Metadata-Version: 1.0
Name: PIMS
Version: 0.4.1
Summary: Python Image Sequence
Home-page: https://github.com/soft-matter/pims
Author: PIMS Contributors
Author-email: dallan@pha.jhu.edu
License: UNKNOWN
Description: pims: Python Image Sequence
        =========================
        
        [![build status](https://travis-ci.org/soft-matter/pims.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/soft-matter/pims)
        
        What Problem Does PIMS Solve?
        -----------------------------
        
        Scientific video can be packaged in various ways: familiar video formats like
        .AVI and .MOV, folders full of numbered images, or "stacks" of TIFF images. Each
        of these requires a separate Python module. And, once loaded, they have
        different methods for **accessing individual images, looping through the images
        in bulk, accessing a specific range, or dealing with multidimensional files**.
        PIMS can do all of these using a consistent interface, handling the differences
        between different inputs invisibly.
        
        Formats readable by pims include:
        * Directories or zipfiles of still images (most formats, including TIFF, JPEG, PNG, BMP), and TIFF stacks
        * Microscope images supported by the [Bio-formats project](https://www.openmicroscopy.org/site/support/bio-formats5.1/supported-formats.html), including Leica, Nikon, Olympus, and Zeiss formats. Requires separate installation; see below.
        * Movie formats and codecs supported by ffmpeg, including AVI, QuickTime MOV, and H.264 (MP4). May require separate installation; see below.
        * CINE files from Vision Research cameras
        * SEQ files from NorPix StreamPix software
        
        PIMS is based on readers by:
        * [scikit-image](http://scikit-image.org/)
        * [matplotlib](http://matplotlib.org/)
        * [scipy](http://www.scipy.org/)
        * [ffmpeg](https://www.ffmpeg.org/) and [PyAV](http://mikeboers.github.io/PyAV/) (video formats such as AVI, MOV)
        * [jpype](http://jpype.readthedocs.org/en/latest/) (interface with Bio-formats)
        * [Pillow](http://pillow.readthedocs.org/en/latest/) (improved TIFF support)
        * [libtiff](https://code.google.com/p/pylibtiff/) (alternative TIFF support)
        * [tifffile](http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/code/tifffile.py.html) (alterative TIFF support)
        * [pims_nd2](https://github.com/soft-matter/pims_nd2) (improved Nikon .nd2 support)
        * [imageio](https://imageio.github.io) (a multi-purpose reader package that
           reads and writes many formats)
        * [moviepy](http://zulko.github.io/moviepy) (a Python module that supports
           video editing)
        
        Examples & Documentation
        ------------------------
        
        Everything is demonstrated in [this IPython notebook](http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/soft-matter/pims/blob/master/examples/loading%20video%20frames.ipynb).
        
        [**Read the documentation**](http://soft-matter.github.io/pims/) for
        installation instructions, examples, and further reference.
        
        Core Contributors
        -----------------
        
          * **Daniel Allan** founding contributor, slicing and iteration logic,
            basic readers, display tools
          * **Thomas Caswell** major refactor, abstract base class
          * **Casper van der Wel** bioformats readers, display tools
          * **Thomas Dimiduk** filetype-detecting dispatch logic
        
        Support
        -------
        
        This package was developed in part by Daniel Allan, as part of his
        PhD thesis work on microrheology in Robert L. Leheny's group at Johns Hopkins
        University in Baltimore, MD. The work was supported by the National Science Foundation
        under grant number CBET-1033985. Later work was supported by Brookhaven
        National Lab. Dan can be reached at dallan@bnl.gov.
        
        This package was developed in part by Thomas A Caswell as part of his
        PhD thesis work in Sidney R Nagel's and Margaret L Gardel's groups at
        the University of Chicago, Chicago IL.  This work was supported in
        part by NSF Grant DMR-1105145 and NSF-MRSEC DMR-0820054. Later work was
        supported by Brookhaven National Lab. Tom can be
        reached at tcaswell@gmail.com.
        
        This package was developed in part by Casper van der Wel, as part of his
        PhD thesis work in Daniela Kraft's group at the Huygens-Kamerlingh-Onnes laboratory,
        Institute of Physics, Leiden University, The Netherlands. This work was
        supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO/OCW).
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
