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#16
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Re: Excel vs. Matlab/Simulink/RTW
I use Matlab/Simulink to help program the next generation of Hybrid Powertrain Controllers in my day job for General Motors. Other automotive
companies have announced that they are doing the same. I have used Excel for spreadsheet operations and consider it to be a "killer application", a software program that makes you buy a computer just because of what it does by itself. Comparing Matlab and Excel in my opinion is like comparing two kinds of apples. If you limit Matlab to just Matlab you are only operating "on the tip the iceberg" as to it's true power. Simulink is a Matlab based program that allows the user to program embedded controllers using another Matlab based program, the Real-Time-Workshop. In high school and undergraduate college, most of your mathematics do not involve matrix math. In graduate school, Matrix Math is used to describe control systems and Matlab is the tool of choice to help solve those problems. In 2004, FIRST upgraded the controllers from P-basic to C-based controllers. At GM, we began using higher-level programming languages like C in 1996, almost 10 years ago. My predicition is that in about 2010, FIRST will introduce Matlab/Simulink/RTW toolset to allow FIRST teams to program the next generation of robots. If you go on to engineering school, you will most likely be exposed to Excel and Matlab/Simulink. |
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#17
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Re: Excel vs. Matlab
Marc,
Great points. I use Matlab/Simulink every day for about 5 hours a day. It is the usual tool I use in my day job. As for higher level languages, we have been using TargetLink (a 3rd party extension of Simulink from dSPACE Inc.) to do auto code generation at work for about 4 years now. We have used TargetLink to auto code our autonomous control code ever since FIRST has introduced autonomous mode in 2003. I completely agree that before long FIRST might consider adding RTW or TargetLink in order to help code the control portions of of the robot. I think the students will learn a lot from that. The attached image shows the top-level Simulink model of our Waypoint controller. |
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