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rich2202 01-05-2016 16:07

FRC Primer for Programmers
 
As my summer project, I am going to create a power point presentation to train new programmers. Note: I am not trying to teach them Java or C++.

A rough outline is something like this:

1) Overview of the Game
Autonomous
Teleop
2) Overview of the Hardware
RoboRio
Driver Station
Connection through FMS
3) Overview of FMS
Robot Init
Autonomus Init
Autonomus periodic
Autnomous continuous
etc.
4) RoboRio I/O
PWM
DIO
AIO
Can Bus
etc.
5) RobioRio/Driver Station interaction
D/S is like the keyboard/monitor, roborio is the computer
6) Structure of our code

7) Joysticks
x box controller
debouncing buttons
"dead zone" for joystick (not 0,0)
8) Motor controllers
ramping up acceleration
break/coast motor controllers
encoders
9) Sensors

10) WPI Lib

11) compiling and deploying code

12) Networking details
10.TE.AM.xx
Fixed vs dynamic IP addresses
Default Fixed IP Addresses
Router
RoboRio
Driver Station
Camera
Outlines, slides, docs, would be appreciated.

Ether 01-05-2016 16:28

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by rich2202 (Post 1581136)
A rough outline is something like this

Where do state machines and parallel processing fit into your outline? These are areas where many new programmers struggle mightily.



Saventi 01-05-2016 16:32

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
I made bunch of documentation to train new programmers for the recycle rush competition. Most of it focused on teaching java, but there are some bits on stuff like setting up a radio and whatnot. Most of it is still on our trello board that we no longer use if you want to look through it.

teslalab2 01-05-2016 19:28

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
could you also touch on P.I.D's?

virtuald 01-05-2016 22:26

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Sounds like a great idea. I've done something vaguely similar (though, it needs to be expanded) for RobotPy. Check out my anatomy of a robot page.

GreyingJay 06-05-2016 13:02

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
I'll be interested in watching the progress of this as well!

phurley67 06-05-2016 20:29

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Personally, I would also throw in a bit about version control, network tables, and logging.

doge-in-a-bush 24-05-2016 19:16

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
I'd be really interested to see the powerpoint when you are finished!

Dan Waxman 26-05-2016 23:29

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
If you're up for it, I've wanted to make YouTube videos for this stuff for a long time now. Maybe we could correspond in writing material then I can make videos explaining everything? Please PM me if you're interested. Thanks.

WSiggs 27-05-2016 10:01

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Is there anything like this already for java out there other than what's on the wpilib site?

Katie_UPS 27-05-2016 10:05

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by rich2202 (Post 1581136)

2) Overview of the Hardware
RoboRio
Driver Station
Connection through FMS
3) Overview of FMS
Robot Init
Autonomus Init
Autonomus periodic
Autnomous continuous
etc.
.....

12) Networking details
10.TE.AM.xx
Fixed vs dynamic IP addresses
Default Fixed IP Addresses
Router

Why do they need to know this in depth? Why is "Deploying Code" not closer to the top? You're going to bore 99% of them to death. Why would I as a high school student spend my summer watching power-points on dynamic IP addressing?

Its cool to teach them everything (though most of it isn't really necessary, just interesting to some), but get them interested first. If they signed up for "learning to program" maybe programming should be in the first few topics.

None of this is going to have any context until they start writing code anyways, so why not start with code?

Quote:

Originally Posted by phurley67 (Post 1584673)
Personally, I would also throw in a bit about ...network tables

Again, what does this add? How does this help them write an autonomous program? If a student shows interest in the deeper parts of how-things-work then explain it (or if it becomes a relevant lesson because of a problem they're having).

They're not starting Computer Engineering. They don't need to know the networking layer right now, or how the FPGA in the roboRIO works... It's cool and useful eventually, but you're just going to scare away anyone who doesn't think they're smart enough.

Jaci 27-05-2016 10:23

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Katie_UPS (Post 1589861)
Why do they need to know this in depth? Why is "Deploying Code" not closer to the top? You're going to bore 99% of them to death. Why would I as a high school student spend my summer watching power-points on dynamic IP addressing?

Its cool to teach them everything (though most of it isn't really necessary, just interesting to some), but get them interested first. If they signed up for "learning to program" maybe programming should be in the first few topics.

None of this is going to have any context until they start writing code anyways, so why not start with code?



Again, what does this add? How does this help them write an autonomous program? If a student shows interest in the deeper parts of how-things-work then explain it (or if it becomes a relevant lesson because of a problem they're having).

They're not starting Computer Engineering. They don't need to know the networking layer right now, or how the FPGA in the roboRIO works... It's cool and useful eventually, but you're just going to scare away anyone who doesn't think they're smart enough.

I have mixed feelings, some disagreements and some agreements.

Learning about the hardware in the robot is important. We're not building desktop applications here, we're building applications that make a robot run. Students are learning to program for an embedded system, and with that comes some limitations and gotchas that don't come with regular programming lessons. For this reason I think (2) should be included.

FMS -> If your robot is dead on the field, your electrical and programming teams will be the first port of call. Most of FMS is a black box, but things like Periodic and Iterative functions are important as they're important for the control of your robot. I've taught FRC software classes before, and I've had many students come up to me and as "wait, so why do we run the same code over and over again? Can't we just put it in init and it will work?". Students need to understand how states in the robot work, otherwise their code is just plain not going to work. If you look at any child of the RobotBase class, you'll see the words "{state}Init" and "{state}Periodic" pop up very commonly. This grants (3) a pass in my book.

(12), Network Details. Robots don't always work, especially when they're on the field with 6 other robots. While this isn't as important as the other topics, and maybe shouldn't be included in the general, introductory course (sorry op), I think it has a place in more advanced classes maybe later in the pre-season. I'd have to agree that it doesn't belong in the 'primer' course.

NetworkTables. I'd recommend swapping this out for SmartDashboard in the primer, since most of the time (unless your programmers have spare time), you won't be dealing with your own network data transport. I'd have to agree that this doesn't belong in the primer, either.

When you're providing a primer course to students, you're setting the foundation for what they'll do later on, when they start to get more in depth and more advanced. Unfortunately in FIRST, a lot of the code resources are just examples without any real explanation, which places some programmers into bad practices, or in the horrible state of knowing but not understanding. Understand first, execute second. Not the other way around.

~Jaci

Katie_UPS 27-05-2016 10:35

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jaci (Post 1589865)
FMS -> If your robot is dead on the field...


cut for length: I do agree that a lot can be useful, and you brought up some points I didn't think about.

My suggestion OP is that you reorder your topics. Start with what gets them hooked: writing a program, making a robot drive. Expand from there. Focus on whats the most relevant to making a robot move and work your way out. Save advanced topics for advanced students. No one starts out robot design with stress analysis and motor-curves. Programming is already scary and daunting for some students. Don't push them out by making it harder/more complex than it needs to be.

rich2202 28-05-2016 07:38

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
The intent is to give a high level overview. Not to make them experts. The idea is to give them context for what they will see in the production robot code. Knowing the sequence of calls from fms helps in understanding what gets called when in the robot code.

Once the high level overview is created, I could see expanding each topic to a more in depth tutorial.

Note: the purpose is not to entertain. That is for others to work on. The purpose is: in order to understand the code, here is what you need to know. Enough to understand, not enough to program.

Sitting around watching the experienced programmers is no fun if you have no idea what they are doing.

rich2202 28-05-2016 07:50

Re: FRC Primer for Programmers
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Katie_UPS (Post 1589861)
Why do they need to know this in depth? Why is "Deploying Code" not closer to the top? You're going to bore 99% of them to death. Why would I as a high school student spend my summer watching power-points on dynamic IP addressing?

It is an overview, not in depth. It is a one session overview, not a summer long class. The summer is for me to put it together.

Deploying code is at the end because that is the last thing you do.

The idea is: when something happens, and the programmers start looking at ip addresses, they have a context on what is being debugged. As they gain experience, when something goes wrong, they have some idea where to start looking.


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