1 Introduction --; 2 Basic Facilities for Robot Programming --; 2.1 Description of Robot Position and Orientation --; 2.2 Concepts for Robot Programming Languages --; 3 Concept of Data --; 3.1 PASCAL Data Types --; 3.2 Predeclared PASRO Datatypes --; 3.3 PASRO Predeclared System Variables --; 3.4 Arithmetic and Procedures --; 4 Concept of Action --; 4.1 PASRO Procedures for Robot Control --; 4.2 PASRO Procedures for Gripper Control --; 4.3 Traditional Program Flow Control --; 5 Program Structure --; 5.1 PASCAL Program Structure --; 5.2 PASRO Structure --; 6 Input/Output --; 6.1 Traditional PASCAL I/O --; 6.2 I/O of PASRO Standard Data Types --; 6.3 Robot Control --; 6.4 Process I/O --; 7 Integration of Teach-in --; 7.1 Integration of Frames Defined by Teach-in into PASRO Programs --; 7.2 Teaching Frames by System Program "teachin" --; 8 Implementation --; 8.1 General Structure --; 8.2 The Industrial PASRO Extension --; 9 How to Use the PASRO-System --; 9.1 Introduction --; 9.2 Compiling and Linking --; 9.3 Executing a PASRO Program --; 10 PASRO Program Examples --; 10.1 Palletizing --; 10.2 Five-in-a-Row-Game (Gobang or Gomoku) --; 10.3 Transfer of Objects Between Robots --; 10.4 Towers of Hanoi --; 10.5 Simple World-Modelling --; 11 Appendices --; 11.1 Appendix A Summary of PASRO Procedures --; 11.2 Appendix B Pre-declared PASRO and PASCAL Identifiers --; 11.3 Appendix C PASRO Runtime Error Summary --; 11.4 Appendix D PASCAL Syntax Diagrams --; References.
یادداشتهای مربوط به خلاصه یا چکیده
متن يادداشت
The origin ofPASRO (Trademark ofBIOMATIK GmbH, Freiburg, FRG) was a set of proƯ cedures for performing arithmetic on geometric data types and for coordinate transformaƯ tion for study and teaching purposes, developed as a base for high level robot programming. The study of many robot languages revealed areas for necessary improvements: 1. Move statements must be independent of a specific robot control system. They must instead be based on the different types of trajectory calculation resp. interpolation. 2. A structured language concept should be employed, including a structured concept for concurrent programming (The latter is not yet implemented in PASRO owing to the use of Standard PASCAL instead of CONCURRENT PASCAL or MODULA 2). 3. Integration of geometric data types into existing structured data types. 4. Simplicity of language constructs. 5. Integration of teach-in via frame-files. This resulted in the implementation ofPASRO by Christian Blume (BLUME [1.1]) and in the joint development of the SRL concept (Structured Robot Language) as it was introƯ duced in May 1983 at Liege (see BLUMEIJAKOB [1.2]). PASRO is at present state of the implementation a programming system for teaching, studying and experimenting and not for industrial use, although it could easily be extended for that purpose (cf paragraph 8.2). We especially thank the PSI company, Berlin, who gave us technical support to write this book, the BIOMATIK company ofFreiburg, which is marketing PASRO, its manager G.R. Koch, and the University of Karlsruhe, Prof. Dr.-Ing. U. Rembold.
موضوع (اسم عام یاعبارت اسمی عام)
موضوع مستند نشده
Artificial intelligence.
موضوع مستند نشده
Computer science.
موضوع مستند نشده
Physics.
رده بندی کنگره
شماره رده
TJ211
نشانه اثر
.
B934
1985
نام شخص به منزله سر شناسه - (مسئولیت معنوی درجه اول )