Hi Colincolin@loomer wrote:Although it may sounds backwards when compared to standard reading direction, in coding terms it works nicely. Right-to-left makes sense here because the signal inlet, the one that actually tells the module to do it's thing, is always the left-most. In theory, swapping the order isn't a big issue, but this way has always felt most natural to me, it being, more or less, a standard in several other flow-based languages. Still, as always, feedback appreciated, and I'll try the other direction to see how it feels.
I've badgered you for screenshots in the past so many thanks for them here. I am somewhat overwhelmed by them, and only vaguely understand what I am looking at!
Nevertheless, I am a punter who will no doubt buy it, because I love exploring and trying to understand complicated tools much more than I enjoy making music (sad, isn't it!).
Anyway, getting to the point, your statement (in bold) above is clearly self-evident to you, but my small brain is struggling to get my head around it. Could you elaborate? Beyond a bit of dabbling with perl and php in the past I am not a coder and it is not self-evident to me. I am a punter who, I think, would expect signal flow to be L -> R.
