NAME¶
Astro::FITS::Header - Object Orientated interface to FITS HDUs
SYNOPSIS¶
$header = new Astro::FITS::Header( Cards => \@array );
DESCRIPTION¶
Stores information about a FITS header block in an object. Takes an hash with an
array reference as an argument. The array should contain a list of FITS header
cards as input.
METHODS¶
Constructor¶
- new
- Create a new instance from an array of FITS header cards.
$item = new Astro::FITS::Header( Cards => \@header );
returns a reference to a Header object. If you pass in no cards, you get the
(required) first SIMPLE card for free.
Accessor Methods¶
- tiereturnsref
- Indicates whether the tied object should return multiple
values as a single string joined by newline characters (false) or it
should return a reference to an array containing all the values.
Only affects the tied interface.
tie %keywords, "Astro::FITS::Header", $header, tiereturnsref => 1;
$ref = $keywords{COMMENT};
Defaults to returning a single string in all cases (for backwards
compatibility)
- subhdrs
- Set or return the subheaders for a Header object. Arguments
must be given as "Astro::FITS::Header" objects.
$header->subhdrs(@hdrs);
@hdrs = $header->subhdrs;
This method should be used when you have additional header components that
should be associated with the primary header but they are not associated
with a particular name, just an ordering.
FITS headers that are associated with a name can be stored directly in the
header using an "Astro::FITS::Header::Item" of type
'HEADER'.
- item
- Returns a FITS::Header:Item object referenced by index,
"undef" if it does not exist.
$item = $header->item($index);
- get_wcs
- Returns a Starlink::AST FrameSet object representing the
WCS of the FITS Header.
$ast = $header->get_wcs();
- keyword
- Returns keyword referenced by index, "undef" if
it does not exist.
$keyword = $header->keyword($index);
- itembyname
- Returns an array of Header::Items for the requested keyword
if called in list context, or the first matching Header::Item if called in
scalar context. Returns "undef" if the keyword does not exist.
The keyword may be a regular expression created with the "qr"
operator.
@items = $header->itembyname($keyword);
$item = $header->itembyname($keyword);
- itembytype
- Returns an array of Header::Items for the requested type if
called in list context, or the first matching Header::Item if called in
scalar context. See "Astro::FITS::Header::Item" for a list of
allowed types.
@items = $header->itembytype( "COMMENT" );
@items = $header->itembytype( "HEADER" );
$item = $header->itembytype( "INT" );
- index
- Returns an array of indices for the requested keyword if
called in list context, or an empty array if it does not exist. The
keyword may be a regular expression created with the "qr"
operator.
@index = $header->index($keyword);
If called in scalar context it returns the first item in the array, or
"undef" if the keyword does not exist.
$index = $header->index($keyword);
- value
- Returns an array of values for the requested keyword if
called in list context, or an empty array if it does not exist. The
keyword may be a regular expression created with the "qr"
operator.
@value = $header->value($keyword);
If called in scalar context it returns the first item in the array, or
"undef" if the keyword does not exist.
- comment
- Returns an array of comments for the requested keyword if
called in list context, or an empty array if it does not exist. The
keyword may be a regular expression created with the "qr"
operator.
@comment = $header->comment($keyword);
If called in scalar context it returns the first item in the array, or
"undef" if the keyword does not exist.
$comment = $header->comment($keyword);
- insert
- Inserts a FITS header card object at position $index
$header->insert($index, $item);
the object $item is not copied, multiple inserts of the same object mean
that future modifications to the one instance of the inserted object will
modify all inserted copies.
The insert position can be negative.
- replace
- Replace FITS header card at index $index with card $item
$card = $header->replace($index, $item);
returns the replaced card.
- remove
- Removes a FITS header card object at position $index
$card = $header->remove($index);
returns the removed card.
- replacebyname
- Replace FITS header cards with keyword $keyword with card
$item
$card = $header->replacebyname($keyword, $item);
returns the replaced card. The keyword may be a regular expression created
with the "qr" operator.
- removebyname
- Removes a FITS header card object by name
@card = $header->removebyname($keyword);
returns the removed cards. The keyword may be a regular expression created
with the "qr" operator.
- splice
- Implements a standard splice operation for FITS headers
@cards = $header->splice($offset [,$length [, @list]]);
$last_card = $header->splice($offset [,$length [, @list]]);
Removes the FITS header cards from the header designated by $offset and
$length, and replaces them with @list (if specified) which must be an
array of FITS::Header::Item objects. Returns the cards removed. If offset
is negative, counts from the end of the FITS header.
- cards
- Return the object contents as an array of FITS cards.
@array = $header->cards;
- sizeof
- Returns the highest index in use in the FITS header. To get
the total number of header items, add 1.
$number = $header->sizeof;
- allitems
- Returns the header as an array of FITS::Header:Item
objects.
@items = $header->allitems();
General Methods¶
- configure
- Configures the object, takes an array of FITS header cards,
an array of Astro::FITS::Header::Item objects or a simple hash as input.
If you feed in nothing at all, it uses a default array containing just the
SIMPLE card required at the top of all FITS files.
$header->configure( Cards => \@array );
$header->configure( Items => \@array );
$header->configure( Hash => \%hash );
Does nothing if the array is not supplied. If the hash scheme is used and
the hash contains the special key of SUBHEADERS pointing to an array of
hashes, these will be read as proper sub headers. All other references in
the hash will be ignored. Note that the default key order will be retained
in the object created via the hash.
- merge_primary
- Given the current header and a set of
"Astro::FITS::Header" objects, return a merged FITS header (with
the cards that have the same value and comment across all headers) along
with, for each input, header objects containing all the header items that
differ (including, by default, keys that are not present in all headers).
Only the primary headers are merged, subheaders are ignored.
($clone) = $headerr->merge_primary();
($same, @different) = $header->merge_primary( $fits1, $fits2, ...);
($same, @different) = $header->merge_primary( \%options, $fits1, $fits2 );
@different can be empty if all headers match (but see the
"force_return_diffs" option) but if any headers are different
there will always be the same number of headers in @different as supplied
to the function (including the reference header). A clone of the input
header (stripped of any subheaders) is returned if no comparison headers
are supplied.
In scalar context, just returns the merged header.
$merged = $header->merge_primary( @hdrs );
The options hash is itself optional. It contains the following keys:
merge_unique - if an item is identical across multiple headers and only
exists in those headers, propogate to the merged header rather
than storing it in the difference headers.
force_return_diffs - return an empty difference object per input header
even if there are no diffs
- freeze
- Method to return a blessed reference to the object so that
we can store ths object on disk using Data::Dumper module.
- append
- Append or update a card.
$header->append( $card );
This method can take either an Astro::FITS::Header::Item object, an
Astro::FITS::Header object, or a reference to an array of
Astro::FITS::Header::Item objects.
In all cases, if the given Astro::FITS::Header::Item keyword exists in the
header, then the value will be overwritten with the one passed to the
method. Otherwise, the card will be appended to the end of the header.
Nothing is returned.
Operator Overloading¶
These operators are overloaded:
- ""
- When the object is used in a string context the FITS header
block is returned as a single string.
Private methods¶
These methods are for internal use only.
- _rebuild_lookup
- Private function used to rebuild the lookup table after
modifying the header block, its easier to do it this way than go through
and add one to the indices of all header cards following the modifed
card.
TIED INTERFACE¶
The "FITS::Header" object can also be tied to a hash:
use Astro::FITS::Header;
$header = new Astro::FITS::Header( Cards => \@array );
tie %hash, "Astro::FITS::Header", $header
$value = $hash{$keyword};
$hash{$keyword} = $value;
print "keyword $keyword is present" if exists $hash{$keyword};
foreach my $key (keys %hash) {
print "$key = $hash{$key}\n";
}
Basic hash translation¶
Header value type is determined on-the-fly by parsing of the input values.
Anything that parses as a number or a logical is converted to that before
being put in a card (but see below).
Per-card comment fields can be accessed using the tied interface by specifying a
key name of "key_COMMENT". This works because in general
"_COMMENT" is too long to be confused with a normal key name.
$comment = $hdr{CRPIX1_COMMENT};
will return the comment associated with CRPIX1 header item. The comment can be
modified in the same way:
$hdr{CRPIX1_COMMENT} = "An axis";
You can also modify the comment by slash-delimiting it when setting the
associated keyword:
$hdr{CRPIX1} = "34 / Set this field manually";
If you want an actual slash character in your string field you must escape it
with a backslash. (If you're in double quotes you have to use a double
backslash):
$hdr{SLASHSTR} = 'foo\/bar / field contains "foo/bar"';
Keywords are CaSE-inNSEnSiTIvE, unlike normal hash keywords. All keywords are
translated to upper case internally, per the FITS standard.
Aside from the SIMPLE and END keywords, which are automagically placed at the
beginning and end of the header respectively, keywords are included in the
header in the order received. This gives you a modicum of control over card
order, but if you actually care what order they're in, you probably don't want
the tied interface.
Comment cards are a special case because they have no normal value and their
comment field is treated as the hash value. The keywords "COMMENT"
and "HISTORY" are magic and refer to comment cards; nearly all other
keywords create normal valued cards. (see "SIMPLE and END cards",
below).
Multi-card values¶
Multiline string values are broken up, one card per line in the string.
Extra-long string values are handled gracefully: they get split among multiple
cards, with a backslash at the end of each card image. They're transparently
reassembled when you access the data, so that there is a strong analogy
between multiline string values and multiple cards.
In general, appending to hash entries that look like strings does what you think
it should. In particular, comment cards have a newline appended automatically
on FETCH, so that
$hash{HISTORY} .= "Added multi-line string support";
adds a new HISTORY comment card, while
$hash{TELESCOP} .= " dome B";
only modifies an existing TELESCOP card.
You can make multi-line values by feeding in newline-delimited strings, or by
assigning from an array ref. If you ask for a tag that has a multiline value
it's always expanded to a multiline string, even if you fed in an array ref to
start with. That's by design: multiline string expansion often acts as though
you are getting just the first value back out, because perl string-to-number
conversion stops at the first newline. So:
$hash{CDELT1} = [3,4,5];
print $hash{CDELT1} + 99,"\n$hash{CDELT1}";
prints "102\n3\n4\n5", and then
$hash{CDELT1}++;
print $hash{CDELT1};
prints "4".
In short, most of the time you get what you want. But you can always fall back
on the non-tied interface by calling methods like so:
((tied $hash)->method())
If you prefer to have multi-valued items automagically become array refs, then
you can get that behavior using the "tiereturnsref" method:
tie %keywords, "Astro::FITS::Header", $header, tiereturnsref => 1;
When tiereturnsref is true, multi-valued items will be returned via a reference
to an array (ties do not respect calling context). Note that if this is
configured you will have to test each return value to see whether it is
returning a real value or a reference to an array if you are not sure whether
there will be more than one card with a duplicate name.
Type forcing¶
Because perl uses behind-the-scenes typing, there is an ambiguity between
strings and numeric and/or logical values: sometimes you want to create a
STRING card whose value could parse as a number or as a logical value, and
perl kindly parses it into a number for you. To force string evaluation, feed
in a trivial array ref:
$hash{NUMSTR} = 123; # generates an INT card containing 123.
$hash{NUMSTR} = "123"; # generates an INT card containing 123.
$hash{NUMSTR} = ["123"]; # generates a STRING card containing "123".
$hash{NUMSTR} = [123]; # generates a STRING card containing "123".
$hash{ALPHA} = "T"; # generates a LOGICAL card containing T.
$hash{ALPHA} = ["T"]; # generates a STRING card containing "T".
Calls to
keys() or
each() will, by default, return the keywords in
the order in which they appear in the header.
When the key refers to a subheader entry (ie an item of type
"HEADER"), a hash reference is returned. If a hash reference is
stored in a value it is converted to a "Astro::FITS::Header" object.
If the special key "SUBHEADERS" is used, it will return the array of
subheaders, (as stored using the "subhdrs" method) each of which
will be tied to a hash. Subheaders can be stored using normal array
operations.
SIMPLE and END cards¶
No FITS interface would becomplete without special cases.
When you assign to SIMPLE or END, the tied interface ensures that they are first
or last, respectively, in the deck -- as the FITS standard requires. Other
cards are inserted in between the first and last elements, in the order that
you define them.
The SIMPLE card is forced to FITS LOGICAL (boolean) type. The FITS standard
forbids you from setting it to F, but you can if you want -- we're not the
FITS police.
The END card is forced to a null type, so any value you assign to it will fall
on the floor. If present in the deck, the END keyword always contains the
value " ", which is both more-or-less invisible when printed and
also true -- so you can test the return value to see if an END card is
present.
SIMPLE and END come pre-defined from the constructor. If for some nefarious
reason you want to remove them you must explicitly do so with
"delete" or the appropriate method call from the object interface.
SEE ALSO¶
"Astro::FITS::Header::Item", "Starlink::AST",
"Astro::FITS::Header::CFITSIO",
"Astro::FITS::Header::Item::NDF".
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2007-2011 Science and Technology Facilties Council. Copyright (C)
2001-2007 Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council and portions
Copyright (C) 2002 Southwest Research Institute. All Rights Reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple
Place,Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA
AUTHORS¶
Alasdair Allan <aa@astro.ex.ac.uk>, Tim Jenness
<t.jenness@jach.hawaii.edu>, Craig DeForest
<deforest@boulder.swri.edu>, Jim Lewis <jrl@ast.cam.ac.uk>, Brad
Cavanagh <b.cavanagh@jach.hawaii.edu>