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root/radiance/ray/doc/man/man1/rcollate.1
Revision: 1.17
Committed: Wed Dec 6 01:27:00 2023 UTC (17 months, 1 week ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.16: +3 -3 lines
Log Message:
docs(rmtxcomb): Added man page for new rmtxcomb tool

File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 greg 1.17 .\" RCSid "$Id: rcollate.1,v 1.16 2022/03/16 17:36:45 greg Exp $"
2 greg 1.15 .TH RCOLLATE 1 9/5/2013 RADIANCE
3 greg 1.1 .SH NAME
4 greg 1.13 rcollate - resize or re-order matrix data
5 greg 1.1 .SH SYNOPSIS
6     .B rcollate
7     [
8 greg 1.6 .B \-h[io]
9 greg 1.1 ][
10 greg 1.3 .B \-w
11     ][
12 greg 1.14 .B \-c
13     ][
14     .B \-f{a|f|d|b}[N]
15 greg 1.1 ][
16     .B \-t
17     ][
18     .B "\-ic in_col"
19     ][
20     .B "\-ir in_row"
21     ][
22     .B "\-oc out_col"
23     ][
24     .B "\-or out_row"
25 greg 1.9 ][
26     .B "\-o RxC[xR1xC2..]"
27 greg 1.1 ]
28     [
29     .B input.dat
30     ]
31     .SH DESCRIPTION
32     .I Rcollate
33     reads in a single matrix file (table) and reshapes it to have
34     the number of columns specified by the
35     .I \-oc
36     option.
37 greg 1.9 The number of rows may be specified with a
38     .I \-or
39     option, or may be determined automatically from the size of the input if
40     it is an even multiple of the number of columns (as it should be).
41     Alternatively, both may be specified using a
42     .I \-o
43     option with the number of rows and columns separated by an 'x', as in "30x14"
44     for 30 rows by 14 columns.
45     .I Rcollate
46     can also reorder the input into nested blocks by continuing the output size
47 greg 1.12 string.
48     For example, "3x10X7x2" would order output data with a 3x10 super-array of
49     7x2 subblocks.
50     This type of block hierarchy is convenient for visualizing tensor data.
51 greg 1.9 .PP
52 greg 1.1 By default, the file is assumed to include an information header, which
53 greg 1.6 is copied to the standard output along with the command name.
54     The
55     .I \-hi
56     option may be used to turn off the expectation of a header on input.
57     The
58     .I \-ho
59     option turns off header output, and
60 greg 1.1 .I \-h
61 greg 1.6 by itself turns off both input and output headers.
62 greg 1.3 The
63     .I \-w
64     option turns off non-fatal warning messages, such as unexpected EOD.
65 greg 1.1 .PP
66 greg 1.14 Normally,
67     .I rcollate
68     detects whether any transformation is actually taking place, and will
69     reproduce the data verbatim if the input size and shape should be unaltered.
70     The
71     .I \-c
72     opiton forces the operation to proceed, even if it appears to be a no-op,
73     which can be useful to correct a misshapen input matrix or check that
74 greg 1.16 the data is the proper size and formatted correctly (in the case of ASCII input).
75 greg 1.14 .PP
76 greg 1.1 The input format is assumed to be ASCII, with three white-space separated words
77     (typically numbers) in each record.
78     A different input format may be specified with the
79     .I \-f
80     option.
81     The suboptions are
82     .I \-fa,
83     .I \-ff,
84     .I \-fd,
85     and
86     .I \-fb
87     for ASCII, float, double, and binary, respectively.
88     An optional count may be attached to specify the number of data elements per
89     record, which defaults to 1.
90     Thus, the default setting is
91     .I \-fa3.
92     Since
93     .I rcollate
94     does not interpret the fields, all binary options of the same
95     length have the same result.
96     On most architectures,
97     .I \-ff6,
98     .I \-fd3,
99     and
100     .I \-fb24
101     would all be equivalent.
102 greg 1.2 Note that the lack of row separators in binary files means that
103 greg 1.1 .I rcollate
104 greg 1.13 does not actually do anything for binary files unless the data is being
105     re-ordered.
106 greg 1.1 .PP
107 greg 1.5 If an input header is present, it may contain the format, number of components
108     and matrix dimensions.
109     In such cases, the
110     .I \-ic,
111     .I \-ir
112     and
113     .I \-f
114     options are not required, but will be checked against the header
115     information if provided.
116     .PP
117 greg 1.1 The transpose option,
118     .I \-t
119     swaps rows and columns on the input.
120 greg 1.13 For binary files with no header information, the user must
121     specify at least one input or output dimension to define the matrix size.
122 greg 1.1 For ASCII files,
123     .I rcollate
124     will automatically determine the number of columns based on the
125     position of the first EOL (end-of-line) character, and the number
126 greg 1.2 of rows based on the total count of records in the file.
127 greg 1.1 The user may override these determinations, allowing the matrix to
128 greg 1.13 be resized or re-ordered as well as transposed.
129     If input and output dimensions are given and there is no block re-ordering,
130     the number of input rows must equal the number of output columns,
131 greg 1.2 and the number of input columns must equal the number of output rows.
132 greg 1.10 If the
133     .I \-o
134     option is also given with multiple block levels, the transpose operation
135 greg 1.13 will logically precede the re-ordering operation, regardless of their
136     position on the command line.
137 greg 1.8 .SH EXAMPLES
138 greg 1.1 To change put 8760 color triplets per row in a matrix with no header:
139     .IP "" .2i
140     rcollate -h \-oc 8760 input.dat > col8760.dat
141     .PP
142     To transpose a binary file with 145 float triplets per input row:
143     .IP "" .2i
144     rcollate -ff3 -ic 145 -t orig.flt > transpose.flt
145 greg 1.7 .PP
146     To create an appropriate header for a binary float matrix as required by
147     .I rmtxop(1)\:
148     .IP "" .2i
149     rcollate -hi -ff3 -or 145 -oc 8760 input.smx | rmtxop dcoef.dmx - > res.txt
150 greg 1.9 .PP
151     To visualize a Shirley-Chiu BTDF matrix where the interior resolution is
152     64x64 and the exterior resolution is 32x32:
153     .IP "" .2i
154     rcollate -o 64x64X32x32 s-c_bsdf.mtx | rmtxop -fc - > s-c_bsdf.hdr
155 greg 1.1 .SH AUTHOR
156     Greg Ward
157     .SH NOTES
158 greg 1.13 For large transpose or re-ordering operations on Unix systems,
159     it is most efficient to specify the input file on the command line,
160     rather than reading from the standard input, since
161     .I rcollate
162     can map the file directly into virtual memory.
163     .PP
164 greg 1.1 The
165     .I rcollate
166     command is rather inflexible when it comes to output field and record
167     separators for ASCII data.
168 greg 1.2 It accepts any amount of white space between fields
169 greg 1.1 on input, but only produces spaces as field separators
170 greg 1.2 between words and tabs as record separators on output.
171 greg 1.1 Output row separtors will always be an EOL, which may differ between systems.
172     .PP
173     If no options are given on the command line, or a binary file is specified
174 greg 1.13 without a transpose or re-ordering,
175 greg 1.1 .I rcollate
176 greg 1.2 issues a warning and simply copies its input to its standard output.
177 greg 1.1 .SH "SEE ALSO"
178 greg 1.17 cnt(1), histo(1), neaten(1), rcalc(1), rcrop(1), rlam(1), rsensor(1),
179     rmtxop(1), rsplit(1), tabfunc(1), total(1)