Difference between revisions of "UsersGuideVisTrailsPackages"

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(New page: VisTrails provides infrastructure for user-defined functionality to be incorporated into the main program. Specifically, users can incorporate their own visualization and simulation codes ...)
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Revision as of 16:49, 31 January 2007

VisTrails provides infrastructure for user-defined functionality to be incorporated into the main program. Specifically, users can incorporate their own visualization and simulation codes into pipelines by defining custom modules. These modules are bundled in what we call packages. A VisTrails package is simply a collection of Python classes -- each of these classes will represent a new module -- created by the user that respects a certain convention. Here's a simplified example of a very simple user-defined module:

class Divide(Module):
    def compute(self):
        arg1 = self.getInputFromPort("arg1")
        arg2 = self.getInputFromPort("arg2")
        if arg2 == 0.0:
            raise ModuleError(self, "Division by zero")
        self.setResult("result", arg1 / arg2)

registry.addModule(Divide)
registry.addInputPort(Divide, "arg1", (basic.Float, 'dividend'))
registry.addInputPort(Divide, "arg2", (basic.Float, 'divisor'))
registry.addOutputPort(Divide, "result", (basic.Float, 'quotient'))

New VisTrails modules must subclass from Module, the base class that defines basic functionality. The only required override is the compute() method, which performs the actual module computation. Input and output is specified through ports, which currently have to be explicitly registered with VisTrails. However, this is straightforward, and done through method calls to the module registry. A complete documented example of a (slightly) more complicated module is available here.