pyuff_ustb.objects.Scan#
- class pyuff_ustb.objects.Scan(_reader: Reader | str | None = None, **kwargs)[source]#
Bases:
UffUffclass to define a scan.Scancontains the position of a collection of pixels. It is asuperclass for more easy-to-handle classes such asLinearScanorSectorScan.Methods
__init__([_reader])copy()Return a (deep) copy of the Uff object.
read(name)Read an Uff object from the file.
write(filepath, location[, overwrite, ...])Write the Uff to a file.
Attributes
Contact of the authors
Other information
Name of the dataset
Reference to the publication where it was used/acquired
Version of the dataset
Vector containing the x coordinates of each pixel in [m]
Vector containing the [x, y, z] coordinates of each pixel in [m]
Vector containing the y coordinates of each pixel in [m]
Vector containing the z coordinates of each pixel in [m]
- property x: ndarray#
Vector containing the x coordinates of each pixel in [m]
- property y: ndarray#
Vector containing the y coordinates of each pixel in [m]
- property author: str | None#
Contact of the authors
- copy() Uff#
Return a (deep) copy of the Uff object.
In addition to the
_reader, all compulsory and optional fields are copied (deeply) iff they are loaded/cached. This means that if a field has not been read from the file, it will not be copied. This is to avoid unintended eager loading of data.See
Uff.__deepcopy__()for implementation details.- Returns:
A deep copy of this object.
- Return type:
- property info: str | None#
Other information
- property name: str | None#
Name of the dataset
- read(name: str) Uff#
Read an Uff object from the file. A Reader must be provided in order to read.
>> uff = Uff(“/path/to/some/file.uff”) >> scan = uff.read(“scan”)
- property reference: str | None#
Reference to the publication where it was used/acquired
- property version: str | None#
Version of the dataset
- write(filepath: str, location: str | Tuple[str, ...] | List[str], overwrite: bool = False, ignore_missing_compulsory_fields: bool = False)#
Write the Uff to a file.
- Parameters:
filepath (Union[str, h5py.File]) – The filepath (or
h5py.File) to write to.location (Union[str, Tuple[str, ...], List[str]]) – The location in the h5 file to write to. Can be a tuple/list of strings representing a path into the h5 file, or a string with the path separated by slashes.
overwrite (bool) – Whether to overwrite the location if it already exists. If the location already exists and
overwrite=False, aValueErroris raised.overwrite=Falseby default.ignore_missing_compulsory_fields (bool) – Whether to ignore missing compulsory fields. If a compulsory field is not set then usually a
ValueErroris raised. Settingignore_missing_compulsory_fields=Truewill ignore this error and write the object anyway.ignore_missing_compulsory_fields=Falseby default.
Examples
We can write an object to a file like this:
>>> import pyuff_ustb as pyuff >>> point = pyuff.Point(distance=0.0, azimuth=0.0, elevation=0.0) >>> point.write("my_point.uff", "point")
If we try to write an object to the same location, we get an error:
>>> point.write("my_point.uff", "point") Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: Location 'point' already exists in the file 'my_point.uff'. Use overwrite=True to overwrite it.
We can choose to overwrite the location by passing
overwrite=True:>>> point.write("my_point.uff", "point", overwrite=True)
We can also write the object to another arbitrary location if we want:
>>> point.write("my_point.uff", "sub_directory/point")
Compulsory fields may not be None when writing an object to an UFF file (unless
ignore_missing_compulsory_fields=True).>>> point.distance = None >>> point.write("my_point.uff", "point2") Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: The compulsory field 'distance' is set to None. Compulsory fields may not be None when writing an object to an UFF file. To ignore this error and write the object anyway, set ignore_missing_compulsory_fields=True.
Note that even though the previous step failed, the file was still partially written to (we don’t rollback changes when writing fails), so we will have to pass
overwrite=Trueto write the object again.>>> point.write( ... "my_point.uff", ... "point2", ... overwrite=True, ... ignore_missing_compulsory_fields=True, ... )
After running these steps, the file will contain the following fields:
>>> uff = pyuff.Uff("my_point.uff") >>> uff Uff(point=Point(<...>), point2=Point(<...>), sub_directory=<...>)
- property z: ndarray#
Vector containing the z coordinates of each pixel in [m]
- property xyz: ndarray#
Vector containing the [x, y, z] coordinates of each pixel in [m]