STILTS-MOCSHAPE(1) | Stilts commands | STILTS-MOCSHAPE(1) |
NAME¶
stilts-mocshape - Generates Multi-Order Coverage maps from shape values
SYNOPSIS¶
stilts mocshape [ifmt=<in-format>] [istream=true|false] [in=<table>] [icmd=<cmds>] [order=0..29] [coords=<expr>] [shape=point|circle|polygon|moc-ascii|uniq|stc-s] [mocfmt=ascii|fits|json|raw|summary|cds_ascii|cds_json|cds_fits] [mocimpl=auto|cds|bits|lists] [out=<out-file>]
DESCRIPTION¶
mocshape takes a list of sky positions or shapes from an input table and generates a Multi-Order Coverage map (MOC) that describes the union of their coverage on the sky.
It does a similar job to the older pixfoot command, but it can cope with input shapes that are more general than just points or circles; it also understands polygons, STC-S strings and other MOC or UNIQ specifications. It is also implemented using some different and more flexible code. It offers more output options for the calculated MOC via the mocfmt parameter, and a choice of MOC construction implementations via the mocimpl parameter. In most cases you can ignore this flexibility, but performance characteristics may be different for the different choices, and it may be worthwhile to experiment when working with very large tables.
See also the Coverage class for MOC-related functions.
OPTIONS¶
- A filename.
- A URL.
- The special value "-", meaning standard input. In this case the input format must be given explicitly using the ifmt parameter. Note that not all formats can be streamed in this way.
- A scheme specification of the form :<scheme-name>:<scheme-args>.
- A system command line with either a "<" character at the start, or a "|" character at the end ("<syscmd" or "syscmd|"). This executes the given pipeline and reads from its standard output. This will probably only work on unix-like systems.
In any case, compressed data in one of the supported compression formats (gzip, Unix compress or bzip2) will be decompressed transparently.
Commands may alternatively be supplied in an external file, by using the indirection character '@'. Thus a value of "@filename" causes the file filename to be read for a list of filter commands to execute. The commands in the file may be separated by newline characters and/or semicolons, and lines which are blank or which start with a '#' character are ignored. A backslash character '\fR' at the end of a line joins it with the following line.
The options are:
- point: 2-element array (ra,dec)
- circle: 3-element array (ra, dec, r)
- polygon: 2n-element array (ra1,dec1, ra2,dec2,...); a NaN,NaN pair can be used to delimit distinct polygons.
- moc-ascii: Region description using ASCII MOC syntax; see MOC 2.0 sec 4.3.2. Note there are currently a few issues with MOC plotting, especially for large pixels.
- uniq: Region description representing a single HEALPix cell as defined by an UNIQ value, see MOC 2.0 sec 4.3.1.
- stc-s: Region description using STC-S syntax; see TAP 1.0, section 6. Note there are some restrictions: <frame>, <refpos> and <flavor> metadata are ignored, polygon winding direction is ignored (small polygons are assumed) and the INTERSECTION and NOT constructions are not supported. The non-standard MOC construction is supported.
If a blank value is supplied (the default) an attempt will be made to guess the shape type given the supplied coordinate column; if no good guess can be made, an error will result.
- auto: Chooses implementation based on order
- cds: Uses CDS SMoc class
- bits: Uses BitSets
- lists: Uses BitSets and lists
SEE ALSO¶
If the package stilts-doc is installed, the full documentation
SUN/256 is available in HTML format:
file:///usr/share/doc/stilts/sun256/index.html
VERSION¶
STILTS version 3.5.2-debian
This is the Debian version of Stilts, which lack the support of
some file formats and network protocols. For differences see
file:///usr/share/doc/stilts/README.Debian
AUTHOR¶
Mark Taylor (Bristol University)
Mar 2017 |