Book Image

BeagleBone Robotic Projects - Second Edition

By : Richard Grimmett
Book Image

BeagleBone Robotic Projects - Second Edition

By: Richard Grimmett

Overview of this book

BeagleBone Blue is effectively a small, light, cheap computer in a similar vein to Raspberry Pi and Arduino. It has all of the extensibility of today’s desktop machines, but without the bulk, expense, or noise. This project guide provides step-by-step instructions that enable anyone to use this new, low-cost platform in some fascinating robotics projects. By the time you are finished, your projects will be able to see, speak, listen, detect their surroundings, and move in a variety of amazing ways. The book begins with unpacking and powering up the components. This includes guidance on what to purchase and how to connect it all successfully, and a primer on programming the BeagleBone Blue. You will add additional software functionality available from the open source community, including making the system see using a webcam, hear using a microphone, and speak using a speaker. You will then learn to use the new hardware capability of the BeagleBone Blue to make your robots move, as well as discover how to add sonar sensors to avoid or find objects. Later, you will learn to remotely control your robot through iOS and Android devices. At the end of this book, you will see how to integrate all of these functionalities to work together, before developing the most impressive robotics projects: Drone and Submarine.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Creating, editing, and saving files on the BeagleBone Blue


Now that you can log in and move easily between directories and see which files are in your directories, you'll want to be able to edit those files. To do this, you'll need a program that allows you to edit the characters in a file. If you have worked in Microsoft Windows, you probably have used a program such as Microsoft Notepad, WordPad, or Word to do this. As you might imagine, these are not available in Linux.

There are several choices, all of which are free. I am going to show you how to use an editor program called Emacs. Other possibilities are programs such nano, vi, Vim, and gedit. There is nothing more religious than conversation among programmers about which editor to use, so if you have a strong opinion, you are probably already used to using one of these editors. The vi and nano editors are included in the regular Debian distribution; however, I personally find Emacs the most intuitive of the editors, so will show you...