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ENH: Allow tool to run in a web browser #13
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Agree vm! |
Well, I know absolutely nothing about actually running python in the browser, but it should be possible to run the tool on a server and provide a web front end. When I searched for it, I stumbled across cmd2web. (Coincidentally, it's from @ryanlayer who's also doing genetics.) I did not yet have time to take a closer look or even try it out. With a web-based tool, there'd be a lot of interesting applications, e.g. linking from other tools to this one ("click here to see your data in sc2r") or providing on-the-fly conversion like I did for csv files with csv2svg4md. |
Yes exactly, sorry, I didn't mean to run it in a browser like Nextclade does with web assembly - that'd be complicated. With a server would be perfect. Actually it may be quite easy for you given your experience (for me it wouldn't :D ) On a server you could align with Nextalign for example, if fasta is not yet aligned. |
Yesterday @zach-hensel pointed out that sc2rf can be run from a web browser through Google Colab, which is a modified version of Jupyter-Notebooks. This approach can work quite nicely, as shown by ColabFold (also recommended by Zach). I will try to set up a Collab Notebook soon and share the link here and in the README. |
It'd be super cool if the tool ran in a web browser.
Drop (aligned) sequences and see it displayed.
This may be not worth the probably not quite insignificant effort though.
It would reduce barrier to entry significantly.
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