The plot_element_counts.py script. If you get an error that it cannot find the module “matplotlib” or something, it's probably not installed. This fixes that on Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get install python-matplotlib
Example usage:
./plot_element_counts.py /tmp/xxx/tbd/data.dat “a nice title” “Data” “Creg” “Dreg”
#!/usr/bin/env python # This script plots the counts of the specified elements against AEPS, # each plot having the specified title. import sys import matplotlib.pyplot as plt # Idea: keep a mapping somewhere (file?) of Element name to color # to use with plot def plot_mfs_data(filePath, plot_title, elem_names): with open(filePath, "r") as inFile: # Read header and AEPS column header = inFile.readline().split() header.remove("#") # there is a column named as "# AEPS", bad AEPS_index = header.index("AEPS") lines = inFile.readlines() AEPS = [] for l in lines: entries = l.split() AEPS.append(entries[AEPS_index]) ############################## # Read data lines of file, get element counts, make plots for each fig_index = 0 for elem in elem_names: col_index = header.index(elem) counts = [] for l in lines: entries = l.split() counts.append(entries[col_index]) # Make plots for this Element fig = plt.figure(fig_index) fig_index += 1 plt.plot(AEPS, counts) plt.xlabel('AEPS') plt.ylabel("Number of " + elem) plt.title(plot_title) # Show all figures/plots plt.show() # When run as a script if __name__ == "__main__": if len(sys.argv) < 4: print "Usage: <tbd data file> <plot_title> <list of Element names>" else: plot_mfs_data(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3:])