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#6
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Perhaps your question has already been answered, but there is another
way to build "a simulator " using simple switches and servo motors that I used in 2004 to test my logic. A standard servo motor can be plugged in to the output port of the robot controller. This motor becomes synonomous with any robot motor you have in operating on your robot. Next, make yourself or get hold off one of those autonomous cables to help debug autonomous mode. I then plugged in some Joysticks to the system, downloaded by code and watched the motors, ie servo motors, respond to joystick commands. Add yourself some switches by plugging directly into the robot controller and you have yourself a "robot simulator" good for simple software checkout testing. This is very similiar to the approach we use at work, Oops, that's why FIRST is so much fun, havings students learn what they will see in their future workplace. |
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