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CarND-Controls-PID

Self-Driving Car Engineer Nanodegree Program


Here's the result (video)

In the video you will see the effect of a PID (Proportional Integrative Derivative) controller driving the car around the track. The final parameter choice was made all automatically using multiple iteration of twiddle algorithm. My PID parameters start at with Kp = 0, Kd = 0, Ki = 0 and then using twiddle they are set to a point where the car does not goes out of the track always trying to run as fast as it can. In order to check if the car is still on the track I used speed (that should be positive and >= 0.1) and the absolute value of the cross track error (cte) should be inside a certain limit. The "training" of the Kp, Kd, Ki parameter takes lot of attempts (and time too) so the you will see on the first two runs on the track how the car improves the part of the track it can rides on. Then the simulator is stopped and previously detected final parameters are put inside the code and then a complete lap is shown with those parameters. As you can see the car can't foresee what the best trajectory is but just tries to keep the car on the track changing the steering angle when car deviates too much from the center of the road.

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Dependencies

Basic Build Instructions

  1. Clone this repo.
  2. Make a build directory: mkdir build && cd build
  3. Compile: cmake .. && make
  4. Run it: ./pid.

Editor Settings

We've purposefully kept editor configuration files out of this repo in order to keep it as simple and environment agnostic as possible. However, we recommend using the following settings:

  • indent using spaces
  • set tab width to 2 spaces (keeps the matrices in source code aligned)

Code Style

Please (do your best to) stick to Google's C++ style guide.

Project Instructions and Rubric

Note: regardless of the changes you make, your project must be buildable using cmake and make!

More information is only accessible by people who are already enrolled in Term 2 of CarND. If you are enrolled, see the project page for instructions and the project rubric.

Hints!

  • You don't have to follow this directory structure, but if you do, your work will span all of the .cpp files here. Keep an eye out for TODOs.

Call for IDE Profiles Pull Requests

Help your fellow students!

We decided to create Makefiles with cmake to keep this project as platform agnostic as possible. Similarly, we omitted IDE profiles in order to we ensure that students don't feel pressured to use one IDE or another.

However! I'd love to help people get up and running with their IDEs of choice. If you've created a profile for an IDE that you think other students would appreciate, we'd love to have you add the requisite profile files and instructions to ide_profiles/. For example if you wanted to add a VS Code profile, you'd add:

  • /ide_profiles/vscode/.vscode
  • /ide_profiles/vscode/README.md

The README should explain what the profile does, how to take advantage of it, and how to install it.

Frankly, I've never been involved in a project with multiple IDE profiles before. I believe the best way to handle this would be to keep them out of the repo root to avoid clutter. My expectation is that most profiles will include instructions to copy files to a new location to get picked up by the IDE, but that's just a guess.

One last note here: regardless of the IDE used, every submitted project must still be compilable with cmake and make./

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