This package contains Flowtracks, a Python-package for post-processing of 3D Particle Tracking Velocimetry particle/trajectory databases.
The full documentation for this package may be built from the Sphinx sources in the doc/ directory. It is also available online:
http://flowtracks.readthedocs.org
Please refer to that documentation for the full information on installing, reference documentation and usage examples contained in the package.
The program is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 3.0. For details, see the LICENSE.txt file.
Meller, Y and Liberzon, A 2016 Particle Data Management Software for 3DParticle Tracking Velocimetry and Related Applications – The Flowtracks Package. Journal of Open Research Software, 4: e23, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/jors.101
The most recent version of this package may be found under the auspices of the OpenPTV project, in its Github repository,
https://github.com/OpenPTV/postptv
Dependencies:
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The software depends on the SciPy package, obtainable from http://www.scipy.org/
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Some features depend on the Matplotlib package. Users which need those features may get Matplotlib at http://matplotlib.org/
To install this package, follow the standard procedure for installing Python modules. The package may be installed either systemwide, in the default location, or for a single user, by changing the install location and updating environment variables in the standard way, as indicated by the Python documentation [1].
For a default systemwide installation: using a terminal, change directory into the root directory of theis program's source code, then run
python setup.py install
Note that for the default install you may need administrative privileges on the machine you are using. Consult the Python documentation for the single-user install procedure.
The install script will install the Python package in the default place for
your platform. Additionally, it will install example scripts in a
subdirectory flowtracks-examples/
under the default executable location,
and a the documentation in the default package root. For information on where
these directories are on your platform (and how to change them), refer to
the Python documentation [1]. Other standard features of the setup script are
also described therein.
The examples are Jupyter notebooks [2], and can be previewed without any special setup under the examples section of
http://flowtracks.readthedocs.org
[1] Python documentation: https://docs.python.org/2/install/index.html [2] http://jupyter.org/