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Practical Arduino Robotics

You're reading from   Practical Arduino Robotics A hands-on guide to bringing your robotics ideas to life using Arduino

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804613177
Length 334 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Lukas Kaul Lukas Kaul
Author Profile Icon Lukas Kaul
Lukas Kaul
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Selecting the Right Components for Your Robots
2. Chapter 1: Introducing Robotics and the Arduino Ecosystem FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Making Robots Perceive the World with Sensors 4. Chapter 3: Making Your Robot Move and Interact with the World with Actuators 5. Chapter 4: Selecting the Right Arduino Board for Your Project 6. Part 2: Writing Effective and Reliable Robot Programs for Arduino
7. Chapter 5: Getting Started with Robot Programming 8. Chapter 6: Understanding Object-Oriented Programming and Creating Arduino Libraries 9. Chapter 7: Testing and Debugging with the Arduino IDE 10. Part 3: Building the Hardware, Electronics, and UI of Your Robot
11. Chapter 8: Exploring Mechanical Design and the 3D Printing Toolchain 12. Chapter 9: Designing the Power System of Your Robot 13. Chapter 10: Working with Displays, LEDs, and Sound 14. Chapter 11: Adding Wireless Interfaces to Your Robot 15. Part 4: Advanced Example Projects to Put Your Robotic Skills into Action
16. Chapter 12: Building an Advanced Line-Following Robot Using a Camera 17. Chapter 13: Building a Self-Balancing, Radio-Controlled Telepresence Robot 18. Chapter 14: Wrapping Up, Next Steps, and a Look Ahead 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Testing and Debugging with the Arduino IDE

Testing and debugging are essential parts of every development process. Testing becomes more important and more difficult the more complex a robot is. As we have already seen, even a relatively simple Arduino robot consists of several physical subsystems, such as motors, sensors, batteries, the Arduino board itself, and all the wiring in between. The program that runs on your robot also consists of several components, including hardware interfaces, external libraries, and tasks that need to cooperate with one another to efficiently share CPU resources.

It is common for robot builders, especially less experienced ones, to build an entire robot, write the program for it, and then test the hardware and software all at once. It is very unlikely that everything works as expected on the first attempt, and trying to identify the underlying problems can be very difficult and a major source of frustration in this scenario. This approach is sometimes...

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