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author | Daniele Nicolodi <nicolodi@science.unitn.it> |
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date | Mon, 05 Dec 2011 16:20:06 +0100 |
parents | f0afece42f48 |
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<h2> Overview </h2> <p> An LTPDA Workbench is a collection of pipelines. Each pipeline can have sub-pipelines which are represented as <i>subsystem blocks</i> on the parent canvas. Nested subsystems are supported to any depth. </p> <p> Only one LTPDA Workbench can be open at any one time, but a collection of pipelines in a workbench saved on disk can be imported to the current workbench. </p> <p> Each block/element must have a unique name on a particular canvas. </p> <p> The following annotated screen-shot describes the main elements of the workbench interface: <br> <img src="images/lwb_overview.png" alt="Workbench Overview" border="3"> <br> </p> <h2> Starting the Workbench </h2> <p> To start the LTPDA Workbench, click on the launcher on the LTPDA Launch Bay. Alternatively, the workbench can be started from the command window by typing: <div class="fragment"><pre> >> LTPDAworkbench </pre></div> </p> <p> You can also get a handle to the workbench so that you can use the programmatic interface. To do that <div class="fragment"><pre> >> wb = LTPDAworkbench </pre></div> If you loose the variable <tt>wb</tt>, for example, by using the <tt>clear</tt> command, then you can retrieve a handle to the workbench by doing <div class="fragment"><pre> >> wb = getappdata(0, <span class="string">'LTPDAworkbench'</span>); </pre></div> More advanced uses of the workbench command interface (such as creating pipelines from LTPDA objects), are described in <a href="lwb_buildProgram.html">Building pipelines programatically</a>. </p>