Hello Rose, your Slicer tutorials have been extremely helpful and I cannot thank you enough for them. Could you tell me if there is way to join two different semilandmark curves through a common landmark?
Hi Vaibhav, I'm so glad they've been helpful! There are a few ways to merge two curves, one is to use the MergeMarkups module. But its much simpler to just select all the coordinate data for your second curve (found in the left-side menu under "Control Points" in the Markups module) and copy/paste it into that same space for your first curve. That will make one new combined curve with all the points you originally placed, but you'll want to adjust the points along the new merged curve to make sure they're accurately placed and Resample so they're equidistant. Also, importantly, if the homologous landmark you mentioned wasn't part of your original curve, then you'll want to add it as the last point in your 1st curve before copy/pasting the 2nd curve. Or if you're wanting to make an enclosed circle from your two curves, there's also a "Closed Curve" option that could be better. Let us know how it goes! -Rose
@@deleonlab Hi Rose, your solution(s) work just fine! The MergeMarkups module seems to be a bit painful, so I'll go ahead with simply copy/pasting the control points. All the best for your future endeavors!
Hello! I use the "closed curve" tool in Markups to capture circumference. But yes you can get the measurement in the same way described in this video. Good luck! - Rose
Hi, I haven't used those programs so I'm not sure. You might have to check with their customer support to find the best file format to import coordinates. Good luck! - Rose
Hello Rose, your Slicer tutorials have been extremely helpful and I cannot thank you enough for them. Could you tell me if there is way to join two different semilandmark curves through a common landmark?
Hi Vaibhav, I'm so glad they've been helpful! There are a few ways to merge two curves, one is to use the MergeMarkups module. But its much simpler to just select all the coordinate data for your second curve (found in the left-side menu under "Control Points" in the Markups module) and copy/paste it into that same space for your first curve. That will make one new combined curve with all the points you originally placed, but you'll want to adjust the points along the new merged curve to make sure they're accurately placed and Resample so they're equidistant. Also, importantly, if the homologous landmark you mentioned wasn't part of your original curve, then you'll want to add it as the last point in your 1st curve before copy/pasting the 2nd curve.
Or if you're wanting to make an enclosed circle from your two curves, there's also a "Closed Curve" option that could be better. Let us know how it goes!
-Rose
@@deleonlab Hi Rose, your solution(s) work just fine! The MergeMarkups module seems to be a bit painful, so I'll go ahead with simply copy/pasting the control points. All the best for your future endeavors!
can you also use this to measure circumference?
Hello! I use the "closed curve" tool in Markups to capture circumference. But yes you can get the measurement in the same way described in this video. Good luck! - Rose
Is it possible import fcsv file to 3D software, like Fusion360 or Solidworks and similar?
Hi, I haven't used those programs so I'm not sure. You might have to check with their customer support to find the best file format to import coordinates. Good luck! - Rose