Introduction to ROS: Difference between revisions
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This talk provides a short introduction to ROS, focusing on the basic concepts fundamental to use ROS from a user perspective. Three basic concepts are introduced: Nodes, Topics, and Services. Then, the specification of message types is covered. The rest of the talk is dedicated to the operationalization of these concepts, covering the creation and management of packages, the programming of nodes that subscribe/publish to nodes and that call/serve services, and some useful command line tools. The Python language is used throughout the examples, although the use of C++ is not significantly different. Finally, some practical aspects, such as Java support, MATLAB binding, and some graphical tools are briefly described. | This talk provides a short introduction to ROS, focusing on the basic concepts fundamental to use ROS from a user perspective. Three basic concepts are introduced: Nodes, Topics, and Services. Then, the specification of message types is covered. The rest of the talk is dedicated to the operationalization of these concepts, covering the creation and management of packages, the programming of nodes that subscribe/publish to nodes and that call/serve services, and some useful command line tools. The Python language is used throughout the examples, although the use of C++ is not significantly different. Finally, some practical aspects, such as Java support, MATLAB binding, and some graphical tools are briefly described. | ||
== | == Slides == | ||
* [[Media:Intro to ros.pdf|First part]] | * [[Media:Intro to ros.pdf|First part]] | ||
* [[Media:Ros giovanni.pdf|Second part]] | * [[Media:Ros giovanni.pdf|Second part]] |
Revision as of 16:03, 4 August 2011
- Where: ISR-Lisbon meeting room (IST campus, North Tower)
- When: Wednesday, 20-July, at 15h30
- Who: Rodrigo Ventura and Giovanni Sapponaro
Abstract
This talk provides a short introduction to ROS, focusing on the basic concepts fundamental to use ROS from a user perspective. Three basic concepts are introduced: Nodes, Topics, and Services. Then, the specification of message types is covered. The rest of the talk is dedicated to the operationalization of these concepts, covering the creation and management of packages, the programming of nodes that subscribe/publish to nodes and that call/serve services, and some useful command line tools. The Python language is used throughout the examples, although the use of C++ is not significantly different. Finally, some practical aspects, such as Java support, MATLAB binding, and some graphical tools are briefly described.