Book Image

Raspberry Pi Robotic Projects - Third Edition

By : Richard Grimmett, Jon Witts
Book Image

Raspberry Pi Robotic Projects - Third Edition

By: Richard Grimmett, Jon Witts

Overview of this book

This book will allow you to take full advantage of Raspberry Pi Zero and Raspberry Pi 3 by building both simple and complex robotic projects. The book takes a mission-critical approach to show you how to build amazing robots and helps you decide which board to use for which type of robot. The book puts a special emphasis on designing mobile (or movable) robots using the Raspberry Pi Zero. The projects will show inexpensive, yet powerful, ways to take full advantage. It will teach you how to program Raspberry Pi, control the movement of your robot, and add features to your robots.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
Raspberry Pi Robotic Projects - Third Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Interpreting commands and initiating actions


Now that the system can both hear and speak, you'll want to provide the capability to respond to your speech and execute some commands based on the speech input. Next, you're going to configure the system to respond to simple commands.

In order to respond, you're going to edit the continuous.c code in the /home/pi/ pocketsphinx-0.8/src/programs directory. You could create our own C file, but this file is already set up in the makefile system and is an excellent starting spot. You can save a copy of the current file in continuous.c.old so that you can always get back to the starting program, if required. Then, you will need to edit the continuous.c file. It is very long and a bit complicated, but you are specifically looking for the section in the code, which is shown in the following screenshot. Look for the /* Exit if the first word spoken was GOODBYE */ comment line:

In this section of the code, the word has already been decoded and is held...