That's right. Want your awesome create lifter to do it's mojo when you press button 1? Just click it. Relax. Tele-op Catalyst will help you do the rest!
That's right. Want your awesome create lifter to do it's mojo when you press button 1? Just click it. Relax. Tele-op Catalyst will help you do the rest!
Make your crate lifter do its thing when button 1 is toggled on, toggled off, mashed down, or not mashed at all. It's totally your call.
Painlessly export your shiny new teleop code directly to a ROBOTC file. Feeling lazy? Tele-op Catalyst supports one-click export to your clipboard, too.

Tele-op Catalyst makes it stupidly easy to create robust teleop (remote control) programs using a simple but powerful "click, command, create" workflow.
While you still need to know how to write simple code such as motor[motorA]=100, all the complexities of handling button presses, determining toggle states, driving, etc. are handled by Tele-op Catalyst, so you don't have to.
In addition to its ease-of-use, Tele-op Catalyst also has features for more seasoned ROBOTC programmers as well. It provides native interfaces where programmers can specify custom functions and tasks (prototypes are automatically generated, too!), rudimentary versioning, and the ability to save and resume any number of Catalyst projects.
There is a major known bug in the current version of Tele-op Catalyst. Here's how you can fix it:
%appdata% in the address bar.org.kcastromechs.ftc.TeleopCatalystForRobotC folder and open itLocal Store folder and open itpreferences.xml file and oepn it in Notepad or another text editor (I like to use Notepad++)<programVersion></programVersion> tag and change the version number to any previous version (such as Version 1.3 Beta)preferences.xml file close it
Hi there! I'm Titus Woo. When I wrote this app, I was a home-schooled, 17 year old web designer and programmer who fell in love with computers since I was 12. I have been writing computer programs, designing websites, and wondering "how the heck does that work?" ever since.
I want to get my Master's Degree in Computer Science from Georgia Tech, work for an amazing tech company, and create something that will change the world as we know it; not necessarily in that order. I'm working hard towards that goal (among other things, I started college at 13 and have three Associate's Degrees), and while this catalyst program might not be particularly jawdropping, I like to think it's a small step in the right direction.