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Nominally yes. Trajopt can accept joint waypoints or Cartesian waypoints, and it represents movement between these waypoints in joint space (i.e. a joint-interpolated arc, rather than a straight linear line). However, if your waypoints are spaced closely enough together and are on your linear trajectory, the joint-interpolated arc between waypoints approximates a line.

If you're using trajopt through tesseract, you can denote the MoveInstructions of your motion planning input as LINEAR moves; then the SimplePlanner (which generates a seed trajectory for Trajopt) will do linear interpolation between those waypoints at some specifiable density to approximate a line. Then Trajopt will optimi…

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@joao-pm-santos96
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@joao-pm-santos96
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@marip8
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Converted from issue

This discussion was converted from issue #335 on June 21, 2023 14:52.