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Learning ROS for Robotics Programming Second Edition

You're reading from   Learning ROS for Robotics Programming Second Edition Take control of the Linux based Robot Operating System, and discover the tools, libraries, and conventions you need to create your own robots without the hassle.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783987580
Length 458 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Concepts
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with ROS Hydro FREE CHAPTER 2. ROS Architecture and Concepts 3. Visualization and Debug Tools 4. Using Sensors and Actuators with ROS 5. Computer Vision 6. Point Clouds 7. 3D Modeling and Simulation 8. The Navigation Stack – Robot Setups 9. The Navigation Stack – Beyond Setups 10. Manipulation with MoveIt! Index

Plotting scalar data


Scalar data can be easily plotted with generic tools already available in ROS. Even nonscalar data can be plotted, but with each scalar field plotted separately. That is why we talk about scalar data, because most nonscalar structures are better represented with ad hoc visualizers, some of which we will see later; for instance, images, poses, orientation/attitude, and so on.

Creating a time series plot with rqt_plot

Scalar data can be plotted as a time series over the time provided by the timestamps of the messages. Then, in the y axis, we will plot our scalar data. The tool to do so is rqt_plot. It has a powerful argument syntax, which allows specifying several fields of a structured message in a concise manner as well; we can also add or remove topics or fields manually from the GUI.

To show rqt_plot in action, we are going to use the example4 node since it publishes a scalar and a vector (nonscalar) in two different topics, which are temp and accel, respectively. The...

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