Difference between revisions of "NA-MIC-kit-curriculum"
From NAMIC Wiki
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** How-to make a hello world plug-in | ** How-to make a hello world plug-in | ||
* Slicer 3 IGT capabilities | * Slicer 3 IGT capabilities | ||
+ | ** workflow engine | ||
+ | ** real-time behavior | ||
+ | ** Slicer demon | ||
+ | ** i/o to trackers, devices, and scanners | ||
+ | ** Lego robot |
Revision as of 14:10, 20 January 2008
Home < NA-MIC-kit-curriculumIntroduction
This curriculum is intended as an introduction for scientists with engineering background who are considering using the NA-MIC kit as their software platform for research. The NA-MIC kit consists of free open source software without restrictions on use and without a give-back requirement. The NA-MIC kit is suited for academic or commercial activities.
The curriculum provides an overview over the technologies, toolkits and applications which are available in the NA-MIC kit. It is a hands-on curriculum and will require participants to attend with a suitable laptop, preloaded with software and sample data. A working knowledge of C++ is a prerequisite for benefitting from the full curriculum.
Program
- Slicer 3 as a software application
- Loading, Visualization, IGT capabilities
- Engineering methodology:
- What is a software engineering methodology, do I need one?
- the extreme programming approach
- The components of the NA-MIC kit software engineering methodology: CMAKE, CTEST, CPACK, Dashboards
- ITK, VTK, batchmake introduction
- VTK
- ITK
- Batchmake
- XNAT
- Slicer 3 architecture
- Plug-ins for Slicer 3
- Introduction: Plug-ins as a way to interface external programs
- How-to make a hello world plug-in
- Slicer 3 IGT capabilities
- workflow engine
- real-time behavior
- Slicer demon
- i/o to trackers, devices, and scanners
- Lego robot