QCoDeS is a Python-based data acquisition framework developed by the Copenhagen / Delft / Sydney / Microsoft quantum computing consortium. While it has been developed to serve the needs of nanoelectronic device experiments, it is not inherently limited to such experiments, and can be used anywhere a system with many degrees of freedom is controllable by computer. To learn more about QCoDeS, browse our homepage .
To get a feeling of qcodes browse the Jupyter notebooks in docs/examples .
QCoDeS is compatible with Python 3.5+. It is primarily intended for use from Jupyter notebooks, but can be used from traditional terminal-based shells and in stand-alone scripts as well. Although some feature at the moment are b0rken outside the notebook.
QCoDeS is still in development, more documentation and features will be coming! The team behind this project just expanded. There are still rough edges, and gray areas but QCoDeS has been running without major issue in two long running experiments.
The most important features in the roadmap are:
- a robust architecture that uses the full potential of your harwdare
- a more flexible and faster data storage solution
This is mostly for tech-y scientist, in general refer to here for installation.
pip install qcodes
And see if you miss any dependencies.
Because these can sometimes be tricky to install (and not everyone will
want all of them), the plotting packages are not set as required
dependencies, so setup.py will not automatically install them. You can
install them with pip
:
- For
qcodes.MatPlot
: matplotlib version 1.5 or higher - For
qcodes.QtPlot
: pyqtgraph version 0.9.10 or higher
Core developers use virtualenv and pyenv to make sure all the system are the same, this rules out issues and the usual "it works on my machine". Install pyenv on your OS see this .
$QCODES_INSTALL_DIR is the folder where you want to have the source code.
git clone https://github.com/QCoDeS/Qcodes.git $QCODES_INSTALL_DIR
cd $QCODES_INSTALL_DIR
pyenv install 3.5.2
pyenv virtualenv 3.5.2 qcodes-dev
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -e .
python qcodes/test.py -f
If the tests pass you are ready to hack! This is the reference setup one needs to have to contribute, otherwise too many non-reproducible environments will show up.
pip install --upgrade qcodes
cd $QCODES_INSTALL_DIR && git pull
or if using GUIs, just pull the repo!
Read it here . Documentation is updated and deployed on every successful build in master.
We use sphinx for documentations, makefiles are provided both for Windows, and *nix.
Go to the directory docs
and
make html
This generate a webpage, index.html, in docs/_build/html
with the
rendered html.
See Contributing for information about bug/issue reports, contributing code, style, and testing
See License.