Difference between revisions of "Robotics-2010"
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==== Ubuntu ==== | ==== Ubuntu ==== | ||
# Download [http://cs.earlham.edu/~carrick/courses/cs282/nxt.tgz Brad's installation kit] and untar it anywhere you want. | # Download [http://cs.earlham.edu/~carrick/courses/cs282/nxt.tgz Brad's installation kit] and untar it anywhere you want. | ||
− | # In your editor of choice, modify the install.sh script to connect to your brick instead of Brad's | + | # In your editor of choice, modify the install.sh script to connect to your brick instead of Brad's. This will be within the first few lines. |
# Open a terminal, navigate to the folder with your newly untarred files and type | # Open a terminal, navigate to the folder with your newly untarred files and type | ||
− | sudo ./install | + | sudo ./install.sh |
If your computer supports bluetooth, set up your connection to your robot | If your computer supports bluetooth, set up your connection to your robot | ||
# Turn on your brick. | # Turn on your brick. |
Revision as of 17:17, 22 February 2010
Contents
NXT-Python Documentation
Largely a work in-progress, please add/edit as you learn the details. Note that this page is documenting the NXT-Python v1.1 release (http://code.google.com/p/nxt-python/), not the NXT_Python v0.7 release which appears to have gone dormant (note hyphen vs underscore).
nxt.locator
The function of this module is to locate NXT brick(s). Returns an nxt.bluesock.BlueSock
object for robots connected by Bluetooth and a nxt.usbsock.USBSock
object for robot connected by USB, and throws nxt.locator.BrickNotFoundError
if none can be found.
- Status: incomplete as of 2010-02-14
- Objects
nxt.bluesock.BlueSock
- The object returned byfind_one_brick()
when a brick is found on a Bluetooth connection [defined in nxt.bluesock]nxt.usbsock.USBSock
- The object returned byfind_one_brick()
when a brick is found on a USB connection [defined in nxt.usbsock]nxt.brick.Brick
- The object returned by theconnect()
method [defined in nxt.brick]
- Methods
connect()
- Try to connect to the brick.close()
- Close connection to brick.host
- Returns the address of the brick (if connected via Bluetooth connection)- generator object
find_bricks()
next()
- Find the next brick in the sequence, returns the same thing asfind_one_brick()
.
find_one_brick()
find_bricks(host=None, name=None)
- Find all the bricks in the area, returns a generator objectfind_bricks
.
- Example
import nxt.locator sock = nxt.locator.find_one_brick() brick = sock.connect() if hasattr(brick, 'host'): print brick.host else: print "brick.host is not defined for USB connections" sock.close()
nxt.motor
- Port Constants
PORT_A
PORT_B
PORT_C
PORT_ALL
- Mode Constants
MODE_IDLE
MODE_MOTOR_ON
MODE_BRAKE
MODE_REGULATED
- Regulation Constants
REGULATION_IDLE
REGULATION_MOTOR_SPEED
REGULATION_MOTOR_SYNC
- Run State Constants
RUN_STATE_IDLE
RUN_STATE_RAMP_UP
RUN_STATE_RUNNING
RUN_STATE_RAMP_DOWN
- Objects
nxt.motor.Motor
- The object returned byMotor(brick, port)
- Class Methods
- _debug_out(self, message)
- set_output_state(self)
- get_output_state(self)
- reset_position(self, relative)
- run(self, power=100, regulated=1)
- stop(self, braking=1)
- update(self, power, tacho_limit, braking=False, max_retries=-1)
- Methods
- Example
import nxt.locator import nxt.motor from time import sleep sock = nxt.locator.find_one_brick() brick = sock.connect() motor_a = nxt.motor.Motor(brick, nxt.motor.PORT_A) print "Initial Position:", motor_a.get_output_state()[7] motor_a.update( 127, 360, True ) # Turn 360 degrees at full power and brake motor_a.update( -127, 360 ) # Turn -360 degrees at full power and coast sleep( 3 ) # update is non-blocking when braking is false, must wait for finish print "Final Position:", motor_a.get_output_state()[7] sock.close()
nxt.sensor
- Status: incomplete as of 2010-02-14
- Objects
- Methods
- Example
nxt.compass
- Status: incomplete as of 2010-02-14
- Objects
- CompassSensor
- Methods
- CompassSensor(bot,port)
- get_sample() returns a value between zero and 180 depending on the heading of the sensor. There is a one-to-two ratio between degrees from due North and get_sample() values. At the moment this generally returns an error.
- Methods to add
- begin_calibration() tells the sensor to go into calibration mode.
- end_calibration() tells the sensor to leave calibration mode
- Example
compass = UltrasonicSensor(bot, PORT_1) #declare the sensor plugged into port 1 "compass" heading = compass.get_sample()*2 # get the current heading in degrees from due north
- Notes
- The sensor gives errors and fails to register almost all of the time. The reasoning for this is under investigation.
- Compass Sensor hardware info
- URL to compass.py in source control (hint)
Scripts
Located in $DISTRIBUTION/scripts
.
- nxt_filer
- nxt_push
- nxt_test
Setup
Ubuntu
- Download Brad's installation kit and untar it anywhere you want.
- In your editor of choice, modify the install.sh script to connect to your brick instead of Brad's. This will be within the first few lines.
- Open a terminal, navigate to the folder with your newly untarred files and type
sudo ./install.sh
If your computer supports bluetooth, set up your connection to your robot
- Turn on your brick.
- Navigate through the menu to enable bluetooth
- Ensure that your device is set to "findable"
- Click the bluetooth symbol at the top of your computer's screen, next to the envelope.
- Select "Set up new device"
- Select your robot
- You will be prompted to input a passkey into your robot
- Use the small grey button to delete characters and the large orange button to select characters
- Select the checkmark to submit your passkey
- Work quickly! You have about a minute before the passkey kicks you out and makes you start over!
- You will be notified on-screen if your passkey was successful
- After your passkey is accepted, try running query.py