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Browsing and selecting with an X display
xcatview is a powerful and flexible catalogue browser. However,
it can only be used from a terminal (or workstation console) capable
of displaying X output. Before starting xcatview you should ensure
that your terminal (or console) is configured to receive X output. Then
simply type:
xcatview
and follow the ensuing dialogue boxes. Copious on-line help is available
within xcatview. To obtain it simply click on the `Help'
button; every dialogue box in xcatview contains a `Help'
button.
In addition to accessing local catalogues xcatview provides some
limited facilities to access remote catalogues held on-line at various
astronomical data centres and archives around the world. These facilities
provide the same functionality as the application catremote and
are described in greater detail in Section
. Obviously
they will only be available if the computer on which CURSA is running
has appropriate network connections (which will usually be the case at
a normal Starlink node).
xcatview provides the following facilities:
- list columns in a catalogue,
- list parameters and textual information from a catalogue,
- list new columns computed `on the fly' using an algebraic
expression defined in terms of existing columns and parameters. For
example, if the catalogue contained columns V and B_V
(corresponding to the
magnitude and
colour) then the
magnitude could be listed by specifying the expression ` V + B_V'. The syntax for expressions is described in
Appendix
,
- fast creation of a subset within a specified range for a sorted
column (see Section
for details of how to create a
catalogue sorted on a specified column),
- creation of subsets defined by algebraic criteria. For example,
if the catalogue again contained columns V and B_V then
to find the stars in the catalogue fainter than twelfth magnitude
and with a
of greater than 0.5 the criteria would be ` V > 12.0 .AND. B_V > 0.5'. Again see Appendix
for the
syntax of expressions,
- compute statistics for one or more columns. The statistics
are computed from either all the rows in the catalogue or just the
subset of rows contained in a previously created selection. The
statistics computed are described in detail in Section
below,
- plot a simple scatter-plot from two columns. The scatter-plot
can show either all the rows in the catalogue or just the subset of
rows contained in a previously created selection,
- plot a histogram from a column. The histogram can be computed
from either all the rows in the catalogue or just the subset of rows
contained in a previously created selection,
- subsets extracted from the catalogue can be saved as new
catalogues. These subsets can include new columns computed from
expressions as well as columns present in the original catalogue,
- subsets extracted from the catalogue can be saved in a text file
in a form suitable for printing, or in a form suitable for passing
to other applications (that is, unencumbered with extraneous
annotation).
A tutorial example of using xcatview to select stars which meet
specified criteria from a catalogue (a `recipe' in the jargon of
cookbooks) is included in SC/6: The CCD Photometric Calibration
Cookbook[22].
Subsections
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Up: CURSA Catalogue and Table Manipulation Applications
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CURSA Catalogue and Table Manipulation Applications
Starlink User Note 190
A.C. Davenhall
4th November 2001
E-mail:starlink@jiscmail.ac.uk
Copyright © 2001 Council for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils