Test Report » History » Revision 7
Revision 6 (Nathanael Muin JUSTIN, 01/09/2025 03:51 PM) → Revision 7/12 (Nathanael Muin JUSTIN, 01/09/2025 03:51 PM)
h2. [[Wiki]] | [[Team Members]] | [[Meeting Documentation]] | [[Our Project]] | [[Project Setup Guide]] | [[User Manual]] | [[Functional & Non-Functional Requirements]] | [[Math Document]] | [[UML Diagrams]] | [[Results]] h1. Test Report ------------------------------------------- h1. Test Plan h2. Test 1 Plan Step 1: Prepare 2 projectors and 2 laptops and 2 images * Arrange them so that their lenses are approximately 75 cm apart horizontally. Use a measuring tape for accuracy. * Ensure you have the two images you intend to blend or a single full image that can be configured for left and right sides separately. Step 2: Turn on the projectors and laptops * Project onto a flat, perpendicular surface (screen) with enough space for both beams to overlap. Step 3: Connect each laptop to a different projector * Laptop A → Projector A (this will display the “left” image). * Laptop B → Projector B (this will display the “right” image). * Confirm that each projector is recognized as an external display by its respective laptop. Step 4: Follow the user manual guide Step 5: Run the code for each image following the user manual (left image with left projector and right image with right projector) * Execute on Laptop A * Execute on Laptop B Step 6: Display the image Step 7: Check the result image * The overlap region should fade from the left projector’s image to the right projector’s image smoothly. Step 8: Adjust the distance between the 2 projectors with the real life environment and the configuration file * Adjust *Adjust each projector so their outputs are as parallel as possible to each other, minimizing keystone distortion. Step 9: Compare with the original image Step 10: Record the result h1. Test Result