[Documentation] [TitleIndex] [WordIndex

laser_filters/Reviews/2009-9-29_Doc_Review

Reviewer:

Instructions for doing a doc review

See DocReviewProcess for more instructions

  1. Does the documentation define the Users of your Package, i.e. for the expected usages of your Stack, which APIs will users engage with?
    • From the doc I understand that the user can (i) use the filter api to run individual/multiple laser filters, or (ii) use the provided nodes to run laser filters.
  2. Are all of these APIs documented?
    • For the filter api this package refers to the filter package
    • The ros api of the two filter nodes is explained, although some information is missing. See below for comments.
  3. Do relevant usages have associated tutorials? (you can ignore this if a Stack-level tutorial covers the relevant usage), and are the indexed in the right places?
    • Yes
  4. If there are hardware dependencies of the Package, are these documented?
  5. Is it clear to an outside user what the roadmap is for the Package?
    • It is mentioned that there will be pointcloud filters in the future.
  6. Is it clear to an outside user what the stability is for the Package?
    • No
  7. Are concepts introduced by the Package well illustrated?
    • Yes
  8. Is the research related to the Package referenced properly? i.e. can users easily get to relevant papers?
  9. Are any mathematical formulas in the Package not covered by papers properly documented?

For each launch file in a Package

  1. Is it clear how to run that launch file?
  2. Does the launch file start up with no errors when run correctly?
  3. Do the Nodes in that launch file correctly use ROS_ERROR/ROS_WARN/ROS_INFO logging levels?

Concerns / issues

Wim

As a first time user, it took me a while to figure out what the different options are to run the laser filters. Could this be made more clear by e.g. having the main page only mention the individual laser filters, and a separate page mention the different ways to run filters?

Josh

Wim got most of mine, but here are some more:

ok, one more.

Conclusion


2024-12-07 14:54