Hi, Jesse.
>Yep, that's what I meant. Meaning that if I set that on my HTML file,
>the extra_files would hopefully pick up the metadata from the
>metadata_source.
AFAIK, not possible. No metadata is stored anywhere in the Galaxy
database tables for any of the files *inside* an html object
files_
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 9:07 AM, Ross wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 9:51 AM, Jesse Erdmann wrote:
>> files visible in the first place and hide and link to the other items
>> generated that aren't as likely to be reused is subsequent tasks. The
>
> That sounds like a good way to use Html outputs
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 9:51 AM, Jesse Erdmann wrote:
> files visible in the first place and hide and link to the other items
> generated that aren't as likely to be reused is subsequent tasks. The
That sounds like a good way to use Html outputs - use the html history
item to hide all the 'inform
Sorry, I think I went a little too deep into the weeds and lost my way
there last night. I think the answer is to just leave the BED/WIG
files visible in the first place and hide and link to the other items
generated that aren't as likely to be reused is subsequent tasks. The
metadata, like which
Thanks for the suggestions guys. I'm still struggling with a couple
of things. How do I give the user a link to expose the file from
extra_files_path as a history item and how would I set metadata like
file format and db on the extra files? Things like PDF and text work
fine, but I'd really like
Hi, Jesse,
IMHO, the Html datatype is perfect for this. By definition, the
composite datatype can have any number of files (of any type!) in the
files_path, but of course, your tool or wrapper will need to generate
the legal html contents of that html page but that can be done when
the files_path a
Have you checked out the barcode splitter? The output is quite similar, an
HTML report with links to the split files.
-Dannon
On Oct 31, 2011, at 2:50 PM, Jesse Erdmann wrote:
> I have an in-house Perl tool that generates a double digit number of
> outputs that we'd like the user to have acces
I have an in-house Perl tool that generates a double digit number of
outputs that we'd like the user to have access to, but don't
necessarily need to be in the history. A complicating factor is that
the exact number is determined at run time as user input can add any
number of outputs that can't b