Trame is an easy-to-use, Python-based framework that let you create desktop like application which shows up in your web browser. You can create buttons, dialogs, 3D scenes with VTK/ParaView, charts, maps and much more.
It is great for any micro apps, dashboards, or even replacing a PyQt app into a web app. You can also use it in development, for example when tweaking/configuring 3D rendering, machine learning and more.
At the end your app can be used locally, remotely, in the cloud, in Jupyter or on HPC.
Trame is available as a PyPI package, on conda-forge and we provide docker images for cloud deployment.
If you need help don't hesitate to reach out
trame - a web framework that weaves together open source components into customized visual analytics easily.
trame is French for
- the core that ties things together
- a guide providing the essence of a task
With trame, create stunning, interactive web applications compactly and intuitively.
With best-in-class VTK and ParaView platforms at its core, trame provides complete control of 3D visualizations and data movements. Developers benefit from a write-once environment while trame simply exposes both local and remote rendering through a single method.
trame leverages existing libraries and tools such as Vuetify, Altair, Vega, deck.gl, VTK, ParaView, and more, to create vivid content for visual analytics applications.
By relying simply on Python, trame focuses on one's data and associated analysis and visualizations while hiding the complications of web app development.
The resulting trame applications can act as local desktop applications or remote cloud applications both accessed through a browser.
trame can be installed with pip:
pip install --upgrade trame
The Trame Tutorial is the place to go to learn how to use the library and start building your own application.
The API Reference documentation provides API-level documentation.
trame is made available under the Apache License, Version 2.0. For more details, see LICENSE
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When installing trame using pip (pip install trame
) you will get the core infrastructure for any trame application to work but more advanced usage may require additional dependencies.
The list below captures what may need to add depending on your usage:
- pywebview : Needed for desktop usage (--app)
- jupyterlab : Needed to run inside jupyter-lab
- notebook : Needed to run inside jupyter-notebook
- requests : Needed when using remote assets such as GDrive files
- TRAME_LOG_NETWORK : Path to log file for capturing network exchange. (default: None)
- TRAME_WS_MAX_MSG_SIZE : Maximum size in bytes of any ws message. (default: 10MB)
- TRAME_WS_HEART_BEAT : Time in second before assuming the server is non-responsive. (default: 30s)
Life cycle events are directly managed on the application controller
and are prefixed with on_*
.
-
on_server_ready : All protocols initialized and available for client to connect
-
on_client_connected : Connection established to server
-
on_client_exited : Linked to browser "beforeunload" event
-
on_server_exited : Trame is exiting its event loop
-
on_server_reload : If callback registered it is used for reloading server side modules
The shared state allow us to synchronize the server with the client.
Rather than creating another mechanism to handle similar needs throughout
the application we purposely reuse that state internally. To prevent any conflict with any user we are prefixing our internal
variable with trame__*
. In general those state values should not be use
or changed by the user except for the one listed below:
Read/Write:
- trame__favicon: Update it to replace the displayed favicon in your browser. The content needs to be an image encoded url.
- trame__title: Update it to replace your page title (tab name / window name).
Read-only:
- trame__busy: Provide information if we have pending requests waiting for the server to respond.
- tts: Template Time Stamp to regenerate sub elements when a template
gets updated. Usually used as
:key="tts"
to force some component rebuild.
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