Yeah, that’s why I started this project. I was sick and tired of having to think boolean in new ways. And starting out in electronics, not being able to deal with boolean logic was a bummer.
Would love to find a better action card for it, but this is making it one heck of a lot easier to create logic. And I finally have an output that will be false if the logic didn’t stick.
Please tell me if you test it with some fancy formulas. I still haven’t had time to be really creative with it yet. But I will - because now I can ![]()