Expipe plugin for the CINPLA laboratory.
expipe-plugin-cinpla
can be installed by running
$ pip install expipe-plugin-cinpla
It requires Python 3.10+ to run.
If you want the latest features and can't wait for the next release, install from GitHub:
$ pip install git+https://github.com/CINPLA/expipe-plugin-cinpla.git
The starting point is a valid expipe
project. Refer to the expipe docs to read more on how to create one.
The recommended usage is via Jupyter Notebook / Lab, using the interactive widgets to Register, Process, Curate, and View your actions.
To launch the interactive browser, you can run:
from expipe_plugin_cinpla import display_browser
project_path = "path-to-my-project"
display_browser(project_path)
The current version uses Neurodata Without Borders as backend instead of Exdir. If you have an existing project created with the old version, you can convert it to a new project as follows:
from expipe_plugin_cinpla import convert_old_project
old_project_path = "path-to-old-project"
new_project_path = "path-to-new-project"
probe_path = "path-to-probe-path.json" # see probes/ folder
convert_old_project(old_project_path, new_project_path, probe_path)
To check out other options, use convert_old_project?
First, we recommend to create a virtual environment and install pip
;
-
Using venv:
$ python3.11 -m venv <env_name> $ source <env_name>/bin/activate $ python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip
-
Using conda:
$ conda create -n <env_name> python=3.11 pip $ conda activate <env_name>
Then install expipe-plugin-cinpla
in editable mode from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/CINPLA/expipe-plugin-cinpla.git
$ cd expipe_plugin_cinpla
$ python3 -m pip install -e ".[full]"
We use pre-commit to run Git hooks on every commit to identify simple issues such as trailing whitespace or not complying with the required formatting. Our pre-commit configuration is specified in the .pre-commit-config.yml
file.
To set up the Git hook scripts specified in .pre-commit-config.yml
, run
$ pre-commit install
NOTE: If
pre-commit
identifies formatting issues in the commited code, the pre-commit Git hooks will reformat the code. If code is reformatted, it will show up in your unstaged changes. Stage them and recommit to successfully commit your changes.
It is also possible to run the pre-commit hooks without attempting a commit:
$ pre-commit run --all-files