How do I shift the plot of a matrix in a Binary Occupancy Map?
3 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
I am building a binary occupancy map for robot path planning. The outer border is the boundary and a square with four given points. There is one obstacle inside the boundary, a square, with four given points. I do not know how to assign occupancy values for points/coordinates that do not begin at the origin. All occupancy values are 1. Right now I can only plot and assign occupancy values for the far left and bottom lines of the boundary's square shape. I do not know how to get the top and the right as they do not start at the origin. How do I assign values starting from the coordinate (0,120) across to (120,120)? This is what I have:
%Occupancy grid size 120x120 with resolution 1
map = binaryOccupancyMap(120,120,1,"grid")
%First four coordinates are boundaries of environment. Last four are boundaries of the obstacle.
%x = [0; 0; 120; 120; 20; 100; 20; 100];
%y = [0; 120; 120; 0; 100; 100; 20; 20];
x = 1:1:120;
y = ones(1,120);
x1 = ones(1,120);
y1 = 1:1:120;
x2 = 1:1:120;
y2 = ones(1,120);
topLeft = [120,0];
setOccupancy(map, [x' y'], ones(120,1))
setOccupancy(map, [x1' y1'], ones (1,120))
setOccupancy(map,topLeft,y2,"local") %This is my attempt to get the top line but it does not work
figure
show(map)
0 Kommentare
Antworten (1)
Cameron Stabile
am 15 Mär. 2022
Bearbeitet: Cameron Stabile
am 15 Mär. 2022
Hi Analise,
When using the block syntax for setOccupancy, the first input should be the minimum corner of your block (i.e. bottom-left corner for XY coordinates, top-left corner if you are using grid coordinates), and the second input is the block of values themselves, which determine the size of the block.
In your example, you have a few options:
1) The easiest option would be to add an occupied block, then remove the center
% Occupancy grid size 120x120 with resolution 1
map1 = binaryOccupancyMap(120,120,1,"grid");
%First four coordinates are boundaries of environment. Last four are boundaries of the obstacle.
%x = [0; 0; 120; 120; 20; 100; 20; 100];
%y = [0; 120; 120; 0; 100; 100; 20; 20];
% Define outside of block in local-coordinates
cornerLocal = [20 20];
blockSize = map1.GridSize/map1.Resolution-cornerLocal;
blockValues = true(blockSize);
setOccupancy(map1,cornerLocal,blockValues,"local");
figure(1); subplot(1,2,1); title('setOccupancy Block: Area Filled');
show(map1)
% Un-occupy the center
setOccupancy(map1,cornerLocal+1,~blockValues(2:end-1,2:end-1),"local");
subplot(1,2,2); title('setOccupancy Block: Inside removed');
show(map1)
2) Another option is to add the individual lines, which follows the same rules as before
%Occupancy grid size 120x120 with resolution 1
map2 = binaryOccupancyMap(120,120,1,"grid");
% Define 4 corners and edge-lengths, in [left, top, right, bottom] order
edgeSize = ones(4,2);
m = [1;0;1;0] == true;
edgeSize([m ~m]) = repmat(blockSize,1,2);
blockCorners = [cornerLocal;
cornerLocal+[0 blockSize(1)-1]; % Note that we need to make the corners
cornerLocal+[blockSize(2)-1 0]; % bottom-left for each edge
cornerLocal];
figure(2); ax = gca;
for i = 1:size(blockCorners,1)
setOccupancy(map2,blockCorners(i,:),ones(edgeSize(i,:)),'local');
show(map2,'Parent',ax);
title('setOccupancy Block: Edge-by-edge')
end
3) Lastly, if your "walls" will only be 1-cell wide, then an alternative to #2 is to use raycast. This has the added benefit of working on rotated rectangles or arbitrary polygonal shapes.
%Occupancy grid size 120x120 with resolution 1
map3 = binaryOccupancyMap(120,120,1,"grid");
% Define center of bottom-left corner's cell in world coordinates
cellSize = 1/map3.Resolution;
edgeLength = fliplr(edgeSize)/cellSize;
startPts = local2world(map3,blockCorners+cellSize/2);
endPts = startPts + edgeLength-cellSize;
% Insert edges
figure(3); ax = gca;
for i = 1:size(startPts,1)
[endRayPts,midRayPts] = raycast(map3,startPts(i,:),endPts(i,:));
% Note that output is in grid indices, so we use the point version of
% setOccupancy with "grid" as frame
setOccupancy(map3,[endRayPts;midRayPts],true,'grid');
show(map3,'Parent',ax);
title('raycast+setOccupancy: Raycast edges');
end
Hope this helps,
Cameron
0 Kommentare
Siehe auch
Kategorien
Mehr zu Mapping finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!