these look really promising at first glance. 

I wrote Scivi in a weekend then basically never touched it again. I've been wanting to make it proper. So I will definitely take a look at your view and incorporate some of Scivi's threaded utilities. 

Cheers, 

Chris

On Wed, Oct 27, 2010 at 4:44 PM, mael <mael.primet@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course the viewer is stored here http://github.com/maelp/viewer

On Oct 27, 10:43 pm, mael <mael.pri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I had lots of things to do lately, haven't had much time to work on
> the library, but
> I'll do it quickly,
>
> here are the new things:http://github.com/maelp/scikits.image
> (some new filters, and some nice zooms)
>
> here are other projects that I work on in parallel, and I'd be happy
> to have some contribution:
> - image viewer: this should become the image viewer of scikits.image
> in our  opinion (although it is not yet complete). Basically, it is a
> modulable efficient viewer, that handles zoom properly, displays level
> lines, etc and should be easily extensible. This is only  a stub yet,
> and I'd be happy to merge it with your viewer, in particular have the
> threaded computations to have faster computations, and add the
> histrograms, normalization, etc.
> It can show grey and color   int / float images, and should be pretty
> fast even for large images since it only computes the strictly
> required part that is needed to be viewed, and has a cache to speed-up
> the next recomputations (if you move the view a little, most of the
> rendered image does not change, and it only recomputes what  needs
> be    )
>
> - tutorial:http://github.com/maelp/tutorial
> This should become a standard way to describe scikits.image algorithms
> in a dynamic way (this is basically the Qt Webkit that has been
> extended to include scikits.image algorithm)
> This could be a good advantage of the library: it is often difficult
> to find interactive use-case for algorithms, etc, and many times, old
> algorithms aren't properly documented, or we don't know in which case
> they do and don't apply. If we have a standard "documentation" in
> interactive format (where people can try our algorithms, have a
> mathematical presentation, upload their images etc) this will help
> keep  up  with a large image library.
> I made it such that it is visually attractive because I'm pretty sure
> this is extremely important (have beautiful documentation )
>
> I will add new filters to the library soon, please give  some inputs
> on the  new projects and feel free to extend and/or modify anything
>
> I haven't had time to properly document everything yet, I'll do that
> soon