain knowledge about the Arduino language and its nuances, and here I was being "force fed" more languages!
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>After reading the first Chapter or two, I laid it aside for a couple of weeks, hoping to sell it on e-bay or something. I picked it up again, thumbed to some random location in the middle of the book and found that I was "hooked". I downloaded the Processing language Development Environment as suggested in the book, found it was virtually identical to the Arduino language (from which it was derived), and was delighted that the book delved very nicely into the "nuances" that I had been looking for. <
>I have little interest in OpenFrameWorks language, but this book gives me everything I hoped for related to Arduino and Processing. It is thorough, simple when it needs to be simple, and more in-depth when appropriate. I recommend this book to anyone who has a desire to become proficient in the programming environment used by Arduino. (BTW...if you don't know what an Arduino is, you probably should NOT by this book!) - Being new to programming I have purchased a dozen texts as of this last purchase "Interactivity". This is the only one of the twelve that got me coding straight away. Within twenty minutes I had something a little more interesting than blinking lights to look at. My home brew robot had an obstacle avoidance routine written and working. I have been adding to that program ever since, not laboring over seemingly hopeless examples of projects that just don't interest me.
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>If you just bought an Arduino, or have any other reason to understand and use a computer language this should be your first purchased. More than any of that (and that would be enough) this text is readable, enjoyable. I would reread this book just because I enjoyed the author's style of writing. <
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>This book also offers you a bonus, this might scare off some that read other reviews or the book description: you will learn three languages simultaneously. This would seem like an impossible task for most folks intimidated by learning just one language, but the author demonstrates quickly how natural it is to learn all three side by side. What a boon to your knowledge base! <
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>It is very rare a text book of such wide scope and usefulness is authored. <
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> - This is a great reference for a fast moving area. The author doesn't get too detailed with each topic but he gives you enough to get started. I specifically appreciated the author's advice on OpenCV and OpenFrameworks.






















