Pylinkage is a Python linkage builder and optimizer. You can create planar linkages and optimize them with a Particle Swarm Optimization. It is still in beta, so don't hesitate to post pull request or issues for features you would like to see!.
This package is in the PyPi as pylinkage, and can be installed using:
pip install pylinkage
It is the recommended way of downloading it.
We provide an environment.yml file for conda.
Use conda env update --file environment.yml --name pylinkage-env
to install the requirements in a separate environment.
Let's start with a short demo of the package's capabilities.
It is highly Pythonic and emphasizes efficient code. Here is the definition of a four-bar linkage.
import pylinkage as pl
# Main motor
crank = pl.Crank(0, 1, joint0=(0, 0), angle=.31, distance=1)
# Close the loop
pin = pl.Revolute(
3, 2, joint0=crank, joint1=(3, 0),
distance0=3, distance1=1
)
# Create the linkage
my_linkage = pl.Linkage(joints=(crank, pin))
# Show the results
pl.show_linkage(my_linkage)
Cool, isn't it? But the package doesn't stop here as it provides a library to achieve any movement.
Let's say that you want the pin
joint to stay in top-right corner, with an amplitude of [0, 90] exactly.
You can solve it by yourself, you can ask the code to do it for you.
Define evaluation function called fitness_func
, that returns a good score to the linkage
when the pin
joint stays in the first quadrant, and 0 otherwise.
Then just run the following code:
# Let's set some bounds to keep the dimensions reasonable
bounds = pl.generate_bounds(my_linkage.get_num_constraints())
# Now comes the "magic" function that solve of issue
score, position, coord = pl.particle_swarm_optimization(
eval_func=fitness_func,
linkage=my_linkage,
bounds=bounds,
order_relation=min,
)[0]
# Let's use the result in our linkage!
my_linkage.set_num_constraints(constraints) # Dimensions
my_linkage.set_coords(init_pos) # Initial position
pl.show_linkage(my_linkage)
Tadaaa! We defined a mechanism, solved an issue and viewed the result in a few lines of code! And remember, you can define any objective function, so let's give it a try!
Let's start with a crank-rocker four-bar linkage, as a classic mechanism.
First, we define at least one crank because we want a kinematic simulation.
crank = pl.Crank(0, 1, joint0=(0, 0), angle=0.31, distance=1)
Here we are actually doing the following:
0, 1
: x and y initial coordinates of the tail of the crank link.joint0
: the position of the parent Joint to link with, here it is a fixed point in space. The pin will be created on the position of the parent, which is the head of the crank link.angle
: the crank will rotate with this angle, in radians, at each iteration.distance
: distance to keep constant between crank link tail and head.
Now we add a pin joint to close the kinematic loop.
pin = pl.Revolute(3, 2, joint0=crank, joint1=(3, 0), distance0=3, distance1=1)
In human language, here is what is happening:
joint0
,joint1
: first and secondJoint
s you want to link to, the order is not important.distance0
,distance1
: distance to keep constant between this joint and his two parents.
And here comes the trick:
Why do we specify initial coordinates 3, 2
? They even seem incompatible with distance to parents/parents' positions!
- This explanation is simple: mathematically a pin joint the intersection of two circles. The intersection is often two points. To choose the starting point, we calculate both intersection (when possible), then we keep the intersection closer to the previous position as the solution.
Wait! A linkage with a single motor and only one pin joint? That doesn't make sense!
: Behind the curtain, many joints are created on the fly.
When you define a Crank
joint, it creates a motor and a pin joint on the crank's link head.
For a Revolute
joint, it creates 3 pin joints: one on each of its parents' positions, and one its position,
which forms a deformable triangle.
This is why pylinkage is so short to write.
Once your linkage is finished, you can either use the reload
method of each Joint
in a loop,
or put everything in a Linkage
that will handle this can of thinks for you.
Linkage definition is simple:
my_linkage = pl.Linkage(joints=(crank, pin))
That's all!
Now we want to simulate it and to get the locus of pin
. Just use the step
method of Linkage
to make a complete rotation.
locus = my_linkage.step()
You can also specify the number of steps with the iteration
argument, or subdivisions of each iteration withdt
.
Let's recap.
import pylinkage as pl
# Main motor
crank = pl.Crank(0, 1, joint0=(0, 0), angle=.31, distance=1)
# Close the loop
pin = pl.Revolute(
3, 2, joint0=crank, joint1=(3, 0),
distance0=3, distance1=1
)
my_linkage = pl.Linkage(joints=(crank, pin))
locus = my_linkage.step()
First thing first, you made a cool linkage, but only you know what it is. Let's add friendly names to joints, so the communication is simplified.
crank.name = "B"
pin.name = "C"
# Linkage can also have names
my_linkage.name = "Four-bar linkage"
Then you can view your linkage!
pl.show_linkage(my_linkage)
Last recap, rearranging names:
# Main motor
crank = pl.Crank(0, 1, joint0=(0, 0), angle=.31, distance=1, name="B")
# Close the loop
pin = pl.Revolute(
3, 2, joint0=crank, joint1=(3, 0),
distance0=3, distance1=1, name="C"
)
# Linkage definition
my_linkage = pl.Linkage(
joints=(crank, pin),
order=(crank, pin),
name="My four-bar linkage"
)
# Visualization
pl.show_linkage(my_linkage)
Now, we want automatic optimization of our linkage, using a certain criterion. Let's find a four-bar linkage that makes a quarter of a circle. It is a common problem if you want to build a windshield wiper for instance.
Our objective function, often called the fitness function, is the following:
# We save the initial positions because we don't want a completely different movement
init_pos = my_linkage.get_coords()
@pl.kinematic_minimizastion
def fitness_func(loci, **_kwargs):
"""
Return how fit the locus is to describe a quarter of circle.
It is a minimization problem and the theoretic best score is 0.
"""
# Locus of the Joint 'pin", mast in linkage order
tip_locus = tuple(x[-1] for x in loci)
# We get the bounding box
curr_bb = bounding_box(tip_locus)
# We set the reference bounding box, in order (min_y, max_x, max_y, min_x)
ref_bb = (0, 5, 3, 0)
# Our score is the square sum of the edge distances
return sum((pos - ref_pos) ** 2 for pos, ref_pos in zip(curr_bb, ref_bb))
Please note that it is a minimization problem, with 0 as lower bound. On the first line, you notice a decorator; which plays a crucial role:
- The decorator arguments are (linkage, constraints), it can also receive
init_pos
- It sets the linkage with the constraints.
- Then it verifies if the linkage can do a complete crank turn.
- If it can, pass the arguments and the resulting loci (path of joints) to the decorated function.
- If not, return the penalty. In a minimization problem the penalty will be
float('inf')
.
- The decorated function should return the score of this linkage.
With this constraint, the best theoretic score is 0.0.
Let's start with a candide optimization, the trial-and-error method. Here it is a serial test of switches.
# Exhaustive optimization as an example ONLY
score, position, coord = pl.trials_and_errors_optimization(
eval_func=fitness_func,
linkage=my_linkage,
divisions=25,
n_results=1,
order_relation=min,
)[0]
Here the problem is simple enough, so that method takes only a few seconds and returns 0.05.
However, with more complex linkages, you need something more robust and more efficient. Then we will use particle swarm optimization. Here are the principles:
- The parameters are the geometric constraints (the dimensions) of the linkage.
- A dimension set (an n-uplet) is called a particle or an agent. Think of it like a bee.
- The particles move in an n-vectorial space. That is, if we have n geometric constraints, the particles move in an n-D space.
- Together, the particles form the swarm.
- Each time they move, their score is evaluated by our fitness function.
- They know their best score, and know the current score of their neighbor.
- Together they will try to find the extreme in the space. Here it is a minimum.
It is particularly relevant when the fitness function is not resource-greedy.
# We reset the linkage (an optimal linkage is not interesting)
my_linkage.set_num_constraints(constraints)
# As we do for initial positions
my_linkage.set_coords(init_pos)
# Optimization is more efficient with a start space
bounds = pl.generate_bounds(my_linkage.get_num_constraints())
score, position, coord = pl.particle_swarm_optimization(
eval_func=fitness_func,
linkage=my_linkage,
bounds=bounds,
order_relation=min,
)[0]
Here the result can vary, but it is rarely above 0.2.
So we made something that says it works, let's verify it:
With a bit of imagination, you have a wonderful windshield wiper!
The idea of pylinkage is "one-linkage-one-file". The idea is that you reuse the same structure for linkage declaration, in order to make things easy to follow. Of course, you can adapt the project to your needs, but I recommend the following approach:
- Declare your joints (any
Joint
defined in thepylinkage/joints
package). - Arrange joints together in a
Linkage
(see thepylinkage/linkage
package). - (optional) Manually simulate your linkage.
As we use kinematic planar linkages, constraints are solved as 2D geometry (
pylinkage/geometry
). - Optimize your
Linkage
withpylinkage/optimization
. - View the result with
pylinkage/visualizar
.
Python 3, numpy for calculation, matplotlib for drawing, and standard libraries. You will also need PySwarms for the Particle Swarm Optimization.
Pylinkage is open to contribution. I may consider any pull request, but I ask you to respect the CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md and follow the guidelines as defined in CONTRIBUTING.md.