View Issue Details [ Jump to Notes ] | [ Print ] | ||||||||
ID | Project | Category | View Status | Date Submitted | Last Update | ||||
0012397 | ParaView | (No Category) | public | 2011-07-25 03:29 | 2016-08-12 09:58 | ||||
Reporter | Richard Beare | ||||||||
Assigned To | Kitware Robot | ||||||||
Priority | normal | Severity | minor | Reproducibility | have not tried | ||||
Status | closed | Resolution | moved | ||||||
Platform | OS | OS Version | |||||||
Product Version | 3.10.1 | ||||||||
Target Version | Fixed in Version | ||||||||
Summary | 0012397: Feature request: Allow array names to be set in reader | ||||||||
Description | This issue occurs when viewing multiple image datasets. Color maps are assigned by array names, and all image metadata readers (and series readers) apply the same array name, making it non trivial to view different datasets at the same time with different colormaps. In my case the data is multi-channel, so I'd like to have red, green and blue. I request making the name unique (perhaps based on the input filename) or changeable by the user (or both). Alternatively, making the name changeable from python would be a big plus. | ||||||||
Tags | No tags attached. | ||||||||
Project | TBD | ||||||||
Topic Name | |||||||||
Type | feature | ||||||||
Attached Files | |||||||||
Relationships | |
Relationships |
Notes | |
(0038015) Kitware Robot (administrator) 2016-08-12 09:58 |
Resolving issue as `moved`. This issue tracker is no longer used. Further discussion of this issue may take place in the current ParaView Issues page linked in the banner at the top of this page. |
Notes |
Issue History | |||
Date Modified | Username | Field | Change |
2011-07-25 03:29 | Richard Beare | New Issue | |
2016-08-12 09:58 | Kitware Robot | Note Added: 0038015 | |
2016-08-12 09:58 | Kitware Robot | Status | backlog => closed |
2016-08-12 09:58 | Kitware Robot | Resolution | open => moved |
2016-08-12 09:58 | Kitware Robot | Assigned To | => Kitware Robot |
Issue History |
Copyright © 2000 - 2018 MantisBT Team |