Local CLusters and their Alternatives (LCA) plug-in for WBIA - Part of the WildMe / Wildbook IA Project.
- Python 3.5+
- Python dependencies listed in requirements.txt
The WBIA software is now available on pypi for Linux systems. This means if you have Python installed. You can simply run:
pip install wbia_lca
to install the software.
We highly recommend using a Python virtual environment: https://docs.python-guide.org/dev/virtualenvs/#lower-level-virtualenv
If you use this code or its models in your research, please cite:
@article{berger2017wildbook,
title={Wildbook: Crowdsourcing, computer vision, and data science for conservation},
author={Berger-Wolf, Tanya Y and Rubenstein, Daniel I and Stewart, Charles V and Holmberg, Jason A and Parham, Jason and Menon, Sreejith and Crall, Jonathan and Van Oast, Jon and Kiciman, Emre and Joppa, Lucas},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:1710.08880},
year={2017}
}
The WBIA API Documentation can be found here: https://wbia-lca.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
It's recommended that you use pre-commit
to ensure linting procedures are run
on any commit you make. (See also pre-commit.com)
Reference pre-commit's installation instructions for software installation on your OS/platform. After you have the software installed, run pre-commit install
on the command line. Now every time you commit to this project's code base the linter procedures will automatically run over the changed files. To run pre-commit on files preemtively from the command line use:
git add .
pre-commit run
# or
pre-commit run --all-files
Our code base has been formatted by Brunette, which is a fork and more configurable version of Black (https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/).
Try to conform to PEP8. You should set up your preferred editor to use flake8 as its Python linter, but pre-commit will ensure compliance before a git commit is completed.
To run flake8 from the command line use:
flake8
This will use the flake8 configuration within setup.cfg
,
which ignores several errors and stylistic considerations.
See the setup.cfg
file for a full and accurate listing of stylistic codes to ignore.
Our code uses Google-style documentation tests (doctests) that uses pytest and xdoctest to enable full support. To run the tests from the command line use:
pytest