@kekmeme #1
Two light pieces (bishop or knight) versus a rook is a material imbalance which is not so easy to understand right away when learning chess.
When the position is semi closed or closed, the party with the 2 light pieces might have an advantage.
When the position is open and not many pawns left on the board, the rook can excel, and in some cases the two light pieces can get in trouble.
In your game white is however getting 2 pawns + rook for bishop and knight. The position is closed, and white's center and kingside pawns will probably soon start rolling.
Stockfish probably looks mainly at material difference in the end position. rook + 2 pawns = 7 versus bishop + knight = 6
I would slightly prefer to play white here, centralize the white rooks and get the pawns rolling. Black will have to play carefully.
But you should indeed have played on though !