This project contains example code for working with ImageJ and SciJava.
The easiest way to get started with the ImageJ and SciJava APIs is via the
ImageJ Jupyter notebooks,
located in the notebooks
subfolder of this repository.
The introductory notebooks use the Groovy kernel from BeakerX. Several other JVM-based kernels are usable as well, including Clojure, Java, Kotlin and Scala.
There are also notebooks using the standard Python kernel plus the pyimagej package, enabling use of ImageJ from Python programs.
There is more than one way to install Jupyter, but here is the procedure we recommend to get started quickly:
- Install Miniconda.
- Clone this
imagej/tutorials
repository. - Open a console and
cd
to your cloned working copy. conda env create -f environment.yml
to create a conda environment with the dependencies these notebooks need.source activate scijava
(oractivate scijava
on Windows) to activate the environment.jupyter notebook
to launch Jupyter Notebook in a web browser window.- In the browser, click into
notebooks
, then click on theImageJ-Tutorials-and-Demo.ipynb
notebook to open it.
Learn more about Jupyter Notebook on its web site.
For the type-safety-inclined, this repository also contains Maven projects written in Java. You can import these projects into your favorite IDE:
- Eclipse: File > Import > Existing Maven Projects
- NetBeans: File > Open Project
- IDEA: File > Open Project... (select pom.xml)
Or build and run from the command line:
mvn
cd maven-projects/simple-commands
mvn -Pexec -Dmain-class=GradientImage
To the extent possible under law, the ImageJ developers have waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this tutorial code.
See the CC0 1.0 Universal license for details.
- The ImageJ Tutorials and Development sections of the ImageJ wiki.