ADA
Over the last few days there has not been an area to input a MRN number for pacs_pull, or any other plugin for that matter. I would really appreciate help in resolving this matter as there are very limited things for me to do without ChRIS.
Distributed apps are applications or software that runs on multiple computers within a network at the same time and can be stored on server or with cloud computing. Unlike traditional applications, distributed applications run on multiple systems simulataneously for a single task or a job.
The client software accesses the data from the server or cloud environment, while the server or cloud processes the data. ChRIS is designed to manage the execution of data needs of a specific class of computational applications often used in Research. These are applications that require no user interface once started, have runtime specifications passed in command line arguments and collect all output in files.
While ChRIS itself has a web based user interface, the applications that perform the computations are containerized, Linux based applications. Linux containers are technologies that allow you to package and isolate application with their entire run time environment- all of the files necessar
As application grow in size, it becomes harder and harder to reason about and any additional information we can codify in our syntax when we author our program is hugely valuable. Any extra info in the syntax will be hugely useful
The typescript compiler is made up of a couple of different parts or phases and of of one of these parts is the parser. Parser is responsible for looking at our code and transforming it into a data structure which other parts of the typescript compiler will use and understand.
Each Node.js process has a set of built-in functionality, accessible through the global process module. The process module need not to be required - it is somewhat literally a wrapper around the currently executing process, and many of the methods it exposes are actually wrappers around calls into some of Nodejs core C libraries.
process.stdout.write("hello world")
The simplest way of retrieving arguments in Nodejs is via the process.argv
array. This is a global object that you can use without
importing any additional libraries to use it. You simply need to pass arguments to a Node.js application, just like we showed earlier,
and these arguments can be accessed within the application via the process.argv array.