Ulm-IQO / qudi

(Legacy project) A modular laboratory experiment management suite, predecessor to qudi-core.
GNU General Public License v3.0
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confocal-microscope experiment fluorescence modular spectroscopy spin

⚠ DEPRECATION WARNING

The development of this qudi repository has ceased. We strongly recommend migrating to our new qudi-core project that is actively developed. Framework functionality is now separated from the measurement toolchains. Most features of the old project can be recovered by installing the qudi-core and qudi-iqo-modules packages.

qudi (deprecated)

Qudi is a suite of tools for operating multi-instrument and multi-computer laboratory experiments. Originally built around a confocal fluorescence microscope experiments, it has grown to be a generally applicable framework for controlling experiments.

Features

Citation

If you are publishing scientific results, mentioning Qudi in your methods description is the least you can do as good scientific practice. You should cite our paper Qudi: A modular python suite for experiment control and data processing for this purpose.

Documentation

User and code documentation about Qudi is located at http://ulm-iqo.github.io/qudi-generated-docs/html-docs/ .

Continuous integration

Build Status Build status Scrutinizer Code Quality

Collaboration

For development-related questions and discussion, please use the qudi-dev mailing list.

If you just want updates about releases and breaking changes to Qudi without discussion or issue reports, subscribe to the qudi-announce mailing list.

Feel free to add issues and pull requests for improvements on github at https://github.com/Ulm-IQO/qudi .

The code in pull requests should be clean, PEP8-compliant and commented, as with every academic institution in Germany, our resources in the area of software development are quite limited.

Do not expect help, debugging efforts or other support.

License

Almost all parts of Qudi are licensed under GPLv3 (see LICENSE.txt) with the exception of some files that originate from the Jupyter/IPython project. These are under BSD license, check the file headers and the documentation folder.

Check COPYRIGHT.txt for a list of authors and the git history for their individual contributions.