table of contents
ST(1) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | ST(1) |
NAME¶
st-console - simple statistics from the command line interface (CLI)
DESCRIPTION¶
"st-console" is a command-line tool to calculate simple statistics from a file or standard input.
USAGE¶
st-console [options] [input_file]
OPTIONS¶
FUNCTIONS
--N|n|count # sample size --min # minimum --max # maximum --mean|average|avg|m # mean --stdev|sd # standard deviation --stderr|sem|se # standard error of mean --sum|s # sum of elements of the sample --variance|var # variance
The following options require that the whole dataset is stored in memory, which can be problematic for huge datasets:
--q1 # first quartile --median|q2 # second quartile, or median --q3 # third quartile --percentile=f # percentile=<0..100> --quartile=i # quartile=<1..4>
If no functions are selected, "st-console" will print the default output:
N min max sum mean stddev
You can also use the following predefined sets of functions:
--summary # five-number summary (min q1 median q3 max) --complete # everything
FORMATTING
--format|fmt|f=<value> # default: "%g"
Examples of valid formats:
%d signed integer, in decimal %e floating-point number, in scientific notation %f floating-point number, in fixed decimal notation %g floating-point number, in %e or %f notation --delimiter|d=<value> # default: "\t" --no-header|nh # don't display header --transpose-output|to # switch rows and columns
INPUT VALIDATION
By default, "st-console" skips invalid input with a warning.
You can change this behavior with the following options:
--strict # throws an error, interrupting process --quiet|q # no warning
AUTHOR¶
Nelson Ferraz <nferraz@gmail.com>
CONTRIBUTE¶
Send comments, suggestions and bug reports to:
https://github.com/nferraz/st/issues
Or fork the code on github:
THANKS¶
imurray, who suggested a different algorithm for calculating variance.
asgeirn, who suggested a input filter and helped to remove some warnings.
gabeguz, who modified the script to make it more portable.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2013 Nelson Ferraz.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the MIT License (see LICENSE).
2023-01-31 | perl v5.36.0 |