Re: [PATCH v2 2/7] dt: bindings: Add multicolor class dt bindings documention

From: Jacek Anaszewski
Date: Fri Apr 12 2019 - 15:24:22 EST


Dan,

On 4/12/19 8:46 PM, Dan Murphy wrote:
Jacek

On 4/12/19 1:14 PM, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:
Hi Marek,

On 4/12/19 12:07 AM, Marek Behun wrote:
Hi Dan,
this probaly was discussed, but I did not follow brightness model
discussions:
what will happen if I set yellow by writing into yellow mode
brightness, and then orange by writing orange model brightness?
Will the resulting color be a mix of yellow and orange, or will the
orange overwrite the yellow setting?

Orange will overwrite yellow settings. When color name is given
it should be treated as a hue. Then changing brightness level
should affect the lightness of a hue, similarly like changing
L component of HSL color model. This will be however entirely
up to DT brightness-model designer how they will design their models.
We are not going to verify that in the LED multi color class.

It implies that it will be possible to define arbitrary range
of color levels, not necessarily adhering to any established color
model. I think it could be useful to define brightness model
that allows to go from blue color (for cold) up to red (hot)
for representing a temperature for instance.

These ideas will need however more documentation. Generally
we aim to propose only a convention.


Ah but what about the issue of writing the monochrome LED color. With your description
it implies that when we write the red LED, the red LED will come on and if we write the blue
LED then the red LED in theory should turn off and the blue come on.

Where did I write that? Probably the way I used word "color"
was not adequate in at least two cases, which may have confused
the reader.

Modifying monochrome color brightness levels (under colors dir)
will just modify corresponding IOUT brightness. Not affecting the
other. I'll try to rephrase what seems to may sound equivocal:

s/When color name is given/When brightness-model is given a color name/

s/arbitrary range of color levels/arbitrary range of brightness-model levels/


But these could be used to mix the colors to create some abstract violet that is not defined in the brightness
model. Why should the brightness models and monochrome LEDs have two different operations.

Dan


--
Best regards,
Jacek Anaszewski