On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 02:14:15PM -0600, Nathan West wrote: > Hi, > > I had the same issue a couple of weeks ago. I forget what the > differences were, but I remember the code that comes with GNU Radio > working, so check here: > http://gnuradio.org/redmine/projects/gnuradio/repository/revisions/master/show/gr-howto-write-a-block > > I chalked up the differences to the tutorial being written for the > next release and didn't bother changing the wiki. Maybe it's worth > doing.
Hi guys, hope your stuff is working now. There might be problems in the tutorial (I actually did the tutorial on another screen while I was writing it, so it should be 99% correct, 1% remains to be checked :). The actual output of gr_modtool as shown in the wiki page might not be exactly what you see. There are several versions of modtool out there; we're planning to merge it into main GNU Radio soon. Then, there will be one official version to go with. This concurs with what Nathan said: When 3.6.4 is the official release, the tutorial, modtool and GNU Radio will fit much better. However, right now, it should still be useful, assuming the user can adapt to slightly different outputs--with you guys, I'm not worried in that respect. MB > > -Nathan > > On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 1:59 PM, Brooke Hayden <[email protected]> wrote: > > Martin, > > > > I'm creating a C++ block using the first tutorial like you assumed. I have > > re-done this tutorial about 10 times now. I have the latest version of GNU > > Radio installed. The part in the tutorial you pointed out is most likely the > > problem, but I don't know how. My QA code is as follows: > > from gnuradio import gr, gr_unittest > > import howto_swig as howto > > > > class qa_square_ff (gr_unittest.TestCase): > > > > def setUp (self): > > self.tb = gr.top_block () > > > > def tearDown (self): > > self.tb = None > > > > def test_001_square_ff (self): > > src_data = (-3, 4, -5.5, 2, 3) > > expected_result = (9, 16, 30.25, 4, 9) > > src = gr.vector_source_f(src_data) > > sqr = howto.square_ff() > > dst= gr.vector_sink_f() > > self.tb.connect(src, sqr) > > self.tb.connect(sqr, dst) > > self.tb.run() > > result_data = dst.data() > > self.assertFloatTuplesAlmostEqual(expexted_result, result_data, 6) > > > > > > if __name__ == '__main__': > > gr_unittest.run(qa_square_ff, "qa_square_ff.xml") > > > > One thing that is confusing in the tutorial is the following: > > So, we open python/qa_square_ff.py, which we edit to look like this: > > > > Check out this code, which we save as python/qa_howto.py (only the modified > > portion is shown): > > > > I'm not sure if I need to edit and save qa_square_ff.py, create qa_howto,py, > > or do both. If you, or someone else, has a gr-howto folder that works I > > would like to compare and see what is happening. -- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) Communications Engineering Lab (CEL) Dipl.-Ing. Martin Braun Research Associate Kaiserstraße 12 Building 05.01 76131 Karlsruhe Phone: +49 721 608-43790 Fax: +49 721 608-46071 www.cel.kit.edu KIT -- University of the State of Baden-Württemberg and National Laboratory of the Helmholtz Association
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