.. only:: html
HTML outputs
============================================================
.. note:: In this lesson we learn how QGIS handles outputs in HTML format,
which are used to produce text outputs and graphs.
All the outputs we have produced so far were layers (whether raster or vector).
However, some algorithms generate outputs in the form of text and graphics.
All this outputs are wrapped in HTML files and displayed in the so--called
*Results viewer*, which is another element of the processing framework.
Let's see one of those algorithms to understand how they work.
Open the project with the data to be used in this lesson and then open the
*Basic statistics for numeric fields* algorithm.
.. image:: img/html/paramdialog.png
The algorithm is rather simple, and you just have to select the layer to use
and one of its field (a numeric one). The output is of type HTML, but the
corresponding box works exactly like the one that you can find in the case
of a raster or vector output. You can enter a filepath or leave it blank
to save to a temporary file. In this case, however, only the ``html`` and
``htm`` extensions are allowed, so there is no way of altering the output
format by using a different one.
Run the algorithm selecting the only layer in the project as input, and
the *POP2000* field, and a new dialog like the one shown next will appear
once the algorithm is executed and the parameters dialog is closed.
.. image:: img/html/result.png
This is the *Results viewer*. It keeps all the HTML result generated during
the current session, easily accessible, so you can check them quickly whenever
you need it. As it happens with layers, if you have saved the output to a
temporary file, it will be deleted once you close QGIS. If you have saved
to a non-temporary path, the file will remain, but it will not appear in
the *Results viewer* the next time you open QGIS.
Some algorithms generate text that cannot be divided into other more
detailed outputs. That is the case if, for instance, the algorithm captures
the text output from an external process. In other cases, the output is presented
as text, but internally is divided into several smaller outputs, usually in
the form of numeric values. The algorithm that we have just executed is one of them.
Each one of those values is handled as a single output, and stored in a variable.
This has no importance at all now, but once we move to the graphical modeler,
you will see that it will allow us to use those values as numeric inputs for
other algorithms.