Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on May 4, 2019. It is now read-only.

Export results #67

Open
adilyalcin opened this issue Mar 15, 2015 · 3 comments
Open

Export results #67

adilyalcin opened this issue Mar 15, 2015 · 3 comments

Comments

@adilyalcin
Copy link
Owner

Exporting information from keshif for reporting/further analysis can be among the goals under some use cases.

  1. Are such goals important and on point?
  2. If export is needed and useful, what can be the exported data?
  3. In which format / how to export selected information?
@dlaehnemann
Copy link

It would be great to not only be able to export subsets of the data, but to export / capture the current state of either an individual panel / plot or of the whole browser session with all panels, plots and selections visible into SVG or PDF to use for publications. Or am I missing an obvious way to generally do such an export from any browser?

@adilyalcin
Copy link
Owner Author

Hi @dlaehnemann,

Keshif currently does not have a feature to export images of individual views or the complete interface automatically. This feature is not among its current goals.

However, I understand that it can be useful to get screenshots, for publications and quickly sharing results.

On Mac, I commonly use the screen-capture shortcuts (https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201361) It makes it really easy to automatically copy/save part/all of the screen so I can attach it to emails and publications. Some information for latest Windows version is here: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/take-screen-capture-print-screen . I also like taking GIF shots to quickly share some selections and comparisons. Licecap (http://www.cockos.com/licecap/) is really useful for that.

Keshif is aimed to be a dynamic data exploration platform, and screen captures may not tell the whole story. As a hint, the screen captures generally need to be annotated or described externally.

Also, I will be happy to hear more about your use cases of Keshif, or what kind of exploration you commonly perform with it. Feel free to contact me here anytime,

Adil

@dlaehnemann
Copy link

Hi @adilyalcin,

thanks for the swift response. I am only just starting to try out your tool and I really like what I'm seeing -- so first of all thanks for your efforts in tackling the hard problem of set visualizations! My use case is in the analysis of sets of genetic variants across a set of different samples and I will definitely get back to you with more feedback later on.

For this suggestion here, it just came to my mind yesterday and I figured I'd just document it somewhere before I might forget it. Whenever I produce graphics for publication, I usually do so in some vector graphic format, in order to keep them as scalable as possible. Also, I prefer a vector graphic format for changing little details -- like highlighting important aspects of a figure, adding a legend or inserting labels. And finally, I try to get them published under a permissive license, to enable reuse, which obivously is most useful if the figure is a vector graphic.

Screenshots, however, will always be in some bitmap format. I figured that there has to be some cross-platform or cross-browser way to extract SVGs from a webpage, but haven't found anything. The only useful looking tool I came across is for Chrome: SVG Crowbar (https://nytimes.github.io/svg-crowbar/).

Thanks already, and I'll be back with further info on my use case(s)! :)

cheers,
david

Sign up for free to subscribe to this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in.
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

2 participants