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author | rcoh <rcoh@mit.edu> | 2011-02-15 15:15:43 -0500 |
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committer | rcoh <rcoh@mit.edu> | 2011-02-15 15:15:43 -0500 |
commit | 84d914b0a015ef6c588253ac7f70382bfa9030e5 (patch) | |
tree | afaed4909873652dbf5257091a07fa80a60c444e /docs/tex | |
parent | 5b18ae78733cb4ffbc0ca9fd8f13f5ae1f7e37a6 (diff) |
Added documentation to repo in docs folder.
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/tex')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/tex/Behaviors.tex | 143 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/tex/ClassOverview.tex | 186 |
2 files changed, 329 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/tex/Behaviors.tex b/docs/tex/Behaviors.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9021581 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/tex/Behaviors.tex @@ -0,0 +1,143 @@ +\documentclass{article} +\usepackage{fullpage} +\begin{document} + \title{Behaviors: An Introduction and Exercises} + \author{Russell Cohen} + \date{\today} + \maketitle + \section{What is a behavior?} + At its most basic, a behavior is machine with two input terminals and two + output terminals. One of these input terminals is external input. The + other is feedback from the behavior. Similarly, the behavior has two output + terminals. One gets released externally as output, and the other gets fed + back to the behavior. At their core, behaviors have nothing to do with + pixels are light effects -- this is merely how we commonly use them. + \section{How do I write a behavior?} + At the core of a behavior is its \texttt{ProcessResponse} method which + tells a behavior what to get on input. As you might expect, it has 2 + input ports, and two output ports. The `type' of inputs and outputs can be + anything -- numbers, strings, lists, however, in our system, the inputs + and outputs are all python dictionaries. This allows us to have an + arbitrary number of named parameters. As sample input might look + something like \texttt{{'Location':(20,20), 'Height':10}}. When we + return a value, we return a tuple of (list<dict>,list<dict>). Note that on a + process response method you will actually be given a \textbf{List of + dictionaries} and you should iterate over them. + \textbf{Important:} You should not directly modify the inputs! Use + \texttt{dict(input)} to create a copy of them! + \section{Exercise 1: addFive} + Our goal: Create a behavior that will add 5 to the 'Value' field of the + input. If no 'Value' field exists, we will set it to five. Below is a + sample \verb processResponse method to do this. Note that process + response is the only part of a behavior that must be written (everything + else happens behind the scenes when you \textbf{inherit} from the + \texttt{Behavior} class. + \begin{verbatim} + def processResponse(self, inputs, recurrences): + output = [] #empty list + for inp in inputs: + inpCopy = dict(inp) + if not ('Value' in inpCopy): + inpCopy['Value'] = 0 + inpCopy['Value'] += 5 + output.append(inpCopy) + return (output, []) #empty list, no recurrences + \end{verbatim} + \section{Exercise 2: A Sum-er} + Create a behavior that outputs the sum of all previous input. Hint: + You will need to use recurrences! + \section{Declaring and Configuring Behaviors} + Once you've written your behavior (or are using an already written + behavior, you will need to tell the light installation to use the + behavior. This is done via XML in the configuration file. When you + run the system, you specify a configuration file eg: + \texttt{python LightInstallation.py config/ConfigFile.xml} + + Behaviors are specified in the \verb BehaviorConfiguration section. + A sample behavior follows: + \begin{verbatim} + <Behavior> + <Class>behaviors.EchoBehavior</Class> + <Args> + <Id>echo</Id> + <RenderToScreen>False</RenderToScreen> + </Args> + </Behavior> + \end{verbatim} + + The ``Class'' attribute specifies the \textbf{Python} class for this + behavior. (The \verb behaviors. prefix tells Python to look in the + behaviors folder). You may recall that all classes SmootLight take a + single python dictionary as an argument -- this is embodied by the + \texttt{Args} tag. A dictionary is created from the XML at runtime + -- this dictionary would be: \texttt{{'Id':'echo', + 'RenderToScreen':False}} + The id we specify is the id that we can reference this behavior by + later. The \verb RenderToScreen attribute specifies whether or not + outputs from this behavior should be directed to the screen (some + behaviors act only as the building blocks for other + behaviors, and are never rendered directly to the screen) + + \section{Behavior Chains} + I have mentioned several times that the system allows for behaviors to + be chained together to create many different effects -- often the + ``motion'' effect and the ``coloring'' effects are two separate + behaviors. The result you see on the screen are these two pieces + connected together. This allows us to build up many different behaviors + from a library of simple pieces. Let's look at how we actually + accomplish this. + + Behavior Chaining is accomplished through the behavior chain class. + Here is an example of a behavior we declare (in XML) via a behavior + chain: + \begin{verbatim} + <Behavior> + <Class>behaviors.BehaviorChain</Class> + <Args> + <Id>runcolordecay</Id> + <Inputs> + <Id>pygame</Id> + <Id>randomLoc</Id> + </Inputs> + <ChainedBehaviors> + <Id>colorchange</Id> + <Id>running</Id> + <Id>decay</Id> + </ChainedBehaviors> + <RecursiveHooks>{'running':'acceleratedie'}</RecursiveHooks> + <RenderToScreen>True</RenderToScreen> + <Mapper>gaussmap</Mapper> + </Args> + </Behavior> + \end{verbatim} + + Note the importance of the `Id' field -- that is how we reference all + other components of the system. Let's walk through what is going on + here. We declare this behavior just like any other -- however, for + class, we specify \verb BehaviorChain . The \verb Inputs tag specifies + which inputs will be routed to this behavior. In this case, it is + \verb pygame and \verb randomLoc , two previously declared behaviors. + Inputs from these behaviors will be passed to the behavior chain via + sensorInputs. Next, we have the meet of this chain, the behaviors it is + composed of. This states that first, an input is routed through + \texttt{colorchange}. \verb colorchange adds a color field to the + sensor data. Next, the input is routed to \verb running a behavior + that makes pixels run back and forth. Finally, the input is routed to + \verb decay , a behavior that adds a decay ``PixelEvent'' that makes + individual pixels turn on and then decay. + + The next item we see is \verb RecursiveHooks . This is a special + feature of the \verb BehaviorChain that allows us to augment the + reccurences recursive events have. We specify that we will augment the + recursive behavior of \verb running with another behavior, + \verb acceleratedie which modifies increases the speed of the running + behavior, and stops the behavior after a certain number of iterations. + Note that recursive hooks take data in via their \textbf{external input} + port, and \textbf{not} their recursive port. + + Finally, we state that this behavior will indeed be rendered directly to + the screen. We also specify which PixelMapper we want to use. + + Phew. This isn't as complicated as it sounds. I promise. + + \end{document} diff --git a/docs/tex/ClassOverview.tex b/docs/tex/ClassOverview.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..00d55ec --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/tex/ClassOverview.tex @@ -0,0 +1,186 @@ +\documentclass{article} +\usepackage{fullpage} +\begin{document} + \title{150 Smoots Lighting Installation Design Document} + \author{Russell Cohen} + \date{\today} + \maketitle + \newcommand{\classDoc}[5]{ + \subsection{#1} + \begin{itemize} + \item \textbf{Inherits from: } #2 + \item \textbf{Inherited by: } #3 + \item \textbf{Brief Description: } #4 + \item \textbf{Argument Requirements: } #5 + \end{itemize} + } + \section{Intro} + \textbf{NB: These docs give an overview of the classes and methods but + may lag behind the code for certain in-flux functionality. For + up-to-the minute docs, please use pydoc.} \\ + The system, which we will describe henceforth as SmootLight is a + modular system designed with the following goals in mind: + \begin{itemize} + \item The system must abstract away from all components while + remaining useful (\verb=Renderer=, \verb=Input=, \verb=Behavior=) + \item The system must be modular and be easy to write new code for. + \item More goals as I think of them + \end{itemize} + We accomplish this in the following manner: + \begin{itemize} + \item The system is configured by an XML file which specifies its + components. + \item All classes are initialized with a dictionary as an argument + containing anything a class may need. All objects are passed + between members as python dictionaries because their easy + serialization. + \end{itemize} + \section{Overview} + \begin{itemize} + \item + \section{Operations Class Patterns} + \classDoc{SmootCoreObject}{None}{All 2nd level classes (PixelAssembler, Renderer, + Input, Behavior)} + {SmootCoreObject is essentially a super-object + that makes things easy for us. It does the following actions: + \begin{itemize} + \item Defines a constructor that sets argDict + \item Defines a \texttt{\_\_getitem\_\_} , which lets us acces items in + argDict as if the class was a dictionary. + (\texttt{self['itemName']}). It also automatically maps the + initial contents of the argDict to class attributes. + \item Defines validateArgs and validateArgDict which + validate the incoming arguments against a dictionary + containing argument names as keys and an error message to + display if they are missing as a values. This file should + be named classname.params and look like a python dict + (\texttt{\{'key':value, 'key2':value2\}} ) + \end{itemize} + } + {No required parameters in argDict} + \classDoc{PixelAssembler}{SmootCoreObject}{LineLayout, ZigzagLayout}{ + PixelAssembler is a class that defines the positions of lights. It + provides a method \texttt{getLightLocations} which give a list of + all light locations for a given strip. Inheriting classes must + define \texttt{layoutFunc} which returns the next location given the + previous location. (They may simply override + \texttt{getLightLocations} + instead, if they wish, but be careful when doing so). In + heriting classes may defint \texttt{initLayout} which is called at + initialization.}{\begin{itemize} + \item \texttt{lightToLightSpacing}: this is the length of wire + between 2 adjacent LEDs. Common values are 4 or 12. + \item \texttt{numLights}: Number of lights in a strip. + \item \texttt{originLocation}: Location of the first light. + \end{itemize}} + \classDoc{Renderer}{SmootCoreObject}{PygameRenderer, IndoorRenderer}{ + Renderer is a class that serves as an abstract class for renderers + interacting with the system. Inheriting classes must define + render, which is passed a \texttt{lightSystem} object. Inheriting + classes may define initRenderer which is called on initiation. + }{No required arguments} + \classDoc{Input}{SmootCoreObject, threading.Thread}{PygameInput, + TCPInput,UDPInput}{Input is a abstract class which facilitates Inputs. + It does this by providing a method that is polled at a periodic + interval within which the inheriting class can raise an event. + Inheriting classes must define \texttt{sensingLoop} which is + called at the interval specified in the config. Inheriting + classes should call respond with an dictionary as an argument + to raise an event. Classes using (not + inheriting) input must pass a scope into + the argDict which offers a \texttt{processInput} + method. Inputs are marked as Daemon threads, and + are therefore killed when their parent is + killed.}{\begin{itemize} + \item \texttt{InputId}: The string id of a given input. Must be + unique. + \item Optional:\texttt{RefreshInterval}: The interval in + seconds (will soon be changed to milliseconds) between + sucessive calls to the sensingLoop method. TODO: make + timeout. + \end{itemize}} + \classDoc{Behavior}{SmootCoreObject}{EchoBehavior, DebugBehavior}{ +Abstract class for a behavior. On every time step, the behavior is passed the +inputs from all sensors it is bound to as well as any recursive inputs that it +spawned during the last time step. Inheriting classes MUST define \texttt{processResponse}. Look +at the Behaviors documentation for more details.} +{\begin{itemize} + \item \texttt{Inputs}: A list of input Ids specifying input to the + behavior. +\end{itemize}} +\classDoc{PixelEvent}{SmootCoreObject}{StepResponse}{ + Abstract class defining the behavior of a light after it has been turned on. + Inheriting classes should defint \texttt{lightState} which is passed a + timeDelay in ms as an argument. \texttt{lightState} should return a + color or None if the response is complete.}{\begin{itemize} + \item \texttt{Color}: The color of response. \textit{This is may be + removed in the future} + \end{itemize} + } +\section{The Screen Class and Its Relatives} +\classDoc{Screen}{None}{None} +{The \texttt{Screen} class is a representation of an entire system of pixels, + distributed over space. The Screen class and its relatives process + responses (mapped to pixels via a LayoutEngine), and add PixelEvents + to the individual pixels. The Screen provides an instance that + renderers can call to determine the color of all the individual pixels. It contains a list of PixelStrips, which each + address the individual pixels. \texttt{Screen} offers a + \texttt{respond} method which takes a dictionary containing information + about a response. TODO: detail the contents of this dictionary (maybe + somewhere else). Note: \texttt{Screen} will not process its + responses until \texttt{timeStep} is called which processes all responses that + have been queued since the last time that \texttt{timeStep} was + called. Screen also offers an iterator over \textit{all} lights, + accesible by using an expression like: \texttt{for light in screen:}. For + addressing of specific \texttt{PixelStrips} , \texttt{self.pixelStrips} + is exposed.}{No required parameters} +\classDoc{PixelStrip}{None}{None} +{The \texttt{PixelStrip} class is a representation of a string of Pixels that are + connected in physical space (eg. a strip of lights). A \texttt{PixelStrip} takes a + \texttt{LayoutBuilder} (\textit{Name up for debate, currently known as layout + engine}) as an argument. The \texttt{argDict} of the + \texttt{LayoutBuilder} is + passed becomes the \texttt{argDict} of the \texttt{PixelStrip}. + \texttt{PixelStrip} generally shouldn't be + adressed directly unless you need Strip-Identification for rendering + purposes. You should never, for example, call \texttt{respond} on a + \texttt{PixelStrip} + directly, unless you really know what you're doing. Well, actually you + should never need to do that. + never. Don't do it.}{Takes a \texttt{LayoutBuilder} as an argument.} + \end{itemize} + \section{Best Practices} + \subsection{Variable and function naming} + I'm pretty bad about being consistent. However, in all future + code, please adhere to the following: + \begin{itemize} + \item Classes: \texttt{FirstLetterCaps} + \item Functions: \texttt{camelCase} + \item Property Names: \texttt{FirstLetterCaps} + \item Constants: \texttt{ALL\_CAPS\_WITH\_UNDERSCORES} + \end{itemize} + \subsection{Time} + For time, use the \texttt{util.TimeOps.time()} method to return the current + time in ms. + \subsection{Acessing a Component Given an Id} + Use \texttt{util.ComponentRegistry.getComponent(id)}. This provides any + component access to any other components. We may consider a way to + make this read-only. + \subsection{Acessing Pixels} + The ideal method for acessing Pixels in a screen is to use its + iterator. Iterating over the individual PixelStrips is also an + acceptable method. + \subsection{Determining the state of a \texttt{Pixel}} + The best practice for determining the color of a \texttt{Pixel} is to call + \texttt{state}. This ensures + all current active responses running on the Pixel contribute correctly. + \subsection{Color} + For color, use a tuple of (R,G,B) 0-255 for each. Colors can be + easily manipulated with members of the Util class. + \subsection{Locations} + Locations are stored (x,y), in whatever unit you light system is + in. (Whatever unit you use when you define spacing). + \subsection{Constant Strings (key strings, 'Location', 'Color', etc.)} + Use the util.Strings module. It contains many currently in use + Strings, and ensures consistency. + \end{document} |