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Command Line Analysis Tools: A collection of tools for doing data analysis.

Project description

clat

Command Line Analysis Tools: A collection of tools for doing data analysis.

This project started out as a small collection of example scripts to learn about using Python for simple data analysis at the command line and grew into a collection of utilities I have found useful.

Installation

Install this tool using pip:

$ pip install clat

Usage

clat consists of several different commands, all named with the clat- prefix. For example, clat-avg computes the average of a set of numbers. It behaves like a standard UNIX filter program.

set 10 | clat-avg
5.5

There are scripts for computing the sum, standard deviation, generating histograms, plotting, and more. To see a list of available tools, just type clat- and then press <TAB> a couple of times. All commands accept the --help option.

Filters

clat includes commands for computing the sum, average, standard deviation, root mean square, and uncertainty (standard error of the mean) for a stream of data. These commands read data from standard input and behave like a normal UNIX filter (grep,cut,sort,etc). For example:

echo -e '1\n2\n3' | clat-sum
echo -e '1\n2\n3' | clat-avg
echo -e '1\n2\n3' | clat-stddev
echo -e '1\n2\n3' | clat-rms
echo -e '1\n2\n3' | clat-unc
6.0
2.0
1.0
2.160246899469287
0.5773502691896258

Generators

Sometimes it is useful to be able to generate some data at the command line. For example, creating a test function to use with some other analysis tool or check that your plotting program is working. In the past I have used seq with gawk to do this, but it gets clumsy. The clat-func command was created to make this easier. For example, to generate a Gaussian function from -1 to 1, you could do this

clat-func --x-min -1 --x-max 1 --n 20 --y "exp( -({x}/0.2)**2 ) "
-1.0 1.3887943864964021e-11
-0.8947368421052632 2.032802578425745e-09
-0.7894736842105263 1.7098030687941603e-07
-0.6842105263157895 8.26400593449372e-06
-0.5789473684210527 0.00022952436120824522
-0.4736842105263158 0.003663199685231906
-0.368421052631579 0.033595881277480345
-0.26315789473684215 0.17705374665950163
-0.1578947368421053 0.5361889303292543
-0.052631578947368474 0.9330914390145757
0.05263157894736836 0.9330914390145759
0.1578947368421053 0.5361889303292543
0.26315789473684204 0.17705374665950185
0.36842105263157876 0.033595881277480484
0.4736842105263157 0.003663199685231916
0.5789473684210527 0.00022952436120824522
0.6842105263157894 8.264005934493735e-06
0.7894736842105261 1.7098030687941723e-07
0.894736842105263 2.0328025784257597e-09
1.0 1.3887943864964021e-11

CAREFUL!! This script uses Pythons eval(...) function to evaluate the arguments passed to the various options so that you can use expressions. For example:

clat-func --x-min 0 --x-max 2*pi --n 10 --y "sin({x})"
0.0 0.0
0.6981317007977318 0.6427876096865393
1.3962634015954636 0.984807753012208
2.0943951023931953 0.8660254037844387
2.792526803190927 0.34202014332566893
3.490658503988659 -0.3420201433256687
4.1887902047863905 -0.8660254037844383
4.886921905584122 -0.9848077530122081
5.585053606381854 -0.6427876096865395
6.283185307179586 -2.4492935982947064e-16

That means you should only run this with TRUSTED input. You have been warned...

Plotting

The clat-plot command can be used to quickly plot some data at the command line. It reads from standard input and uses Gnuplot to generate the graph.

clat-func --x-min 0 --x-max 2*pi --n 100 --y "sin({x})" | clat-plot -i

This will open a plot window with this graph

Project details


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Source Distribution

clat-1.1.tar.gz (8.6 kB view hashes)

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