Mercurial > repos > iuc > imagej2_make_binary
view jython_utils.py @ 0:66d9e595dff2 draft
planemo upload commit 98c34e070343a117019ffd25a3af117808159bf5-dirty
| author | iuc |
|---|---|
| date | Tue, 04 Aug 2015 13:20:29 -0400 |
| parents | |
| children | d26f11339f08 |
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import imagej2_base_utils from ij import IJ IMAGE_PLUS_IMAGE_TYPE_FIELD_VALUES = { '0':'GRAY8', '1':'GRAY16', '2':'GRAY32', '3':'COLOR_256', '4':'COLOR_RGB' } def convert_before_saving_as_tiff( image_plus ): # The bUnwarpJ plug-in produces TIFF image stacks consisting of 3 # slices which can be viewed in ImageJ. The 3 slices are: 1) the # registered image, 2) the target image and 3) the black/white warp # image. When running bUnwarpJ from the command line (as these # Galaxy wrappers do) the initial call to IJ.openImage() (to open the # registered source and target images produced by bUnwarpJ) in the # tool's jython_script.py returns an ImagePlus object with a single # slice which is the "generally undesired" slice 3 discussed above. # However, a call to IJ.saveAs() will convert the single-slice TIFF # into a 3-slice TIFF image stack (as described above) if the selected # format for saving is TIFF. Galaxy supports only single-layered # images, so to work around this behavior, we have to convert the # image to something other than TIFF so that slices are eliminated. # We can then convert back to TIFF for saving. There might be a way # to do this without converting twice, but I spent a lot of time looking # and I have yet to discover it. tmp_dir = imagej2_base_utils.get_temp_dir() tmp_out_png_path = imagej2_base_utils.get_temporary_image_path( tmp_dir, 'png' ) IJ.saveAs( image_plus, 'png', tmp_out_png_path ) return IJ.openImage( tmp_out_png_path ) def get_display_image_type( image_type ): return IMAGE_PLUS_IMAGE_TYPE_FIELD_VALUES.get( str( image_type ), None ) def handle_error( error_log, msg ): # Java writes a lot of stuff to stderr, so the received error_log # will log actual errors. elh = open( error_log, 'wb' ) elh.write( msg ) elh.close()
