@ohif/core
@ohif/core is a collection of useful functions and classes for building web-based medical imaging applications. This library helps power OHIF's zero-footprint DICOM viewer.
Why?
This library offers pre-packaged solutions for features common to Web-based
medical imaging viewers. For example:
- Hotkeys
- DICOM Web
- Hanging Protocols
- Managing a study's measurements
- Managing a study's DICOM metadata
- A flexible pattern for extensions
- And many others
It does this while remaining decoupled from any particular view library or
rendering logic. While we use it to power our React Viewer, it
can be used with Vue, React, Vanilla JS, or any number of other frameworks.
Getting Started
The documentation for this library is sparse. The best way to get started is to
look at its
top level exports,
and explore the source code of features that interest you. If you want to see
how we use this library, you can check out our viewer
implementation.
Install
This library is pre- v1.0. All realeases until a v1.0 have the possibility of
introducing breaking changes. Please depend on an "exact" version in your
projects to prevent issues caused by loose versioning.
// with npm
npm i @ohif/core --save-exact
// with yarn
yarn add @ohif/core --exact
Usage
Usage is dependent on the feature(s) you want to leverage. The bulk of
ohif-core
's features are "pure" and can be imported and used in place.
Example: retrieving study metadata from a server
import { studies } from 'ohif-core'
const studiesMetadata = await studies.retrieveStudiesMetadata(
server,
studyInstanceUids,
seriesInstanceUids
)
Contributing
It is notoriously difficult to setup multiple dependent repositories for
end-to-end testing and development. That's why we recommend writing and running
unit tests when adding and modifying features for this library. This allows us
to program in isolation without a complex setup, and has the added benefit of
producing well-tested business logic.
- Clone this repository
- Navigate to the project directory, and
yarn install
- To begin making changes,
yarn run dev
- To commit changes, run
yarn run cm
When creating tests, place the test file "next to" the file you're testing.
For example:
index.js
index.test.js
As you add and modify code, jest
will watch for uncommitted changes and run
your tests, reporting the results to your terminal. Make a pull request with
your changes to master
, and a core team member will review your work. If you
have any questions, please don't hesitate to reach out via a GitHub issue.
Contributors
Thanks goes to these wonderful people
(emoji key):
This project follows the
all-contributors
specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
License
MIT © OHIF