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ehofman
0fd9f0a704 David Culp:
First, preferences.xml will define the scenario filename.

For now, the other way of defining ai objects still works, so the sailboat
stays in preferences.xml.  Later, I'll move the sailboat into the demo
scenario.  If no scenario filename is given, then no scenario will be
processed.

I changed the demo scenario to create two 737's, one takes off on runway 01L,
and the other takes off on runway 01R.  This will make a good demo for the ai
system.  One problem, if you takeoff on 28L/R right away, you might run into
the taking-off 737's, or be scared.
2004-05-17 08:45:33 +00:00
ehofman
1dfe93d550 David Culp:
Here's the newest AI stuff.

The AIManager at init() creates a new scenario.  Right now the
default_scenario is hard coded in, but eventually the AIManager should get
the scenario filename from preferences.xml.

The scenario defines which AI objects will be created.  Right now it only
creates AIAircraft, but this is easily extended.  The scenario also defines
which flightplan will be assigned to the airplane.  Scenario config files go
in data/Data/AI.

The Airplane gets a pointer to a FlightPlan object.  Each airplane should get
its own flightplan object, even if two airplanes have the same flight plan.
This is because  the flightplan maintains the iterator pointing to the
current waypoint, and two airplanes might be at different locations (for
instance if they were created at different times).  The flight plan files go
in data/Data/AI/FlightPlans.

When the airplane gets to the waypoint named "END" it vanishes.  The
AIAircraft destructor deletes its flight plan (if it has one).

The last waypoint is a place holder only.  I called mine
<WPT><NAME>"EOF"</NAME></WPT>.
2004-05-15 09:07:55 +00:00
ehofman
6a08c79fcc David Culp:
I added some things to the AI stuff to improve the AIThermal processing.
Before, all the thermals were processed in order, and the last one overwrote
the prior one.  Now, only the data from the nearest thermal is kept.  This
way a tile can be populated with many thermals, and (as long as they have the
same diameter) the one nearest the airplane correctly takes effect.  This
will make us ready for the next step, "auto-thermaling", where FlightGear's
tile manager can cover a tile with thermals, and set the thermal strength
based on land-use type.

I moved the enumerated object_type to the base class.  When an AI object is
created it now sets the _otype variable in the base class.  This lets the AI
manager find out what kind of AI object it is dealing with, using the base
pointer.  I also added a function isa() to the base class, so the manager can
process objects differently based on their type.

The AI manager now sends AIThermal processing to a different function, where
only the data from the nearest thermal is kept.  After the manager processes
all the AI objects, then the results from the nearest thermal are applied to
wind-from-down.
2004-03-07 12:08:46 +00:00
ehofman
250ccf7bff Put the Thermal and Storm support code back in 2004-03-03 20:33:08 +00:00
ehofman
85a1e5cc98 David Culp:
Here's a new batch of AI code which includes a working radar instrument.

I put the radar calculations into the existing AIAircraft class.  It was
easier that way, and it can always be migrated out later if we have to.
Every tenth sim cycle the AIManager makes a copy of the current user state
information.  When the AIAircraft updates it uses this information to
calculate the radar numbers.  It calculates:

1) bearing from user to target
2) range to target in nautical miles
3) "horizontal offset" to target.  This is the angle from the nose to the
   target, in degrees, from -180 to 180.  This will be useful later for a HUD.
4) elevation, in degrees (vertical angle from user's position to target
   position)
5) vertical offset, in degrees (this is elevation corrected for user's pitch)
6) rdot (range rate in knots, note:  not working yet, so I commented it out)

and three items used by the radar instrument to place the "blip"

7) y_shift, in nautical miles
8) x_shift, in nautical miles
9) rotation, in degrees

The radar instrument uses the above three items, and applies a scale factor to
the x-shift and y-shift in order to match the instrument's scale.  Changing
the display scale can be done entirely in the XML code for the instrument.
Right now it's set up only to display a 40 mile scale.

The radar is an AWACS view, which is not very realistic, but it is useful and
demonstrates the technology.  With just a little more work I can get a HUD
marker.  All I need to do there is make a bank angle adjustment to the
current values.
2004-02-27 10:20:17 +00:00
ehofman
4b424a29e7 David Culp:
I went through the AI code to put the "bank" node back into the config file,
so the models can fly circles.  While I was in there I made some other
changes.

*)  Moved the initialization of roll, tgt-roll, pitch ... etc, from init()
into the constructor, so it wouldn't over-write the config settings.

*)  Changed the altitude getter to remove the meters-to-feet conversion.  The
altitude is kept internally in feet.  Only the scenery code needs meters.

*)  Added "bank" item for config file (for type=aircraft).  Left bank is
negative.

*)  Added "rudder" item for config file (for type=ship).  Left rudder is
negative.  Internally this is stored in the "roll" variable, but the ship
model doesn't roll.  It uses the "roll" variable for turning though.


The following puts a tanker at 3000 feet, 6 nm northwest of KSFO.  On takeoff,
the tanker is visible over the hanger building at one-o'clock.

   <entry>
    <type>aircraft</type>
    <class>jet_transport</class>
    <path>Aircraft/737/Models/boeing733.xml</path>
    <speed-KTAS type="double">320.0</speed-KTAS>
    <altitude-ft type="double">3000.0</altitude-ft>
    <longitude type="double">-122.455</longitude>
    <latitude type="double">37.69667</latitude>
    <heading type="double">200.0</heading>
    <bank type="double">-15.0</bank>
   </entry>
2004-02-23 20:55:07 +00:00
ehofman
9bc2517417 Make the AI model export it's internal state to the property tree under /ai/model[] using the same naming convention as used for the regular FDM. Also make sure the model animations are relative the the /ai/model[] node. 2003-12-21 20:12:55 +00:00
ehofman
4c01e0e76a Tidy up the code a bit 2003-12-21 13:42:01 +00:00
ehofman
a9c6ca26af Don't destroy the elements ourselves. Instead clear
() calls the destructor for each element itself.
2003-11-28 20:16:59 +00:00
ehofman
3297ac3544 Some small updates 2003-11-28 20:05:32 +00:00
ehofman
cd0c447b43 Add David Culp's AI model manager code which is derived from David Luff's AI/ATC code. 2003-11-28 15:48:05 +00:00