I just wanna say, please keep making this type of content. I learned how certain concepts work because of your vids. Never be discouraged by low numbers or anything, I know you'll blow up big one day. Just keep doing what you do best
I really want to thank you for doing this Redstone contraption series. Please don't give up on it. I know mumbo jumbo made a Redstone dictionary but it lacked some Redstone components so please continue doing this series. I want to learn them all. It's an enjoyable series. Thank you.
I've been looking for something like this for a redstone project I've been working on! the best I could come up with was a huuuuuge mess of repeaters and comparators that basically locked each line sequentially (it's kinda difficult to explain haha). this way is so much more compact, it's great!
Just would like to add that decoders, apart from computational redstone, would be usefull if you need more than 15/16 (if you include the zero) possible combinations. But very nice video :D
Thank you dearly, I learned how to make these before target blocks but revisiting redstone now with them seems so much easier As always I am immediately sending this to my clueless friend :>
AFAIK you can basically think of redcoders as a series of xor gates that are being sequentially inputted, with one of the being a single power level weaker than the other
Ah cool! Would it be fair to describe the redcoder as a compact, tileable XOR gate that compares the signal strength with the signal strength minus one?
Neat simplifying this! I made some model of this a couple years ago to make a lectern based shop, (I improved the design since the video but it still isn't this small, lol) I used two tracks with pistons more with mine!
Seeing this in action has restored my hopes that I will fully understand how Serial Data transfer works. Then I look at the Shift Register I built from a tutorial and still don't get why my repeater timings are always different from the video...
Idk if this is new or nah but since comparator output the same redstone strength in its rear or back another comparator can read it so you can make a signal strength detector Which only accepts a specific type of signsl strength it was given and nothing else for as long as you wish
i liked your video but i didnt understand what the target blocks are doing so if you can make a video about target blocks in redstone i will apricieate it
If anyone's still wondering what a decoder is, in electronics it's a circuit designed to "decode" numbers from a compact form into something simple for a computer to use (in certain situations). You just give it a number, like 2, and it turns on output #2 and turns off everything else. It has applications in CPUs for determining which instruction to run, and in RAM or ROM deciding where in memory to read/write. Why is it called a decoder though? Because it's a waaay easier name to use than multiplexer. (Still, it's kinda cool tho)
I just wanna say, please keep making this type of content. I learned how certain concepts work because of your vids. Never be discouraged by low numbers or anything, I know you'll blow up big one day. Just keep doing what you do best
Thank you so much!
can you make them in bedrock to
I always love those moments when it finally makes click and I understand another piece of redstone.
Yes! That's what I strive for
You do such a good job of making complicated red stone seem simple. Thanks!
me, who knows this is on the very low end of "complex" redstone
great video! im stealing that black box representation. thats genius
This is genuinly simple, thank you so much for that kind of content
I really want to thank you for doing this Redstone contraption series. Please don't give up on it. I know mumbo jumbo made a Redstone dictionary but it lacked some Redstone components so please continue doing this series. I want to learn them all. It's an enjoyable series. Thank you.
Thank you, I'm so glad you're finding it useful! My goal is to make this series the best place to learn redstone, so I assure you it'll keep going :D
jazzii's Redstone Encyclopedia
Your series are very useful! you are underrated
fax
Tbh, I’d love to see more videos like this! They are really helping me understand redstone! Keep up the great work!
Basically each light is the output of an and gate, that's surprisingly easy to understand actually.
I've been looking for something like this for a redstone project I've been working on! the best I could come up with was a huuuuuge mess of repeaters and comparators that basically locked each line sequentially (it's kinda difficult to explain haha). this way is so much more compact, it's great!
Just would like to add that decoders, apart from computational redstone, would be usefull if you need more than 15/16 (if you include the zero) possible combinations. But very nice video :D
True, good point
Thank you dearly,
I learned how to make these before target blocks but revisiting redstone now with them seems so much easier
As always I am immediately sending this to my clueless friend :>
Great video, please don't stop making these
AFAIK you can basically think of redcoders as a series of xor gates that are being sequentially inputted, with one of the being a single power level weaker than the other
unbelievable yet another banger he can't keep getting away with this
Mr. Trader wants to do a redstone startup, that's why he is so curious in the vid :v
Really nice video :)
Thanks :)
Really useful to know, thank you for the video. Very specific but well explained and very interesting.
Ah cool! Would it be fair to describe the redcoder as a compact, tileable XOR gate that compares the signal strength with the signal strength minus one?
That's definitely an interesting way to think about it, I like that
Neat simplifying this! I made some model of this a couple years ago to make a lectern based shop, (I improved the design since the video but it still isn't this small, lol) I used two tracks with pistons more with mine!
Cant believe he didn't unalive the wandering trader
I really like the example use cases!
Quick comment here, very good vvideo as usual, dont stop ur killing it
Thank you!
Red coder is just a thing used by hexadecimal gangs
whats a hexadecimal gang
How do I turn on the lights? Yes.
Seeing this in action has restored my hopes that I will fully understand how Serial Data transfer works. Then I look at the Shift Register I built from a tutorial and still don't get why my repeater timings are always different from the video...
When i was building my redcoder i used comperator on subtract mode and it take 4 tick with item frame and 3 tick with lectern
The music goes hard
0:02 reminds me of fixing the lights in among us
Cool, I was always wondering how those worked
this series is also good for those in EET courses lol. and can give a minor edge in class 🙃
Excellent!! 😁
vid good
Two things: one I tried it and it doesn’t work in bedrock is there a way to make it work and 2 how do target blocks in redstone work?
What the heck is a redcoder, me after watching this video, Me talking facts to freinds 3hours later done
Idk if this is new or nah but since comparator output the same redstone strength in its rear or back another comparator can read it so you can make a signal strength detector Which only accepts a specific type of signsl strength it was given and nothing else for as long as you wish
thank you for making about this, i will use it in escape rooms (:
i liked your video but i didnt understand what the target blocks are doing so if you can make a video about target blocks in redstone i will apricieate it
Targets redirect redstone dust into them, so they actually have a function beyond the ones involving projectiles.
If anyone's still wondering what a decoder is, in electronics it's a circuit designed to "decode" numbers from a compact form into something simple for a computer to use (in certain situations). You just give it a number, like 2, and it turns on output #2 and turns off everything else. It has applications in CPUs for determining which instruction to run, and in RAM or ROM deciding where in memory to read/write. Why is it called a decoder though? Because it's a waaay easier name to use than multiplexer. (Still, it's kinda cool tho)
😐