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| #define kFilteringFactor 0.1
- (void)accelerometer:(UIAccelerometer *)accelerometer didAccelerate:(UIAcceleration *)acceleration {
// Use a basic low-pass filter to keep only the gravity component of each axis.
accelX = (acceleration.x * kFilteringFactor) + (accelX * (1.0 - kFilteringFactor));
accelY = (acceleration.y * kFilteringFactor) + (accelY * (1.0 - kFilteringFactor))
accelZ = (acceleration.z * kFilteringFactor) + (accelZ * (1.0 - kFilteringFactor));
// Use the acceleration data.
}
If you are using accelerometer data to detect just the instant motion of a device, you need to be able to isolate sudden changes in movement from the constant effect of gravity. You can do that with a high-pass filter.
Listing 2 shows a simplified high-pass filter computation. The acceleration values from the previous event are stored in the accelX, accelY, and accelZ member variables of the class. This example computes the low-pass filter value and then subtracts it from the current value to obtain just the instantaneous component of motion.
Listing 2 Getting the instantaneous portion of movement from accelerometer data
#define kFilteringFactor 0.1
- (void)accelerometer:(UIAccelerometer *)accelerometer didAccelerate:(UIAcceleration *)acceleration {
// Subtract the low-pass value from the current value to get a simplified high-pass filter
accelX = acceleration.x - ( (acceleration.x * kFilteringFactor) + (accelX * (1.0 - kFilteringFactor)) );
accelY = acceleration.y - ( (acceleration.y * kFilteringFactor) + (accelY * (1.0 - kFilteringFactor)) );
accelZ = acceleration.z - ( (acceleration.z * kFilteringFactor) + (accelZ * (1.0 - kFilteringFactor)) );
// Use the acceleration data.
} |
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