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You're reading from  Learn Robotics Programming - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2021
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781839218804
Edition2nd Edition
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Danny Staple
Danny Staple
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Danny Staple

Danny Staple builds robots and gadgets as a hobbyist, makes videos about his work with robots, and attends community events such as PiWars and Arduino Day. He has been a professional Python programmer, later moving into DevOps, since 2009, and a software engineer since 2000. He has worked with embedded systems, including embedded Linux systems, throughout the majority of his career. He has been a mentor at a local CoderDojo, where he taught how to code with Python. He has run Lego Robotics clubs with Mindstorms. He has also developed Bounce!, a visual programming language targeted at teaching code using the NodeMCU IoT platform. The robots he has built with his children include TankBot, SkittleBot (now the Pi Wars robot), ArmBot, and SpiderBot.
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Reading the gyroscope in Python

In this section, we are going to use the gyroscope in the IMU. We will use it to approximate where the robot is facing in three dimensions.

But before we do that, let's understand it.

Understanding the gyroscope

A gyroscope measures rotation as a rate of change in angle, perhaps in degrees per second. At each measurement, it can determine the speed of rotation around each axis:

Figure 12.13 – Illustration of a gyroscope

A gyroscope is traditionally a mechanical system, as shown in the preceding image. It has a gimbal – a set of concentric rings – connected by pivots so that they can pivot around the X-axis, Y-axis, and Z-axis. The middle has a spinning mass, known as a rotor. When the rotor is spinning, moving the handle (shown as a stand at the bottom of the image) does not affect the spinning mass, which keeps its orientation, with the gimbals allowing it to turn freely.

In the case...

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Learn Robotics Programming - Second Edition
Published in: Feb 2021Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781839218804

Author (1)

author image
Danny Staple

Danny Staple builds robots and gadgets as a hobbyist, makes videos about his work with robots, and attends community events such as PiWars and Arduino Day. He has been a professional Python programmer, later moving into DevOps, since 2009, and a software engineer since 2000. He has worked with embedded systems, including embedded Linux systems, throughout the majority of his career. He has been a mentor at a local CoderDojo, where he taught how to code with Python. He has run Lego Robotics clubs with Mindstorms. He has also developed Bounce!, a visual programming language targeted at teaching code using the NodeMCU IoT platform. The robots he has built with his children include TankBot, SkittleBot (now the Pi Wars robot), ArmBot, and SpiderBot.
Read more about Danny Staple