If anybody is needing help make then, Id be more than happy enough to show you how. Combination Locks
Double Doors (two doors open simultaniously)
I can also make traps!
Levers, buttons, wood or stone plates. You name it!
I'd like for Christmas a redstone memory buffer that takes a coded input (one data line and a clock line) and stores it in some NOR latches so I could send a signal that would persist through chunk unloading. The idea is that when the player gets near the memory buffer, loading its chunk, it starts up the oscillator again and sends the signal down the line. That way I could finally send data further than ~400 blocks (though the limit is probably less than that, needs experimentation).
J/K. That's my current project and it's taking forever. It's starting to look like it might be more trouble than it's worth which is surprising because I love my pointless megaprojects. I've got a 4-bit multiplexer working beautifully, now it's time to construct a demultiplexer and then it should be a breeze to attach that to a simple memory buffer. I'm wondering how much redstone / construction time it'll take, probably more than just laying down one redstone line for each bit of data individually. =x
I'd like for Christmas a redstone memory buffer that takes a coded input (one data line and a clock line) and stores it in some NOR latches so I could send a signal that would persist through chunk unloading. The idea is that when the player gets near the memory buffer, loading its chunk, it starts up the oscillator again and sends the signal down the line. That way I could finally send data further than ~400 blocks (though the limit is probably less than that, needs experimentation).
J/K. That's my current project and it's taking forever. It's starting to look like it might be more trouble than it's worth which is surprising because I love my pointless megaprojects. I've got a 4-bit multiplexer working beautifully, now it's time to construct a demultiplexer and then it should be a breeze to attach that to a simple memory buffer. I'm wondering how much redstone / construction time it'll take, probably more than just laying down one redstone line for each bit of data individually. =x
It is insane to me how many people who play minecraft are also electricians... How in the hell is it that so many minecrafters have all this knowledge of circuitry. I had to look up what a multiplexer was. I still dont know.
I'd like for Christmas a redstone memory buffer that takes a coded input (one data line and a clock line) and stores it in some NOR latches so I could send a signal that would persist through chunk unloading. The idea is that when the player gets near the memory buffer, loading its chunk, it starts up the oscillator again and sends the signal down the line. That way I could finally send data further than ~400 blocks (though the limit is probably less than that, needs experimentation).
J/K. That's my current project and it's taking forever. It's starting to look like it might be more trouble than it's worth which is surprising because I love my pointless megaprojects. I've got a 4-bit multiplexer working beautifully, now it's time to construct a demultiplexer and then it should be a breeze to attach that to a simple memory buffer. I'm wondering how much redstone / construction time it'll take, probably more than just laying down one redstone line for each bit of data individually. =x
Well i want a computer that understands c++ :Notch:. as I do not understand the hardware at all. oh and it has to divide by 0 in less than 25 seconds :smile.gif:
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
“Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government!”
I want to make a XOR gate, of sorts. Imagine a house. Outside the house is a switch. Pressing the switch will open the door. You walk inside, and there's a pressure plate. The pressure plate then closes the door. However, the pressure plate should act like a switch. If you stand on it again, it will open the door, and the door will remain open even if you walk off the pressure plate. If you stand on the pressure plate a third time, it will close the door, keep it closed, etc. Can such a thing be done?
I want to make a XOR gate, of sorts. Imagine a house. Outside the house is a switch. Pressing the switch will open the door. You walk inside, and there's a pressure plate. The pressure plate then closes the door. However, the pressure plate should act like a switch. If you stand on it again, it will open the door, and the door will remain open even if you walk off the pressure plate. If you stand on the pressure plate a third time, it will close the door, keep it closed, etc. Can such a thing be done?
Combination Locks
Double Doors (two doors open simultaniously)
I can also make traps!
Levers, buttons, wood or stone plates. You name it!
I'd like for Christmas a redstone memory buffer that takes a coded input (one data line and a clock line) and stores it in some NOR latches so I could send a signal that would persist through chunk unloading. The idea is that when the player gets near the memory buffer, loading its chunk, it starts up the oscillator again and sends the signal down the line. That way I could finally send data further than ~400 blocks (though the limit is probably less than that, needs experimentation).
J/K. That's my current project and it's taking forever. It's starting to look like it might be more trouble than it's worth which is surprising because I love my pointless megaprojects. I've got a 4-bit multiplexer working beautifully, now it's time to construct a demultiplexer and then it should be a breeze to attach that to a simple memory buffer. I'm wondering how much redstone / construction time it'll take, probably more than just laying down one redstone line for each bit of data individually. =x
It is insane to me how many people who play minecraft are also electricians... How in the hell is it that so many minecrafters have all this knowledge of circuitry. I had to look up what a multiplexer was. I still dont know.
gif by quadkillz
Thats one hell of a project
yes. you need a memory (1 or 2 bit) to do it.
just go in on youtube and search "Basic redstone" and then maby look up "AND gates" and "NOT gates"