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author | Joe Hunkeler <jhunkeler@gmail.com> | 2015-08-11 16:51:37 -0400 |
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committer | Joe Hunkeler <jhunkeler@gmail.com> | 2015-08-11 16:51:37 -0400 |
commit | 40e5a5811c6ffce9b0974e93cdd927cbcf60c157 (patch) | |
tree | 4464880c571602d54f6ae114729bf62a89518057 /pkg/utilities/nttools/nttools.hlp | |
download | iraf-osx-40e5a5811c6ffce9b0974e93cdd927cbcf60c157.tar.gz |
Repatch (from linux) of OSX IRAF
Diffstat (limited to 'pkg/utilities/nttools/nttools.hlp')
-rw-r--r-- | pkg/utilities/nttools/nttools.hlp | 244 |
1 files changed, 244 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/pkg/utilities/nttools/nttools.hlp b/pkg/utilities/nttools/nttools.hlp new file mode 100644 index 00000000..e02ffbd4 --- /dev/null +++ b/pkg/utilities/nttools/nttools.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,244 @@ +.help ttools May2000 tables +.nj + +This package contains tasks for working with tables. +Tables are files that contain data in row & column format. +The supported table formats are FITS, STSDAS, and ASCII text. +Different columns may have different data types, +but all the values in one column have the same data type. +In addition to the tabular data, +a table may contain header parameters identified by keywords. + +.nf +Each column has the following four items of information: + (1) a name (case insensitive), + (2) data type (real, double, integer, short int, boolean, or text), + (3) a format specification for printing the contents of the column, + (4) "units", a string (default is null). +.fi + +For STSDAS tables the column names and units +can be up to 20 characters in length. +For FITS tables the limit is 68 characters. +The default column names for ASCII tables are "c1", "c2", "c3", etc.; +however, there is a "#c" syntax for giving explicit column definitions, +which is described below. + +Header parameters may have data types of +floating point, integer, boolean, or text. +Header keywords are limited to eight characters (for FITS compatibility) +and are converted to upper case. + +The print formats are discussed below. + +Here is a list of the ttools tasks organized by function: + +.nf + create a table: + tcreate, tedit + + display contents: + tprint, tread, tedit, tcheck, thedit, thselect, tupar, gtedit + + modify contents: + tedit, thedit, tupar, gtedit + + information about a table: + tinfo, tlcol + + database-like utilities: + tquery, tsort, tproject, tselect, tdiffer, tjoin, tmatch, + tmerge, tproduct, texpand + + statistics, etc: + thistogram, tlinear, trebin, tstat + + arithmetic: + tcalc, tunits, tintegrate + + convert between table or image header parameter, cl parameter, table datum: + keypar, keytab, parkey, partab, tabkey, tabpar + + convert columns of arrays to other formats: + txtable, tximage, titable, tiimage, taextract, tainsert + + change column definition or table size: + tchcol, tchsize + + miscellaneous: + tcopy, tdelete +.fi + +ASCII text tables can be simple files +(just data in row and column format), +or they can have header keywords and/or explicit column definitions. + +Header keywords and column definitions +in text tables have the following syntax: +.nf +#k keyword = value comment +#c column_name data_type print_format units +.fi + +The "#k " (or "#K ") must be the first three characters of the line, +and the space following "k" is required. +Header keywords can be added to any text table, +and they do not have to precede the data. +For a text string keyword, +quotes around the value are needed if there is a comment, +in order to distinguish value from comment. + +The "#c " (or "#C ") must be the first three characters of the line, +and the space following "c" is required. +All column definitions must precede the table data. +Aside from the "#c ", the syntax is the same as +the output from 'tlcol' or the 'tcreate.cdfile'. +Only the column name is required, +although in most cases you will also need to give the data type +(the default is d, double precision). +The print format is not used for reading the text file, +only for displaying it or printing it out if it was modified. +The file is read in free format, +with whitespace (blank or tab) separated columns. +Text string columns must be enclosed in quotes +if they contain embedded blanks. + +For more information about text tables, "page tables$doc/text_tables.doc". + +The print format is used by such tasks as 'tprint', 'tedit', and 'tread' +to determine how the column values are to be displayed. +Most of the ordinary Fortran formats are supported for tables. +Nonstandard formats should not be used for FITS tables +for reasons of portability. +The differences between the capabilities of Fortran formats +and SPP formats are discussed below. + +Here is a list of the default print format for each data type, +given in both SPP style and Fortran style. + +.nf +default formats: + + data type SPP Fortran + --------- --- ------- + real %15.7g G15.7 + double prec %25.16g G25.16 + integer %11d I11 + short %11d I11 + boolean %6b L6 + text string %-ns A-n +.fi + +where n for character strings is the string size as given when the +column was defined. +The minus sign means that the string will be left justified. +While a format such as "A-12" is not available in standard Fortran, +a format may be given with that syntax when using ttools tasks, +and the format will be converted to SPP style. + +SPP formats (and Fortran equivalents) that are supported +for STSDAS tables are as follows. + +.nf + SPP Fortran meaning + --- ------- ------- + b L boolean "yes" or "no" + d I integer, displayed in decimal + x Z integer, displayed in hexadecimal + e E or D exponential format + f F floating point + g G use F or E as appropriate + h H nn:nn:nn.n + H (none) divide by 15, then nn:nn:nn.n + m M nn:nn.n + M (none) divide by 15, then nn:nn.n + s A character string +.fi + +The syntax is "%w.dC" (SPP style) or "Cw.d" (Fortran style), +where w is the field width, +d is the number of decimal places (or precision for g format), +and C is the format code as given in the left column below. +When giving a format in Fortran style, +use the format code given in the second column; +these are shown in upper case but may also be given in lower case. +Note that H and M are not standard Fortran formats; +in particular, H is not interpreted as Hollerith. +See below for more information about H and M formats. + +The field width (w) may be given as a positive number, +a negative number, or preceded by a zero. +A negative field width means the value should be left justified in the field. +A leading zero means the field should be padded on the left by zeroes; +for example, "%04d" or "I04" is equivalent to the standard Fortran "I4.4". +The d value means the number of decimal places +for f, h, m, H or M format, +but it means the digits of precision for g format. +For character strings, "%s" means left justify and +use only as much space as needed to print the value; +"%40s" and "%-40s" mean right and justify respectively in a 40-character field. + +When the format is given in SPP style, +there are two relatively new formats that are not available in Fortran. +Specifying upper case H or M means that +the numbers will be divided by 15 before being formatted +using h or m format respectively. +This is intended for converting hours to degrees. +When two table columns contain right ascension and declination, +both in decimal degrees, +then appropriate formats might be, +for example, %12.2H or %9.2M for right ascension +and %12.1h for declination. +This would print the right ascension in hours, minutes, seconds +(or hours and minutes for M format) with two decimals, +and would print the declination in degrees, minutes, seconds +with one decimal after the seconds. + +Here are some examples. + +.nf + internal value format displayed value + -------------- ------ --------------- + 2.71828 %10.4g 2.718 + 2.71828e27 %10.4g 2.718E27 + 2.71828 %10.4f 2.7183 + 2.71828 %10.4e 2.718E0 + 2.71828 %10.1h 2:43:05.8 + 2.71828 %10.1m 2:43.1 + 2.71828 %07.1m 02:43.1 + 2.71828 %10d 2 + 927 %10d 927 + 927 %-10d 927 + 927 %010d 0000000927 + ttools %s ttools + ttools %10s ttools + ttools %-10s ttools +.fi + +FITS and STSDAS tables can have columns that contain arrays ("3-D tables"). +That is, each cell (designated by both a column name and a row number) +stores a 1-dimensional array of elements instead of a single value. + +There are four tasks that act as 3-D table translators. These tasks extract +information from or insert information into "3-D tables". + +The information moved from/to a 3-D table by the tasks in this package can +have either of two forms, regular 2-D tables or 1-dimensional images. +Tasks 'txtable' and 'titable' perform, respectively, extractions and +insertions of 2-D tables. Tasks 'tximage' and 'tiimage' perform, respectively, +extractions and insertions of images. + +Task 'tscopy' is a variant of the 'tcopy' task. +It performs a standard table copy +but also supports the selector mechanism to allow copying of sections +of columns that contain arrays. +Type "help selectors" for further information about sections. + +.ih +SEE ALSO +.nf +selectors +files in tables$doc/ +.fi + +.endhelp |