They don't provide much utility for the end user. A print at the call to
HAL_ObserveUserProgramStarting() was added in their place so it's still
clear when constructors have finished running.
Currently, we have functions like TeleopInit() for running code on mode
entry, but no such functions for running code on mode exit, and it's
cumbersome to add those in user code without making a custom robot
class. This PR adds exit functions to TimedRobot.
Some example use cases include DisabledExit() for operations when the
robot enables (whether that be into teleop, autonomous, or test) and
AutonomousExit() for disabling feedback controllers.
This is a basic C++ example that demonstrates a simple differential drive implementation using “tank”-style controls through the DifferentialDrive class and an ordinary joystick.
* Rename Butcher tableau sections in NumericalIntegration such that
top-left is c, top-right is A, and bottom-right is b
* Move edu.wpi.first.math.Discretization to
edu.wpi.first.math.system.Discretization
* Sort Java Discretization to match C++ function order
* Add tests for Java Discretization
* Required adding Runge-Kutta time-varying impl to tests
* Move C++ Runge-Kutta time-varying impl to tests only
* Users don't need it
Our patches for the DARE and [[noreturn]] attributes were merged
upstream. We missed their monthly release window by a day, so we'll use
a commit hash for now.
The current 2021.3.1 release refers to `java/lang/IOException` which causes the following exception when using `toPathweaverJson` or `fromPathweaverJson`:
```
java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: java/lang/IOException
at edu.wpi.first.math.WPIMathJNI.fromPathweaverJson(Native Method)
at edu.wpi.first.wpilibj.trajectory.TrajectoryUtil.fromPathweaverJson(TrajectoryUtil.java:79)
```
Also refactored RKF45 implementation to match the new style, which is
easier to read.
The tests were switched from RKF45 to RKDP since it's more accurate.
This reverts commit d068fb321f (#3420).
The 18.04 docker images now use GCC 8, which was the original reason for
updating. 20.04 uses a much more recent libc, so staying with 18.04
enables more Linux platforms to use the binaries.