sreen6056
Bliss Protocal (9/27)
This is a continuation of one of my original iterations, only significantly changed to more suit my new ideas and plans. I coded this myself in C# with Visual Studios, but it is only the beginning portion of the code. The program asks what you are feeling, and then gives you a range of simplistic emotions to choose from: sad, happy, angry, or other. Currently, I just have the sad option coded. When selecting it, the program tells you that it will ask you yes or no questions to better qualify and illustrate how you are actually feeling. It asks questions like “Do you feel like crying?”, “Is your sadness a result of disappointment or embarrassment?”, or “Do you feel a sense of humor with your depression?” After answering a certain amount of questions, the program will spit out the appropriate symbol to go along with the emotion you are feeling. For example, if you described your sadness as ironic and humorous, a depression meme would be given to you. If you said no to all of the questions, therefore implying you are not feeling anything but are vaguely aware of sadness, then it would give you a blanked face, emotionless emoji. I would have a combination of emojis, memes, vines, and other symbols that would be spit out as qualifiers to what the user is feeling. The idea is that this would be a program for younger users still learning to use symbols with language. When they are confused about what symbol to show, they could use this to tell them what would best illustrate that. I took a screenshot of the opening text of the code that is still a work in progress for my documentation. I was imagining the Force Field Model, along with a feminist structure for this iteration. Primarily because this would have to be set up in a classroom for the full effect to occur.
Bliss Protocal (9/27)
This is a continuation of one of my original iterations, only significantly changed to more suit my new ideas and plans. I coded this myself in C# with Visual Studios, but it is only the beginning portion of the code. The program asks what you are feeling, and then gives you a range of simplistic emotions to choose from: sad, happy, angry, or other. Currently, I just have the sad option coded. When selecting it, the program tells you that it will ask you yes or no questions to better qualify and illustrate how you are actually feeling. It asks questions like “Do you feel like crying?”, “Is your sadness a result of disappointment or embarrassment?”, or “Do you feel a sense of humor with your depression?” After answering a certain amount of questions, the program will spit out the appropriate symbol to go along with the emotion you are feeling. For example, if you described your sadness as ironic and humorous, a depression meme would be given to you. If you said no to all of the questions, therefore implying you are not feeling anything but are vaguely aware of sadness, then it would give you a blanked face, emotionless emoji. I would have a combination of emojis, memes, vines, and other symbols that would be spit out as qualifiers to what the user is feeling. The idea is that this would be a program for younger users still learning to use symbols with language. When they are confused about what symbol to show, they could use this to tell them what would best illustrate that. I took a screenshot of the opening text of the code that is still a work in progress for my documentation. I was imagining the Force Field Model, along with a feminist structure for this iteration. Primarily because this would have to be set up in a classroom for the full effect to occur.