This is a simple, portable robot simulator developed by Student Robotics. Some of the arenas and the exercises have been modified for the Research Track I course
The simulator requires a Python 2.7 installation, the pygame library, PyPyBox2D, and PyYAML.
Once the dependencies are installed, simply run the test.py
script to test out the simulator.
To run one or more scripts in the simulator, use run.py
, passing it the file names.
I am proposing you three exercises, with an increasing level of difficulty. The instruction for the three exercises can be found inside the .py files (exercise1.py, exercise2.py, exercise3.py).
When done, you can run the program with:
$ python run.py exercise1.py
You have also the solutions of the exercises (folder solutions)
$ python run.py solutions/exercise1_solution.py
The API for controlling a simulated robot is designed to be as similar as possible to the SR API.
The simulated robot has two motors configured for skid steering, connected to a two-output Motor Board. The left motor is connected to output 0
and the right motor to output 1
.
The Motor Board API is identical to that of the SR API, except that motor boards cannot be addressed by serial number. So, to turn on the spot at one quarter of full power, one might write the following:
R.motors[0].m0.power = 25
R.motors[0].m1.power = -25
The robot is equipped with a grabber, capable of picking up a token which is in front of the robot and within 0.4 metres of the robot's centre. To pick up a token, call the R.grab
method:
success = R.grab()
The R.grab
function returns True
if a token was successfully picked up, or False
otherwise. If the robot is already holding a token, it will throw an AlreadyHoldingSomethingException
.
To drop the token, call the R.release
method.
Cable-tie flails are not implemented.
To help the robot find tokens and navigate, each token has markers stuck to it, as does each wall. The R.see
method returns a list of all the markers the robot can see, as Marker
objects. The robot can only see markers which it is facing towards.
Each Marker
object has the following attributes:
info
: aMarkerInfo
object describing the marker itself. Has the following attributes:code
: the numeric code of the marker.marker_type
: the type of object the marker is attached to (eitherMARKER_TOKEN_GOLD
,MARKER_TOKEN_SILVER
orMARKER_ARENA
).offset
: offset of the numeric code of the marker from the lowest numbered marker of its type. For example, token number 3 has the code 43, but offset 3.size
: the size that the marker would be in the real game, for compatibility with the SR API.
centre
: the location of the marker in polar coordinates, as aPolarCoord
object. Has the following attributes:length
: the distance from the centre of the robot to the object (in metres).rot_y
: rotation about the Y axis in degrees.
dist
: an alias forcentre.length
res
: the value of theres
parameter ofR.see
, for compatibility with the SR API.rot_y
: an alias forcentre.rot_y
timestamp
: the time at which the marker was seen (whenR.see
was called).
For example, the following code lists all of the markers the robot can see:
markers = R.see()
print "I can see", len(markers), "markers:"
for m in markers:
if m.info.marker_type in (MARKER_TOKEN_GOLD, MARKER_TOKEN_SILVER):
print " - Token {0} is {1} metres away".format( m.info.offset, m.dist )
elif m.info.marker_type == MARKER_ARENA:
print " - Arena marker {0} is {1} metres away".format( m.info.offset, m.dist )