Unless you’ve been living in a cave, you know the 2018 FRC game PowerUp is moments away from being released. This is your guide to Chief Delphi across the day before Kickoff and for the 6 critical days after kickoff. The few points (10) listed here will make your and more importantly [strike] my life[/strike] all of our lives here on CD much better.
The first week is hectic. Lots going on, lots of swirl, lots of activity. Chief Delphi can be a great resource. But like any power tool if you gum it up with swarf and debris it grinds to a stop and isn’t useful. Remember, you are not the only one using CD, many of us use CD. So here are some things to keep CD going:
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Right now, go download the FRC virtual Kit of Parts. Make sure you have the latest National Instruments software in your robotRio and your programming laptops. (*) If you haven’t done it yet, get the Power UP! Downloadabe Content site has lots of good logo / graphics and stuff for your team.
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When it’s announced (watch for a Hallry post) go to the FIRST FRC site and download the encrypted game manual. For example Hallary’s post for 2017 There will also be a test file, to see if you can do the decryption process. Test this out. Then do those two steps (download and test) with all the other members of your team. In the past, FIRST has asked us to NOT rehost the manual on our own servers, so just pass around their links.
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About 11 AM EDT Kickoff day FIRST will release the password to the game. There are two dozen people poised to be the first to post the password. Don’t be one of them, just wait a few seconds after you see it on the kickoff video. Like in most years someone will fumble the password entry. Don’t reply “Help it does not work for me!!” In the time it takes you to do that the poster has gone back to fix the post, the right password is now there. Deep breath, just wait, there are 60,000 minutes in build season, it’s OK to waste a few now.
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Unlock your copy and your team member’s copy of the rules and read them. Slowly, carefully, word by word, taking your time as if it was the last corndog of the summer. Read the rules front to back. And when you are done with the first pass read it again. Slowly. Maybe read it out loud as a group, with one person reading each rule and moving around the room. Or read it to the cat. Once you are done with the second full pass, think about what you have read. If you completed both reads in under 20 minutes, consider reading the rules in backwards order.
Remember the rules are “An overview of the game”, “How to score points”, “things you can use to build the robot” and “some of the things you can’t use on the robot”. It does not cover how you are going to play the game (aka strategy) and what the robot will look like (aka design). Karthik, Team 1114, Andy Baker and others have posted great strategy documents and design videos, this brief time before kickoff would be a great time to watch. Get your whole team to watch them/read them
At this point you have many questions. “Can we use sharks with lasers?” Time to break out your number one tool, that 64 oz can of “Common Sense”. So, NO, this is not the year of the water game, the sharks will die. If drinking the can of “Common Sense” didn’t get you that answer don’t post your question on CD, go ask a team mate that has read the manual. Have them use their can of “Common Sense” and their DEEP READING OF THE RULES. Did you come up with the answer? No? Try a 3rd team member.
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Let me add to this that with the kickoff closure in many states there are going to be lots of questions about the Kit of Parts and what the small package is. Just wait a few minutes for it to be announced, there will be people posting what it looks like, you don’t need to ask over and over. There is always a small weird box with a strange part in it, just give someone a chance to post what it is.
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OK, so maybe a legit question. Next step is to check CD. Look at the top of the screen. See the orange bar with Portal, User CP …? See where it says Search. Click Search, see the box to put key words in. Try 2018 Sharks Lasers. No hits? Reword: 2018 R23 Lasers (****). No hits? (There is one, I just tried it. Did you spell shark correctly?) R23 Lasers won’t be enough, since this question got asked in 2016, 2017 and 2018; the rules change year to year, make sure you have the right year.
It could be that it’s a really weird question. Next scan the recent posts list to see if someone has posted something that may be about your question. Look at the posts and see. If there is a thread, consider replying to it, if not maybe a new thread.
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Think about what you are about to write. Think about four things:
– How can I ask my question so it’s clear what I’m looking for
– What part of the rules triggered my question, get that rule number and maybe the exact words ready
– Where did I look for the answer and did I find something close
– Did I really read all the rules carefully? Is now a good time to go back one more time? -
Posting time!
Write your post. Be complete with your question, what rule, what other answers you found that may be close, etc. Use Capital Letters when needed. All sentences need nouns and verbs. You are a high school roboteer you should be able to write four to six sentences without dropping into leetspeek.
Remember your post will be seen my thousands, best foot forward. We all want to help you, so as much detail as you can give helps us help you.
Pick a good subject line. -“Help Stuck” very poor. “Stuck on R23 Help” poor. “Sharks and Lasers in R23” better. “R23 - Are sharks with lasers allowed to be attached to the Arcade Frame?”, much better.
And you’ll have much better responses if you word your question like, “Rule R47 says … does that mean we have to use a blobbermasher on our robot this year?”
Don’t ask, "I haven’t had time to look, but someone on our team says a blobbermasher is required. Anyone know?
Remember, the rules are searchable too! (**)
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Check spelling, grammar, etc. Submit. Now go do something else. Do not sit and refresh CD over and over. Do not post after an hour a reply “Hey, need help here!”. Other people are busy, they may be researching the question, looking at CAD drawings of the Arcade Frame to see how big of a shark can be attached, etc. Give them some time. Maybe go back and read the rules again?
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If this is truly blocking you from progress, the look at answering other threads while you wait. Do you KNOW the answer? Can you cite something that will make your answer better. YAY! Then read all the posts in the thread. Do the current set of posts cover the answer? Will you adding your post really add value? If so, post your answer. Be complete, be detailed, cite why you think this is the answer. "If you check R26 you will see that the Arcade Frame is 8 feet tall, there is no water, the shark will die. And if you check R123 about the additional two human players, you’ll see that sharks would not be included in the criteria. " Remember to check Capitalization, use of nouns and verbs, etc. Questions that look like they came from a smart person get answered quickly.
If it’s 2AM and you need the answer now, try this: Go to Google Hangouts, Add FIRST Help Now as a contact: [email protected], Send a hangout message with your question. In 2017 they often had answers in the middle of the night. (This is managed by the CompassAlliance, a group of about a dozen teams)
I used a rule question as my example. Rules questions are normally the first few days. Remember "The Posts On CD are Opinions Only". If you have a real rules question, ask in the official FIRST forums. (And ask yourself what the reason the GDC does NOT take questions in the first days of build?" Did you read the manual?!?)
Technical Questions.
First thing with tech questions is the same search process in step 5. What is the problem, where did you look, what did you find, are things close that you can use to do what you want?
Lets take a few of moments to talk about the answers.
If you post a technical question, you will get many answers back. You should look at the answer given to see if it makes sense. “Yup, we use the wires we cut off of discarded lamps to wire our robot, go for that”. Yikes!!! :eek: You should also look at who the answer is from (look at when their first season was, do they have two or more green dots (yes, they are just dots but …)
If you answer a technical question make sure you are giving out complete and current information and in within the current constraints (rules change every year). While you may have tons of experience in coding Java for web based e-commerce solutions, programming a robot in Java is a little different. Be helpful, don’t add to the problem. If you are kibitzing, maybe wait a day and see if someone answers that really has an answer. If not you can try “Well I’ve never used ‘GlacticStick Glue’ ™ on a shark, but I did stick a flashlight on my brother with it and it was on there all day”
AND if you ask a question and find an answer through a means other than the thread you started, PLEASE do us all a favor and come back to the thread and post the solution.
There is nothing worse than finding a thread that describes the same problem you are having only to get to the end of thousand posts to find “Thanks, got it fixed” as the last post. (***) Tell us what you did/found out, remember the goal of CD is to help someone else out.
Lastly, many of you live in weather challenged areas (Erie is digging out of +70" of snow, and its -twodigts!! in the Upper Pensulia). Please don’t use Chief Delphi as your team communication channel. You have other ways (IM, text, Slack, your teams FB, Google Hangouts, etc.) please use them.
That’s it, just a few things to make your Chief Delphi experience across the next few weeks great. Help us out helping you out by helping us out!
Now go read the rules!!
TL;DR: Looking for help with the build season? Read the rules over and over, your answer is there. Really, trust me. (Or as Yoda wouuld say “The rules over and over, read,There, your answer is.”)
Thanks to Mike and Dave for posting shorter versions when I was a newbie on CD
() Thanks Connor Ryan
()Thanks GaryVoshel
() Thanks rsisk
(****) Karibou reminds us that the Laser Rule changes location every year!
People often recomment Eric Raymonds How to ask Questions the Smart Way. It’s much longer than what I wrote (HA! you say, but it is!)