![]() Previously it was connected to the associated output on the Data Array, so it would only update at whatever interval you set. ![]() Renamed the pre-existing write interval inputs from "write interval (mins)" and "write interval (secs)" to "mins" and "secs"Īdded write interval inputs for weeks, days, and hours (so now the write interval can be any combination of weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds).Ĭleaned the text on the outputs so that a fresh version of the User Actor shows timecodes of "00:00:00" instead of the random values that were present when I ran my last testĪdded a "write" output in case anyone wants to trigger anything at the same timeĬonnected the "Runtime" output to the series of actors that makes the runtime timecode. Every time you enable and disable this User Actor, or leave and re-enter the Scene it's in, the User Actor will create a new text file with a new start time.įixed some math inside the Time Converter User Actor that's used internally.Īdded a non-functional "-write interval-" input purely for labeling purposes. Please note that this User Actor should be put into a background Scene (video tutorial, written tutorial) that you leave active, as you need to enable the User Actor and then have it continue to be in an active Scene in order to keep updating the times in the text file. See the filename, start time, last recorded time, and runtime on its outputs. Turn it on and off (which will start the timer over in a new file) Set the interval at which you want it to write the current time and runtime to the text file. This can also be useful for debugging if you're leaving a file running long-term and finding that it experiences issues after a certain amount of time. If you put this in a background Scene at the beginning of your file, you can use it to automatically record the exact time your show starts, ends, and how long it lasted. This User Actor can record your start time, current time, and runtime into a text file. This could be connected to a sensor, keyboard watcher, MIDI controller to anything.ģ) If you choose a "Reset Time" the first trigger will "Trigger out" and then wait until the X amount of seconds you decided.Ĥ) The "Gate Reset" is a visual aid to show you how long is left in % until the gate re-opens. If this rings a bell with you? Then this actor is for you.ġ) "Trigger" only sends a "Trigger out" once - and will ignore everything else forever.Ģ) Click "Reset" to manually open the gate. I do a lot of install work and interactive stuff which means I want something to trigger and then block and ignore all the incoming triggers until X amount of time, or when a video/audio file finishes and then automatically open the gate again. ![]() ![]() Have you ever wanted to send a trigger and then block all the other triggers? I.E: Just Trigger Once!Įver wanted to receive a trigger from an Arduino (or similar) and then stop all other triggers for X amount of time? Or decide to open the gate again manually? Well, this is for you. ![]()
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