A robot that follows instructions is like a toy car that knows exactly when to go and when to stop.
Imagine you have a remote control car. When you press a button, it moves forward. When you press another button, it stops. That’s simple instructions, just like what a robot uses.
How It Works
A robot has special parts inside it called sensors and processors. These are like the eyes and brain of the robot. The sensors help it see or feel things around it, and the processor decides what to do next based on the instructions it gets.
For example, if a robot is told to pick up a ball, its sensors might tell it where the ball is, and its processor tells its arms to move and grab the ball, just like how you follow directions to find your favorite toy in a big room.
Why It’s Cool
Robots can do all sorts of tasks because they're very good at following instructions step by step. Whether it's cleaning your room or helping build something, robots are like helpful friends who never forget what they’re supposed to do!
Examples
- A robot in a factory that stacks boxes exactly where it's told to
- A smart speaker that turns on the lights when you say 'Good morning'
- A toy car that moves forward only when you press the button
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See also
- What are instructions?
- What are proxy mechanisms?
- What are instructions for a team game?
- What is automation?
- What is activation?