pygmt.triangulate.delaunay_triples
- static triangulate.delaunay_triples(data=None, x=None, y=None, z=None, output_type='pandas', outfile=None, projection=None, verbose=None, binary=None, nodata=None, find=None, coltypes=None, header=None, incols=None, skiprows=None, wrap=None, **kwargs)[source]
Delaunay triangle based gridding of Cartesian data.
Reads in x,y[,z] data and performs Delaunay triangulation, i.e., it finds how the points should be connected to give the most equilateral triangulation possible. If a map projection (give
region
andprojection
) is chosen then it is applied before the triangulation is calculated. The actual algorithm used in the triangulations is either that of Watson [1982] or Shewchuk [1996] [Default if installed; typegmt get GMT_TRIANGULATE
on the command line to see which method is selected). Note: For geographic data with global or very large extent you should consider sphtriangulate instead sincetriangulate
is a Cartesian or small-geographic area operator and is unaware of periodic or polar boundary conditions.Must provide either
data
orx
,y
, andz
.Full option list at https://docs.generic-mapping-tools.org/latest/triangulate.html
- Parameters
x/y/z (np.ndarray) – Arrays of x and y coordinates and values z of the data points.
data (str or numpy.ndarray or pandas.DataFrame or xarray.Dataset or geopandas.GeoDataFrame) – Pass in (x, y, z) or (longitude, latitude, elevation) values by providing a file name to an ASCII data table, a 2D
numpy.ndarray
, apandas.DataFrame
, anxarray.Dataset
made up of 1Dxarray.DataArray
data variables, or ageopandas.GeoDataFrame
containing the tabular data.projection (str) – projcode[projparams/]width. Select map projection.
region (str or list) – xmin/xmax/ymin/ymax[+r][+uunit]. Specify the region of interest.
outfile (str or bool or None) – The name of the output ASCII file to store the results of the histogram equalization in.
Select verbosity level [Default is w], which modulates the messages written to stderr. Choose among 7 levels of verbosity:
q - Quiet, not even fatal error messages are produced
e - Error messages only
w - Warnings [Default]
t - Timings (report runtimes for time-intensive algorithms);
i - Informational messages (same as
verbose=True
)c - Compatibility warnings
d - Debugging messages
i|o[ncols][type][w][+l|b]. Select native binary input (using
binary="i"
) or output (usingbinary="o"
), where ncols is the number of data columns of type, which must be one of:c - int8_t (1-byte signed char)
u - uint8_t (1-byte unsigned char)
h - int16_t (2-byte signed int)
H - uint16_t (2-byte unsigned int)
i - int32_t (4-byte signed int)
I - uint32_t (4-byte unsigned int)
l - int64_t (8-byte signed int)
L - uint64_t (8-byte unsigned int)
f - 4-byte single-precision float
d - 8-byte double-precision float
x - use to skip ncols anywhere in the record
For records with mixed types, append additional comma-separated combinations of ncols type (no space). The following modifiers are supported:
w after any item to force byte-swapping.
+l|b to indicate that the entire data file should be read as little- or big-endian, respectively.
Full documentation is at https://docs.generic-mapping-tools.org/latest/gmt.html#bi-full.
nodata (str) – i|onodata. Substitute specific values with NaN (for tabular data). For example,
d="-9999"
will replace all values equal to -9999 with NaN during input and all NaN values with -9999 during output. Prepend i to the nodata value for input columns only. Prepend o to the nodata value for output columns only.find (str) – [~]“pattern” | [~]/regexp/[i]. Only pass records that match the given pattern or regular expressions [Default processes all records]. Prepend ~ to the pattern or regexp to instead only pass data expressions that do not match the pattern. Append i for case insensitive matching. This does not apply to headers or segment headers.
coltypes (str) – [i|o]colinfo. Specify data types of input and/or output columns (time or geographical data). Full documentation is at https://docs.generic-mapping-tools.org/latest/gmt.html#f-full.
header (str) –
[i|o][n][+c][+d][+msegheader][+rremark][+ttitle]. Specify that input and/or output file(s) have n header records [Default is 0]. Prepend i if only the primary input should have header records. Prepend o to control the writing of header records, with the following modifiers supported:
+d to remove existing header records.
+c to add a header comment with column names to the output [Default is no column names].
+m to add a segment header segheader to the output after the header block [Default is no segment header].
+r to add a remark comment to the output [Default is no comment]. The remark string may contain \n to indicate line-breaks.
+t to add a title comment to the output [Default is no title]. The title string may contain \n to indicate line-breaks.
Blank lines and lines starting with # are always skipped.
incols (str or 1d array) –
Specify data columns for primary input in arbitrary order. Columns can be repeated and columns not listed will be skipped [Default reads all columns in order, starting with the first (i.e., column 0)].
For 1d array: specify individual columns in input order (e.g.,
incols=[1,0]
for the 2nd column followed by the 1st column).For
str
: specify individual columns or column ranges in the format start[:inc]:stop, where inc defaults to 1 if not specified, with columns and/or column ranges separated by commas (e.g.,incols="0:2,4+l"
to input the first three columns followed by the log-transformed 5th column). To read from a given column until the end of the record, leave off stop when specifying the column range. To read trailing text, add the column t. Append the word number to t to ingest only a single word from the trailing text. Instead of specifying columns, useincols="n"
to simply read numerical input and skip trailing text. Optionally, append one of the following modifiers to any column or column range to transform the input columns:+l to take the log10 of the input values.
+d to divide the input values by the factor divisor [Default is 1].
+s to multiple the input values by the factor scale [Default is 1].
+o to add the given offset to the input values [Default is 0].
[cols][+a][+r]. Suppress output for records whose z-value equals NaN [Default outputs all records]. Optionally, supply a comma-separated list of all columns or column ranges to consider for this NaN test [Default only considers the third data column (i.e., cols = 2)]. Column ranges must be given in the format start[:inc]:stop, where inc defaults to 1 if not specified. The following modifiers are supported:
+r to reverse the suppression, i.e., only output the records whose z-value equals NaN.
+a to suppress the output of the record if just one or more of the columns equal NaN [Default skips record only if values in all specified cols equal NaN].
wrap (str) –
y|a|w|d|h|m|s|cperiod[/phase][+ccol]. Convert the input x-coordinate to a cyclical coordinate, or a different column if selected via +ccol. The following cyclical coordinate transformations are supported:
y - yearly cycle (normalized)
a - annual cycle (monthly)
w - weekly cycle (day)
d - daily cycle (hour)
h - hourly cycle (minute)
m - minute cycle (second)
s - second cycle (second)
c - custom cycle (normalized)
Full documentation is at https://docs.generic-mapping-tools.org/latest/gmt.html#w-full.
- Returns
ret (pandas.DataFrame or None) – Return type depends on the
outfile
parameter:pandas.DataFrame if
outfile
is True or NoneNone if
outfile
is a str (file output is stored inoutfile
)