splitxyz - Split xyz[dh] data tables into individual segments
splitxyz [ table ] [
-Aazimuth/tolerance ] [ -Ccourse_change]
[ -Dminimum_distance ] [
-Fxy_filter/z_filter ] [ -Ntemplate ] [
-Qflags ] [ -S ] [ -V[level] ] [
-bbinary ] [ -dnodata ] [ -eregexp ] [ -fflags ]
[ -ggaps ] [ -hheaders ] [ -iflags ] [
-:[i|o] ]
Note: No space is allowed between the option flag and the
associated arguments.
splitxyz reads a series of (x,y[,z]) records [or optionally
(x,y,z,d,h); see -S option] from standard input [or
xyz[dh]file] and splits this into separate lists of (x,y[,z]) series,
such that each series has a nearly constant azimuth through the x,y plane.
There are options to choose only those series which have a certain
orientation, to set a minimum length for series, and to high- or low-pass
filter the z values and/or the x,y values. splitxyz is a useful
filter between data extraction and pswiggle plotting, and can also be used
to divide a large x,y[,z] dataset into segments.
- table
- One or more ASCII [or binary, see -bi] files with 2, 3, or 5
columns holding (x,y,[z[,d,h]]) data values. To use (x,y,z,d,h) input,
sorted so that d is non-decreasing, specify the -S option; default
expects (x,y,z) only. If no files are specified, splitxyz will read
from standard input.
- -Aazimuth/tolerance
- Write out only those segments which are within +/- tolerance
degrees of azimuth in heading, measured clockwise from North, [0 -
360]. [Default writes all acceptable segments, regardless of
orientation].
- -Ccourse_change
- Terminate a segment when a course change exceeding course_change
degrees of heading is detected [ignore course changes].
- -Dminimum_distance
- Do not write a segment out unless it is at least minimum_distance
units long [0]
- -Fxy_filter/z_filter
- Filter the z values and/or the x,y values, assuming these are functions of
d coordinate. xy_filter and z_filter are filter widths in
distance units. If a filter width is zero, the filtering is not performed.
The absolute value of the width is the full width of a cosine-arch
low-pass filter. If the width is positive, the data are low-pass filtered;
if negative, the data are high-pass filtered by subtracting the low-pass
value from the observed value. If z_filter is non-zero, the entire
series of input z values is filtered before any segmentation is performed,
so that the only edge effects in the filtering will happen at the
beginning and end of the complete data stream. If xy_filter is
non-zero, the data is first divided into segments and then the x,y values
of each segment are filtered separately. This may introduce edge effects
at the ends of each segment, but prevents a low-pass x,y filter from
rounding off the corners of track segments. [Default = no filtering].
- -Ntemplate
- Write each segment to a separate output file [Default writes a multiple
segment file to stdout]. Append a format template for the individual file
names; this template must contain a C format specifier that can
format an integer argument (the running segment number across all tables);
this is usually %d but could be %08d which gives leading zeros, etc.
[Default is splitxyz_segment_%d.{txt|bin}, depending on -bo].
Alternatively, give a template with two C format specifiers and we will
supply the table number and the segment number within the table to build
the file name.
- -Qflags
- Specify your desired output using any combination of xyzdh, in any
order. Do not space between the letters. Use lower case. The output will
be ASCII (or binary, see -bo) columns of values corresponding to
xyzdh [Default is -Qxyzdh (-Qxydh if
only 2 input columns)].
- -S
- Both d and h are supplied. In this case, input contains x,y,z,d,h.
[Default expects (x,y,z) input, and d,h are computed from delta x, delta
y. Use -fg to indicate map data; then x,y are assumed to be in
degrees of longitude, latitude, distances are considered to be in
kilometers, and angles are actually azimuths. Otherwise, distances are
Cartesian in same units as x,y and angles are counter-clockwise from
horizontal].
- -:[i|o] (more ...)
- Swap 1st and 2nd column on input and/or output.
- -^ or just -
- Print a short message about the syntax of the command, then exits (NOTE:
on Windows just use -).
- -+ or just +
- Print an extensive usage (help) message, including the explanation of any
module-specific option (but not the GMT common options), then exits.
- -? or no arguments
- Print a complete usage (help) message, including the explanation of all
options, then exits.
The ASCII output formats of numerical data are controlled by
parameters in your gmt.conf file. Longitude and latitude are formatted
according to FORMAT_GEO_OUT, absolute time is under the control of
FORMAT_DATE_OUT and FORMAT_CLOCK_OUT, whereas general floating point values
are formatted according to FORMAT_FLOAT_OUT. Be aware that the format in
effect can lead to loss of precision in ASCII output, which can lead to
various problems downstream. If you find the output is not written with
enough precision, consider switching to binary output (-bo if
available) or specify more decimals using the FORMAT_FLOAT_OUT setting.
The type of input data is dictated by the -f option. If
-fg is given then x,y are in degrees of longitude, latitude,
distances are in kilometers, and angles are azimuths. Otherwise, distances
are Cartesian in same units as x,y and angles are counter-clockwise from
horizontal.
Suppose you want to make a wiggle plot of magnetic anomalies on
segments oriented approximately east-west from a NGDC-supplied cruise called
JA020015 in the region -R300/315/12/20. You want to use a 100 km
low-pass filter to smooth the tracks and a 500km high-pass filter to detrend
the magnetic anomalies. Try this:
gmt mgd77list JA020015 -R300/315/12/20 -Flon,lat,mag,dist,azim | gmt splitxyz -A90/15 -F100/-500 \
-D100 -S -V -fg | gmt pswiggle -R300/315/12/20 -Jm0.6i -Baf -B+tJA020015 -T1 \
-W0.75p -Ggray -Z200 > JA020015_wiggles.ps
MGD-77 users: For this application we recommend that you extract
dist,azim from mgd77list rather than have splitxyz compute them
separately.
Suppose you have been given a binary, double-precision file
containing lat, lon, gravity values from a survey, and you want to split it
into profiles named survey_###.txt (when gap exceeds 100 km).
Try this:
gmt splitxyz survey.bin -Nsurvey_%03d.txt -V -gd100k -D100 -: -fg -bi3d
gmt, filter1d, mgd77list, pswiggle
2019, P. Wessel, W. H. F. Smith, R. Scharroo, J. Luis, and F.
Wobbe