Welcome to the QTT framework. This README will shortly introduce the framework, and it will guide you through the structure, installation process and how to contribute. We look forward to working with you!
Quantum Technology Toolbox (QTT) is a Python-based framework developed initially by QuTech for the tuning and calibration of quantum dots and spin qubits. QuTech is an advanced research center based in Delft, the Netherlands, for quantum computing and quantum internet, a collaboration founded by the University of Technology Delft (TU Delft) and the Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO).
For usage of QTT see the detailed documentation on readthedocs.io.
QTT is the framework on which you can base your measurement and analysis scripts. QTT is based on QCoDeS (basic framework such as instrument drivers, DataSet) and the SciPy ecosystem.
QTT is compatible with Python 3.8+. QTT can be installed as a pip package to be used in a (virtual) Python environment. We assume that software packages like git and python are already installed on your system.
Note: when running Ubuntu Linux, installing these packages is done via:
sudo apt install git gcc python3.10 python3.10-venv python3.10-dev
for Python 3.10.x. Other Linux distributions require similar steps.
To create a clean virtual Python environment for your QTT development do:
mkdir qtt
cd qtt
Now activate the virtual environment. On Linux do:
python3 -m venv env
. ./env/bin/activate
or
source ./env/bin/activate
On Windows do:
python -m pip install virtualenv
python -m virtualenv --copies env
env\Scripts\activate.bat
Now we are ready to install QTT.
To use QTT, install it as a pip package:
pip install qtt
or install QTT from source.
The source for QTT can be found at Github. For the default installation from the QTT source directory execute:
git clone https://github.com/QuTech-Delft/qtt.git
cd qtt
pip install wheel
For QTT development install QTT in editable mode:
pip install -e .
For non-editable mode do:
pip install .
When (encountered on Linux) PyQt5 gives an error when installing try upgrading pip
pip install --upgrade pip
and rerun the respective install command.
Sometimes the default installation does not work because of incompatible dependencies between the used packages on your system. To be sure you use all the right versions of the packages used by QTT and its dependencies do:
pip install . -r requirements_lock.txt
or for development
pip install -e . -r requirements_lock.txt
This will install a tested set of all the packages QTT depends on.
Tests for the QTT packages are contained in the subdirectory tests
. To run the tests run the following command:
pytest
When integration tests fail because of errors in plotting try downgrading opencv-python to 4.2.0.34:
pip install opencv-python==4.2.0.34
To install the necessary packages to perform documentation activities for QTT do:
pip install -e .[rtd]
The documentation generation process is dependent on pandoc. When you want to generate the documentation and pandoc is not yet installed on your system navigate to Pandoc and follow the instructions found there to install pandoc. To build the 'readthedocs' documentation do:
cd docs
make html
For the Vandersypen research group there are more detailed instructions, read the file INSTALL.md in the spin-projects repository.
To update QTT do:
pip install . --upgrade
See the documentation and the example notebooks in the docs/notebooks directory.
For a general introduction also see
If you use Spyder then use the following settings:
- Use a
IPython
console and inTools->Preferences->IPython console->Graphics
set the IPython backend graphics option toQt5
. This ensures correctly displaying theParameterViewer
andDataBrowser
- In
Tools->Preferences->Console->Advanced settings
uncheck the boxEnable UMR
See Contributing for information about bug/issue reports, contributing code, style, and testing
See License