Writing Tables#
astropy.io.ascii
is able to write ASCII tables out to a file or file-like
object using the same class structure and basic user interface as for reading
tables.
The write()
function provides a way to write a data table as a
formatted ASCII table.
Examples#
To write a formatted ASCII table using the write()
function:
>>> import numpy as np
>>> from astropy.io import ascii
>>> from astropy.table import Table
>>> data = Table()
>>> data['x'] = np.array([1, 2, 3], dtype=np.int32)
>>> data['y'] = data['x'] ** 2
>>> ascii.write(data, 'values.dat', overwrite=True)
The values.dat
file will then contain:
x y
1 1
2 4
3 9
It is also possible and encouraged to use the write functionality from
astropy.io.ascii
through a higher level interface in the Data
Tables package (see Unified File Read/Write Interface for more details). For
example:
>>> data.write('values.dat', format='ascii', overwrite=True)
For a more reproducible ASCII version of your table, we recommend using the
ECSV Format. This stores all the table meta-data (in particular the
column types and units) to a comment section at the beginning while still
maintaining compatibility with most plain CSV readers. It also allows storing
richer data like SkyCoord
or multidimensional or
variable-length columns. For our simple example:
>>> data.write('values.ecsv', overwrite=True)
The .ecsv
extension is recognized and implies using ECSV (equivalent to
format='ascii.ecsv'
). The values.ecsv
file will then contain:
# %ECSV 1.0
# ---
# datatype:
# - {name: x, datatype: int32}
# - {name: y, datatype: int32}
# schema: astropy-2.0
x y
1 1
2 4
3 9
Most of the input table Supported Formats for
reading are also available for writing. This provides a great deal of
flexibility in the format for writing. The example below writes the data as a
LaTeX table, using the option to send the output to sys.stdout
instead of a
file:
>>> ascii.write(data, format='latex')
\begin{table}
\begin{tabular}{cc}
x & y \\
1 & 1 \\
2 & 4 \\
3 & 9 \\
\end{tabular}
\end{table}
There is also a faster Cython engine for writing simple formats,
which is enabled by default for these formats (see Fast ASCII I/O).
To disable this engine, use the parameter fast_writer
:
>>> ascii.write(data, 'values.csv', format='csv', fast_writer=False)
Note
For most supported formats one can write a masked table and then read it back without losing information about the masked table entries. This is accomplished by using a blank string entry to indicate a masked (missing) value. See the Bad or Missing Values section for more information.
Parameters for write()
#
The write()
function accepts a number of parameters that specify the detailed
output table format. Each of the Supported Formats is handled by a
corresponding Writer class that can define different defaults, so the
descriptions below sometimes mention “typical” default values. This refers to
the Basic
writer and other similar Writer classes.
Some output format Writer classes (e.g., Latex
or
AASTex
) accept additional keywords that can
customize the output further. See the documentation of these classes for
details.
- output: output specifier
There are two ways to specify the output for the write operation:
Name of a file (string)
File-like object (from open(), StringIO, etc.)
- table: input table
Any value that is supported for initializing a
Table
object (see Constructing a Table). This includes a table with a list of columns, a dictionary of columns, or fromnumpy
arrays (either structured or homogeneous).- format: output format (default=’basic’)
This specifies the format of the ASCII table to be written, such as a basic character delimited table, fixed-format table, or a CDS-compatible table, etc. The value of this parameter must be one of the Supported Formats.
- delimiter: column delimiter string
A one-character string used to separate fields which typically defaults to the space character. Other common values might be “,” or “|” or “\t”.
- comment: string defining start of a comment line in output table
For the
Basic
Writer this defaults to “# “. Which comments are written and how depends on the format chosen. The comments are defined as a list of strings in the input tablemeta['comments']
element. Comments in the metadata of the givenTable
will normally be written before the header, althoughCommentedHeader
writes table comments after the commented header. To disable writing comments, setcomment=False
.- formats: dict of data type converters
For each key (column name) use the given value to convert the column data to a string. If the format value is string-like, then it is used as a Python format statement (e.g., ‘%0.2f’ % value). If it is a callable function, then that function is called with a single argument containing the column value to be converted. Example:
astropy.io.ascii.write(table, sys.stdout, formats={'XCENTER': '%12.1f', 'YCENTER': lambda x: round(x, 1)},
- names: list of output column names
Define the complete list of output column names to write for the data table, overriding the existing column names.
- include_names: list of names to include in output
From the list of column names found from the data table or the
names
parameter, select for output only columns within this list. If not supplied then include all names.- exclude_names: list of names to exclude from output
Exclude these names from the list of output columns. This is applied after the
include_names
filtering. If not specified then no columns are excluded.- fill_values: list of fill value specifiers
This can be used to fill missing values in the table or replace values with special meaning.
See the Bad or Missing Values section for more information on the syntax. The syntax is almost the same as when reading a table. There is a special value
astropy.io.ascii.masked
that is used to say “output this string for all masked values in a masked table” (the default is to use an empty string""
):>>> import sys >>> from astropy.table import Table, Column, MaskedColumn >>> from astropy.io import ascii >>> t = Table([(1, 2), (3, 4)], names=('a', 'b'), masked=True) >>> t['a'].mask = [True, False] >>> ascii.write(t, sys.stdout) a b "" 3 2 4 >>> ascii.write(t, sys.stdout, fill_values=[(ascii.masked, 'N/A')]) a b N/A 3 2 4
Note that when writing a table, all values are converted to strings before any value is replaced. Because
fill_values
only replaces cells that are an exact match to the specification, you need to provide the string representation (stripped of whitespace) for each value. For example, in the following commands-99
is formatted with two digits after the comma, so we need to replace-99.00
and not-99
:>>> t = Table([(-99, 2), (3, 4)], names=('a', 'b')) >>> ascii.write(t, sys.stdout, fill_values = [('-99.00', 'no data')], ... formats={'a': '%4.2f'}) a b "no data" 3 2.00 4
Similarly, if you replace a value in a column that has a fixed length format (e.g.,
'f4.2'
), then the string you want to replace must have the same number of characters. In the example above,fill_values=[(' nan',' N/A')]
would work.- fill_include_names: list of column names, which are affected by
fill_values
If not supplied, then
fill_values
can affect all columns.- fill_exclude_names: list of column names, which are not affected by
fill_values
If not supplied, then
fill_values
can affect all columns.- fast_writer: whether to use the fast Cython writer
If this parameter is
None
(which it is by default),write()
will attempt to use the faster writer (described in Fast ASCII I/O) if possible. Specifyingfast_writer=False
disables this behavior.- WriterWriter class (deprecated in favor of
format
) This specifies the top-level format of the ASCII table to be written, such as a basic character delimited table, fixed-format table, or a CDS-compatible table, etc. The value of this parameter must be a Writer class. For basic usage this means one of the built-in Extension Reader Classes. Note that Reader classes and Writer classes are synonymous; in other words, Reader classes can also write, but for historical reasons they are often called Reader classes.
Machine-Readable Table Format#
The American Astronomical Society Journals’ Machine-Readable Table (MRT) format consists of single file with
the table description header and the table data itself. MRT is similar to the
CDS format standard, but differs
in the table description sections and the lack of a separate ReadMe
file.
Astropy does not support writing in the CDS format.
The Mrt
writer supports writing tables to MRT format.
Note
The metadata of the table, apart from column unit
, name
and
description
, are not written in the output file. Placeholders for
the title, authors, and table name fields are put into the output file and
can be edited after writing.
Examples#
The command ascii.write(format='mrt')
writes an astropy
Table
to the MRT format. Section dividers ---
and ===
are used to divide the table
into different sections, with the last section always been the actual data.
As the MRT standard requires,
for columns that have a unit
attribute not set to None
,
the unit names are tabulated in the Byte-By-Byte
description of the column. When columns do not contain any units, ---
is put instead.
A ?
is prefixed to the column description in the Byte-By-Byte for Masked
columns or columns that have null values, indicating them as such.
The example below initializes a table with columns that have a unit
attribute and
has masked values.
>>> from astropy.io import ascii
>>> from astropy.table import Table, Column, MaskedColumn
>>> from astropy import units as u
>>> table = Table()
>>> table['Name'] = ['ASASSN-15lh', 'ASASSN-14li']
>>> # MRT Standard requires all quantities in SI units.
>>> temperature = [0.0334, 0.297] * u.K
>>> table['Temperature'] = temperature.to(u.keV, equivalencies=u.temperature_energy())
>>> table['nH'] = Column([0.025, 0.0188], unit=u.Unit(10**22))
>>> table['Flux'] = ([2.044 * 10**-11] * u.erg * u.cm**-2).to(u.Jy * u.Unit(10**12))
>>> table['Flux'] = MaskedColumn(table['Flux'], mask=[True, False])
>>> table['magnitude'] = [u.Magnitude(25), u.Magnitude(-9)]
Note that for columns with Time
, TimeDelta
and related values,
the writer does not do any internal conversion or modification. These columns should be
converted to regular columns with proper unit
and name
attribute before writing
the table. Thus:
>>> from astropy.time import Time, TimeDelta
>>> from astropy.timeseries import TimeSeries
>>> ts = TimeSeries(time_start=Time('2019-01-01'), time_delta=2*u.day, n_samples=1)
>>> table['Obs'] = Column(ts.time.decimalyear, description='Time of Observation')
>>> table['Cadence'] = Column(TimeDelta(100.0, format='sec').datetime.seconds,
... unit=u.s)
Columns that are SkyCoord
objects or columns with
values that are such objects are recognized as such, and some predefined labels and
description is used for them. Coordinate columns that have SphericalRepresentation
are additionally sub-divided into their coordinate component columns. Representations that have
ra
and dec
components are divided into their hour
-min
-sec
and deg
-arcmin
-arcsec
components respectively. Whereas columns with
SkyCoord
objects in the Galactic
or any of the Ecliptic
frames are divided
into their latitude(ELAT
/GLAT
) and longitude components (ELON
/GLAT
) only.
The original table remains accessible as such, while the file is written from a modified
copy of the table. The new coordinate component columns are appended to the end of the table.
It should be noted that the default precision of the latitude, longitude and seconds (of arc)
columns is set at a default number of 12, 10 and 9 digits after the decimal for deg
, sec
and arcsec
values, respectively. This default is set to match a machine precision of 1e-15
relative to the original SkyCoord
those columns were extracted from.
As all other columns, the format can be expliclty set by passing the formats
keyword to the
write
function or by setting the format
attribute of individual columns (the latter
will only work for columns that are not decomposed).
To customize the number of significant digits, presicions should therefore be specified in the
formats
dictionary for the output column names, such as
formats={'RAs': '07.4f', 'DEs': '06.3f'}
or formats={'GLAT': '+10.6f', 'GLON': '9.6f'}
for milliarcsecond accuracy. Note that the forms with leading zeros for the seconds and
including the sign for latitudes are recommended for better consistency and readability.
The following code illustrates the above.
>>> from astropy.coordinates import SkyCoord
>>> table['coord'] = [SkyCoord.from_name('ASASSN-15lh'),
... SkyCoord.from_name('ASASSN-14li')]
>>> table.write('coord_cols.dat', format='ascii.mrt')
>>> table['coord'] = table['coord'].geocentrictrueecliptic
>>> table['Temperature'].format = '.5E' # Set default column format.
>>> table.write('ecliptic_cols.dat', format='ascii.mrt')
After execution, the contents of coords_cols.dat
will be:
Title:
Authors:
Table:
================================================================================
Byte-by-byte Description of file: table.dat
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bytes Format Units Label Explanations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-11 A11 --- Name Description of Name
13-23 E11.6 keV Temperature [0.0/0.01] Description of Temperature
25-30 F6.4 10+22 nH [0.01/0.03] Description of nH
32-36 F5.3 10+12Jy Flux ? Description of Flux
38-42 E5.1 mag magnitude [0.0/3981.08] Description of magnitude
44-49 F6.1 --- Obs [2019.0/2019.0] Time of Observation
51-53 I3 s Cadence [100] Description of Cadence
55-56 I2 h RAh Right Ascension (hour)
58-59 I2 min RAm Right Ascension (minute)
61-73 F13.10 s RAs Right Ascension (second)
75 A1 --- DE- Sign of Declination
76-77 I2 deg DEd Declination (degree)
79-80 I2 arcmin DEm Declination (arcmin)
82-93 F12.9 arcsec DEs Declination (arcsec)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASASSN-15lh 2.87819e-09 0.0250 1e-10 2019.0 100 22 02 15.4500000000 -61 39 34.599996000
ASASSN-14li 2.55935e-08 0.0188 2.044 4e+03 2019.0 100 12 48 15.2244072000 +17 46 26.496624000
And the file ecliptic_cols.dat
will look like:
Title:
Authors:
Table:
================================================================================
Byte-by-byte Description of file: table.dat
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bytes Format Units Label Explanations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1- 11 A11 --- Name Description of Name
13- 23 E11.6 keV Temperature [0.0/0.01] Description of Temperature
25- 30 F6.4 10+22 nH [0.01/0.03] Description of nH
32- 36 F5.3 10+12Jy Flux ? Description of Flux
38- 42 E5.1 mag magnitude [0.0/3981.08] Description of magnitude
44- 49 F6.1 --- Obs [2019.0/2019.0] Time of Observation
51- 53 I3 s Cadence [100] Description of Cadence
55- 70 F16.12 deg ELON Ecliptic Longitude (geocentrictrueecliptic)
72- 87 F16.12 deg ELAT Ecliptic Latitude (geocentrictrueecliptic)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASASSN-15lh 2.87819e-09 0.0250 1e-10 2019.0 100 306.224208650096 -45.621789850825
ASASSN-14li 2.55935e-08 0.0188 2.044 4e+03 2019.0 100 183.754980099243 21.051410763027
Finally, MRT has some specific naming conventions for columns
(https://journals.aas.org/mrt-labels/#reflab). For example, if a column contains
the mean error for the data in a column named label
, then this column should be named e_label
.
These kinds of relative column naming cannot be enforced by the MRT writer
because it does not know what the column data means and thus, the relation between the
columns cannot be figured out. Therefore, it is up to the user to use Table.rename_columns
to appropriately rename any columns before writing the table to MRT format.
The following example shows a similar situation, using the option to send the output to
sys.stdout
instead of a file:
>>> table['error'] = [1e4, 450] * u.Jy # Error in the Flux values.
>>> outtab = table.copy() # So that changes don't affect the original table.
>>> outtab.rename_column('error', 'e_Flux')
>>> # re-order so that related columns are placed next to each other.
>>> outtab = outtab['Name', 'Obs', 'coord', 'Cadence', 'nH', 'magnitude',
... 'Temperature', 'Flux', 'e_Flux']
>>> ascii.write(outtab, format='mrt')
Title:
Authors:
Table:
================================================================================
Byte-by-byte Description of file: table.dat
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bytes Format Units Label Explanations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1- 11 A11 --- Name Description of Name
13- 18 F6.1 --- Obs [2019.0/2019.0] Time of Observation
20- 22 I3 s Cadence [100] Description of Cadence
24- 29 F6.4 10+22 nH [0.01/0.03] Description of nH
31- 35 E5.1 mag magnitude [0.0/3981.08] Description of magnitude
37- 47 E11.6 keV Temperature [0.0/0.01] Description of Temperature
49- 53 F5.3 10+12Jy Flux ? Description of Flux
55- 61 F7.1 Jy e_Flux [450.0/10000.0] Description of e_Flux
63- 78 F16.12 deg ELON Ecliptic Longitude (geocentrictrueecliptic)
80- 95 F16.12 deg ELAT Ecliptic Latitude (geocentrictrueecliptic)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASASSN-15lh 2019.0 100 0.0250 1e-10 2.87819e-09 10000.0 306.224208650096 -45.621789850825
ASASSN-14li 2019.0 100 0.0188 4e+03 2.55935e-08 2.044 450.0 183.754980099243 21.051410763027
Attention
The MRT writer currently supports automatic writing of a single coordinate column
in Tables
. For tables with more than one coordinate column of a given kind
(e.g. equatorial, galactic or ecliptic), only the first found coordinate column
will be decomposed into its component columns, and the rest of the coordinate
columns of the same type will be converted to string columns. Thus users should take
care that the additional coordinate columns are dealt with (e.g. by converting them
to unique float
-valued columns) before using SkyCoord
methods.