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Mastering Beaglebone Robotics

You're reading from   Mastering Beaglebone Robotics Master the power of the BeagleBone Black to maximize your robot-building skills and create awesome projects

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783988907
Length 234 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Richard Grimmett Richard Grimmett
Author Profile Icon Richard Grimmett
Richard Grimmett
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Preparing the BeagleBone Black FREE CHAPTER 2. Building a Basic Tracked Vehicle 3. Adding Sensors to Your Tracked Vehicle 4. Vision and Image Processing 5. Building a Robot that Can Walk 6. A Robot that Can Sail 7. Using GPS for Navigation 8. Measuring Wind Speed – Integrating Analog Sensors 9. An Underwater Remotely Operated Vehicle 10. A Quadcopter 11. An Autonomous Quadcopter Index

Parsing the GPS information


Your project will now have the GPS connected and also have access to querying the data via serial port. In this section, you will create a program to use this data to find where you are, and then you can determine what to do with that information.

If you have completed the last section, you should be able to receive the raw data from the GPS unit. Now you will be able to take this data and do something with it. For example, you can find your current latitude, longitude, and altitude, and then decide if your goal location is to the east or west, and to the north or south.

The first thing you'll need to do is parse the information out of the raw data. As noted previously, your position and speed are in the $GPMRC output of our GPS. First, you will write a program to simply parse out a couple of pieces of information from that data. Create a new file that looks like this screenshot:

Here are the details of the code shown in the preceding screenshot:

  • #!/usr/bin/python...

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