http://imagej.273.s1.nabble.com/Re-image-names-in-stack-tp5001829p5001844.html
> Dear Anda,
> I had the same problem and was helped by Christophe Leterrier and his
> extremely useful macro 'Transfer Labels' that I am not able to locate more
> precisely at the moment since I am not at my Fiji-ImageJ-machine.
> Maybe you can track it down. The macro lets you transfer all Labels from
> one opened stack to another of the same slice number (e.g. a resulting
> stack after an operation).
> Best regards
> Christian
> ________________________________________
> From: ImageJ Interest Group [
[hidden email]] on behalf of Anda
> Cornea [
[hidden email]]
> Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2013 7:26 PM
> To:
[hidden email]
> Subject: Re: image names in stack
>
> Hello!
>
> On a somewhat related topic: Is there a way to keep the original names of
> images that were built into a stack that is then exposed to various
> transformations (SIFT registration, Advanced Weka Segmentation, Measure,
> etc.). In my hands, each transformation generates a stack where slices are
> labeled 1 to n. It is time consuming and error prone to match measurement
> data to the original images at the end.
>
> Thank you for your help,
>
> Anda
>
>
> Anda Cornea, PhD
> Director of the Imaging and Morphology Support Core
> Oregon National Primate Research Center
> Oregon Health & Science University
> 503-690-5293
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ImageJ Interest Group [mailto:
[hidden email]] On Behalf Of
> Rasband, Wayne (NIH/NIMH) [E]
> Sent: Saturday, February 16, 2013 6:44 AM
> To:
[hidden email]
> Subject: Re: images to stack
>
> On Feb 14, 2013, at 11:49 AM, Agustin Lobo wrote:
>
> > Hi!
> > Is there any way to add images by name to an stack? My images are not
> > in the same directory, and prefer not to move/copy them.
> > I can open them all and the use images to stack, but there are too
> > many and opening them all represents a memory problem.
> > I can easily have the names (with their paths) in a list, bit do not
> > know how to add each image to the stack (and close) within a loop.
>
> You can use the File>Import>Stack from List command, which opens a stack,
> or virtual stack, from a text file or URL containing a list of image file
> paths. The images can be in different folders but they must all be the same
> size and type.
>
> This macro demonstrates how to generate a list of images and then use that
> list to open the images as a virtual stack:
>
>
http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/macros/VirtualStackFromList.txt>
> And this one demonstrates how to how to open an image series from a remote
> server:
>
>
http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/macros/OpenStackUsingURLs.txt>
> -wayne
>
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