PDL::Core
Core(e)        User Contributed Perl Documentation        Core(e)



NAME
       PDL::Core - fundamental PDL functionality

DESCRIPTION
       Methods and functions for type conversions, PDL creation,
       type conversion, threading etc.

SYNOPSIS
        use PDL::Core;             # Normal routines
        use PDL::Core ':Internal'; # Hairy routines


FUNCTIONS
       pdl

       piddle constructor - creates new piddle from perl
       scalars/arrays

        $a = pdl(SCALAR|ARRAY REFERENCE|ARRAY);

        $a = pdl [1..10];             # 1D array
        $a = pdl ([1..10]);           # 1D array
        $a = pdl (1,2,3,4);           # Ditto
        $b = pdl [[1,2,3],[4,5,6]];   # 2D 3x2 array
        $b = pdl 42                   # 0-dimensional scalar
        $c = pdl $a;                  # Make a new copy
        $a = pdl([1,2,3],[4,5,6]);    # 2D
        $a = pdl([[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]);  # 2D

       Note the last two are equivalent - a list is automatically
       converted to a list reference for syntactic convenience.
       i.e. you can omit the outer "[]"

       "pdl()" is a functional synonym for the 'new' constructor,
       e.g.:

        $x = new PDL [1..10];

       In order to control how undefs are handled in converting
       from perl lists to PDLs, one can set the variable
       $PDL::undefval.  For example:

        $foo = [[1,2,undef],[undef,3,4]];
        $PDL::undefval = -999;
        $f = pdl $foo;
        print $f
        [
         [   1    2 -999]
         [-999    3    4]
        ]

       $PDL::undefval defaults to zero.

       null

       Returns a 'null' piddle.

        $x = null;

       "null()" has a special meaning to PDL::PP. It is used to
       flag a special kind of empty piddle, which can grow to
       appropriate dimensions to store a result (as opposed to
       storing a result in an existing piddle).

        perldl> sumover sequence(10,10), $ans=null;p $ans
        [45 145 245 345 445 545 645 745 845 945]


       nullcreate

       Returns a 'null' piddle.

        $x = PDL->nullcreate($arg)

       This is an routine used by many of the threading primi-
       tives (i.e. sumover, minimum, etc.) to generate a null
       piddle for the function's output that will behave properly
       for derived (or subclassed) PDL objects.

       For the above usage: If $arg is a PDL, or a derived PDL,
       then "$arg->null" is returned.  If $arg is a scalar (i.e.
       a zero-dimensional PDL) then "$PDL->null" is returned.

        PDL::Derived->nullcreate(e)
          returns PDL::Derived->null.
        PDL->nullcreate($pdlderived)
          returns $pdlderived->null.


       nelem

       Return the number of elements in a piddle

        $n = nelem($piddle); $n = $piddle->nelem;

        $mean = sum($data)/nelem($data);


       dims

       Return piddle dimensions as a perl list

        @dims = $piddle->dims;  @dims = dims($piddle);

        perldl> p @tmp = dims zeroes 10,3,22
        10 3 22


       ndims

       Returns the number of dimensions in a piddle. Alias for
       getndims.

       getndims

       Returns the number of dimensions in a piddle

        $ndims = $piddle->getndims;

        perldl> p zeroes(10,3,22)->getndims
        3


       dim

       Returns the size of the given dimension of a piddle. Alias
       for getdim.


       getdim

       Returns the size of the given dimension.

        $dim0 = $piddle->getdim(m);

        perldl> p zeroes(10,3,22)->getdim(m)
        3

       Negative indices count from the end of the dims array.
       Indices beyond the end will return a size of 1. This
       reflects the idea that any pdl is equivalent to an
       infinitely dimensional array in which only a finite number
       of dimensions have a size different from one. For example,
       in that sense a 3D piddle of shape [3,5,2] is equivalent
       to a [3,5,2,1,1,1,1,1,....]  piddle. Accordingly,

         print $a->getdim(m);

       will print 1 for most practically encountered piddles.

       topdl

       alternate piddle constructor - ensures arg is a piddle

        $a = topdl(SCALAR|ARRAY REFERENCE|ARRAY);

       The difference between pdl() and "topdl()" is that the
       latter will just 'fall through' if the argument is already
       a piddle. It will return a reference and NOT a new copy.

       This is particulary useful if you are writing a function
       which is doing some fiddling with internals and assumes a
       piddle argument (e.g. for method calls). Using "topdl()"
       will ensure nothing breaks if passed with '2'.

       Note that "topdl()" is not exported by default (see exam-
       ple below for usage).

        use PDL::Core ':Internal'; # use the internal routines of
                                   # the Core module

        $a = topdl 43;             # $a is piddle with value '43'
        $b = topdl $piddle;        # fall through
        $a = topdl (1,2,3,4);      # Convert 1D array


       PDL::get_datatype

       Internal: Return the numeric value identifying the piddle
       datatype

        $x = $piddle->get_datatype;

       Mainly used for internal routines.

       NOTE: get_datatype returns 'just a number' not any special
       type object, unlike type.

       howbig

       Returns the size of a piddle datatype in bytes.

       Note that "howbig()" is not exported by default (see exam-
       ple below for usage).

        use PDL::Core ':Internal'; # use the internal routines of
                                   # the Core module

        $size = howbig($piddle->get_datatype);

       Mainly used for internal routines.

       NOTE: NOT a method! This is because get_datatype returns
       'just a number' not any special object.

        perldl> p howbig(ushort([1..10])->get_datatype)
        2


       threadids

       Returns the piddle thread IDs as a perl list

       Note that "threadids()" is not exported by default (see
       example below for usage).

        use PDL::Core ':Internal'; # use the internal routines of
                                   # the Core module

        @ids = threadids $piddle;


       doflow

       Turn on/off dataflow

        $x->doflow;  doflow($x);


       flows

       Whether or not a piddle is indulging in dataflow

        something if $x->flows; $hmm = flows($x);


       PDL::new

       new piddle constructor method

        $x = PDL->new(SCALAR|ARRAY|ARRAY REF);

        $x = PDL->new(w);
        $y = new PDL [1..10];

       Constructs piddle from perl numbers and lists.

       PDL::copy

       Make a physical copy of a piddle

        $new = $old->copy;

       Since "$new = $old" just makes a new reference, the "copy"
       method is provided to allow real independent copies to be
       made.





       PDL::unwind

       Return a piddle which is the same as the argument except
       that all threadids have been removed.

        $y = $x->unwind;


       PDL::make_physical

       Make sure the data portion of a piddle can be accessed
       from XS code.

        $a->make_physical;
        $a->call_my_xs_method;

       Ensures that a piddle gets its own allocated copy of data.
       This obviously implies that there are certain piddles
       which do not have their own data.  These are so called
       virtual piddles that make use of the vaffine optimisation
       (see PDL::Indexing).  They do not have their own copy of
       data but instead store only access information to some (or
       all) of another piddle's data.

       Note: this function should not be used unless absolutely
       neccessary since otherwise memory requirements might be
       severly increased. Instead of writing your own XS code
       with the need to call "make_physical" you might want to
       consider using the PDL preprocessor (see PDL::PP) which
       can be used to transparently access virtual piddles with-
       out the need to physicalise them (though there are excep-
       tions).

       dummy

       Insert a 'dummy dimension' of given length (defaults to 1)

       No relation to the 'Dungeon Dimensions' in Discworld!
       Negative positions specify relative to last dimension,
       i.e. "dummy(-1)" appends one dimension at end, "dummy(-2)"
       inserts a dummy dimension in front of the last dim, etc.

        $y = $x->dummy($position[,$dimsize]);

        perldl> p sequence(e)->dummy(0,3)
        [
         [0 0 0]
         [1 1 1]
         [2 2 2]
        ]


       clump

       "clumps" several dimensions into one large dimension

       If called with one argument $n clumps the first $n dimen-
       sions into one. For example, if $a has dimensions
       "(5,3,4)" then after

        $b = $a->clump(p);   # Clump 2 first dimensions

       the variable $b will have dimensions "(15,4)" and the ele-
       ment "$b->at(7,3)" refers to the element "$a->at(1,2,3)".

       Use "clump(-1)" to flatten a piddle. The method flat is
       provided as a convenient alias.

       If "clump" is called with an index list with more than one
       element it is treated as a list of dimensions that should
       be clumped together into one. The resulting clumped dim is
       placed at the position of the lowest index in the list.
       This convention ensures that "clump" does the expected
       thing in the usual cases. The following example demon-
       strates typical usage:

         $a = sequence 2,3,3,3,5; # 5D piddle
         $c = $a->clump(1..3);    # clump all the dims 1 to 3 into one
         print $c->info;          # resulting 3D piddle has clumped dim at pos 1
        PDL: Double D [2,27,5]


       thread_define

       define functions that support threading at the perl level

        thread_define 'tline(a(a);b(b))', over {
         line $_[0], $_[1]; # make line compliant with threading
        };

       "thread_define" provides some support for threading (see
       PDL::Indexing) at the perl level. It allows you to do
       things for which you normally would have resorted to
       PDL::PP (see PDL::PP); however, it is most useful to wrap
       existing perl functions so that the new routine supports
       PDL threading.

       "thread_define" is used to define new threading aware
       functions. Its first argument is a symbolic repesentation
       of the new function to be defined. The string is composed
       of the name of the new function followed by its signature
       (see PDL::Indexing and PDL::PP) in parentheses. The second
       argument is a subroutine that will be called with the
       slices of the actual runtime arguments as specified by its
       signature. Correct dimension sizes and minimal number of
       dimensions for all arguments will be checked (assuming the
       rules of PDL threading, see PDL::Indexing).

       The actual work is done by the "signature" class which
       parses the signature string, does runtime dimension checks
       and the routine "threadover" that generates the loop over
       all appropriate slices of pdl arguments and creates pdls
       as needed.

       Similar to "pp_def" and its "OtherPars" option it is pos-
       sible to define the new function so that it accepts normal
       perl args as well as piddles. You do this by using the
       "NOtherPars" parameter in the signature. The number of
       "NOtherPars" specified will be passed unaltered into the
       subroutine given as the second argument of
       "thread_define". Let's illustrate this with an example:

        PDL::thread_define 'triangles(inda();indb();indc()), NOtherPars => 2',
         PDL::over {
           ${$_[3]} .= $_[4].join(',',map {$_->at} @_[0..2]).",-1,\n";
         };

       This defines a function "triangles" that takes 3 piddles
       as input plus 2 arguments which are passed into the rou-
       tine unaltered. This routine is used to collect lists of
       indices into a perl scalar that is passed by reference.
       Each line is preceded by a prefix passed as $_[4]. Here is
       typical usage:

        $txt = '';
        triangles(pdl(1,2,3),pdl(l),pdl(l),\$txt," "x10);
        print $txt;

       resulting in the following output

        1,1,0,-1,
        2,1,0,-1,
        3,1,0,-1,

       which is used in PDL::Graphics::TriD::VRML to generate
       VRML output.

       Currently, this is probably not much more than a POP
       (proof of principle) but is hoped to be useful enough for
       some real life work.

       Check PDL::PP for the format of the signature. Currently,
       the "[t]" qualifier and all type qualifiers are ignored.

       PDL::thread

       Use explicit threading over specified dimensions (see also
       PDL::Indexing)

        $b = $a->thread($dim,[$dim1,...])

        $a = zeroes 3,4,5;
        $b = $a->thread(2,0);

       Same as PDL::thread1, i.e. uses thread id 1.

       diagonal

       Returns the multidimensional diagonal over the specified
       dimensions.

        $d = $x->diagonal(dim1, dim2,...)

        perldl> $a = zeroes(3,3,3);
        perldl> ($b = $a->diagonal(0,1))++;
        perldl> p $a
        [
         [
          [1 0 0]
          [0 1 0]
          [0 0 1]
         ]
         [
          [1 0 0]
          [0 1 0]
          [0 0 1]
         ]
         [
          [1 0 0]
          [0 1 0]
          [0 0 1]
         ]
        ]





       PDL::thread1

       Explicit threading over specified dims using thread id 1.

        $xx = $x->thread1(3,1)

        Wibble

       Convenience function interfacing to PDL::Slices::threadI.

       PDL::thread2

       Explicit threading over specified dims using thread id 2.

        $xx = $x->thread2(3,1)

        Wibble

       Convenience function interfacing to PDL::Slices::threadI.

       PDL::thread3

       Explicit threading over specified dims using thread id 3.

        $xx = $x->thread3(3,1)

        Wibble

       Convenience function interfacing to PDL::Slices::threadI.

       sever

       sever any links of this piddle to parent piddles

       In PDL it is possible for a piddle to be just another view
       into another piddle's data. In that case we call this pid-
       dle a virtual piddle and the original piddle owning the
       data its parent. In other languages these alternate views
       sometimes run by names such as alias or smart reference.

       Typical functions that return such piddles are "slice",
       "xchg", "index", etc. Sometimes, however, you would like
       to separate the virtual piddle from its parent's data and
       just give it a life of its own. This is simply achieved by
       using "sever". For example,

          $a = $pdl->index(pdl(0,3,7))->sever;
          $a++;       # important: $pdl is not modified!

       In this regard it acts similar to "copy". However, in gen-
       eral performance is better with "sever" and secondly,
       "sever" doesn't lead to futile copying when used on pid-
       dles that already have their own data.

          $a = zeroes(s);
          $a->sever;   # NOOP since $a is already its own boss!


       PDL::info

       Return formatted information about a piddle.

        $x->info($format_string);

        print $x->info("Type: %T Dim: %-15D State: %S");

       Returns a string with info about a piddle. Takes an
       optional argument to specify the format of information a
       la sprintf.  Format specifiers are in the form
       "%<width><letter>" where the width is optional and the
       letter is one of

       T      Type

       D      Formatted Dimensions

       F      Dataflow status

       S      Some internal flags (P=physi-
              cal,V=Vaffine,C=changed)

       C      Class of this piddle, i.e. "ref $pdl"

       A      Address of the piddle struct as a unique identifier

       M      Calculated memory consumption of this piddle's data
              area

       approx

       test for approximately equal values (relaxed "==")

         # ok if all corresponding values in
         # piddles are within 1e-8 of each other
         print "ok\n" if all approx $a, $b, 1e-8;

       "approx" is a relaxed form of the "==" operator and often
       more appropriate for floating point types ("float" and
       "double").

       Usage:

         $res = approx $a, $b [, $eps]

       The optional parameter $eps is remembered across invoca-
       tions and initially set to 1e-6, e.g.

         approx $a, $b;         # last $eps used (1e-6 initially)
         approx $a, $b, 1e-10;  # 1e-10
         approx $a, $b;         # also 1e-10


       mslice

       Convenience interface to slice, allowing easier inclusion
       of dimensions in perl code.

        $a = $x->mslice(...);

        # below is the same as $x->slice("5:7,:,3:4:2")
        $a = $x->mslice([5,7],X,[3,4,2]);


       nslice

       Internally used interface to slice and dice that is the
       runtime part of the PDL::NiceSlice implementation.

        $a = $x->nslice(...);


        # below is the same as $x->slice("5:7,:,3:4:2")
        $a = $x->nslice([5,7],X,[3,4,2]);

       It implements a superset of mslice's features. Should
       probably not be used in your scripts. Rather resort to the
       PDL::NiceSlice interface.

       inplace

       Flag a piddle so that the next operation is done 'in
       place'

        somefunc($x->inplace); somefunc(inplace $x);

       In most cases one likes to use the syntax "$y = f($x)",
       however in many case the operation "f()" can be done cor-
       rectly 'in place', i.e. without making a new copy of the
       data for output. To make it easy to use this, we write
       "f()" in such a way that it operates in-place, and use
       "inplace" to hint that a new copy should be disabled. This
       also makes for clear syntax.

       Obviously this will not work for all functions, and if in
       doubt see the function's documentation. However one can
       assume this is true for all elemental functions (i.e.
       those which just operate array element by array element
       like "log10").

        perldl> $x = xvals zeroes 10;
        perldl> log10(inplace $x)
        perldl> p $x
        [      -Inf 0    0.30103 0.47712125 0.60205999    0.69897
        0.77815125 0.84509804 0.90308999 0.95424251]


       PDL::new_from_specification

       Internal method: create piddle by specification

       This is the argument processing method called by zeroes
       and some other functions which constructs piddles from
       argument lists of the form:

        [type], $nx, $ny, $nz,...

       For $nx, $ny, etc. 0 and 1D piddles are allowed.  Giving
       those has the same effect as if saying "$arg->list", e.g.

          1, pdl(5,2), 4

       is equivalent to

          1, 5, 2, 4

       Note, however, that in all functions using "new_from_spec-
       ification" calling "func $piddle" will probably not do
       what you want. So to play safe use (e.g. with zeroes)

         $pdl = zeroes $dimpdl->list;

       Calling

         $pdl = zeroes $dimpdl;

       will rather be equivalent to

         $pdl = zeroes $dimpdl->dims;

       However,

         $pdl = zeroes ushort, $dimpdl;

       will again do what you intended since it is interpreted as
       if you had said

         $pdl = zeroes ushort, $dimpdl->list;

       This is unfortunate and confusing but no good solution
       seems obvious that would not break existing scripts.

       isempty

       Test whether a piddle is empty

        print "The piddle has zero dimension\n" if $pdl->isempty;

       This function returns 1 if the piddle has zero elements.
       This is useful in particular when using the indexing func-
       tion which. In the case of no match to a specified crite-
       rion, the returned piddle has zero dimension.

        perldl> $a=sequence(e)
        perldl> $i=which($a < -1)
        perldl> print "I found no matches!\n" if ($a->isempty);

       Note that having zero elements is rather different from
       the concept of being a null piddle, see the PDL::FAQ and
       PDL::Indexing manpages for discussions of this.

       zeroes

       construct a zero filled piddle from dimension list or tem-
       plate piddle.

       Various forms of usage,

       (i) by specification or (ii) by template piddle:

        # usage type (i):
        $a = zeroes([type], $nx, $ny, $nz,...);
        $a = PDL->zeroes([type], $nx, $ny, $nz,...);
        $a = $pdl->zeroes([type], $nx, $ny, $nz,...);
        # usage type (ii):
        $a = zeroes $b;
        $a = $b->zeroes
        zeroes inplace $a;     # Equivalent to   $a .= 0;
        $a->inplace->zeroes;   #  ""

        perldl> $z = zeroes 4,3
        perldl> p $z
        [
         [0 0 0 0]
         [0 0 0 0]
         [0 0 0 0]
        ]
        perldl> $z = zeroes ushort, 3,2 # Create ushort array
        [ushort() etc. with no arg returns a PDL::Types token]

       See also new_from_specification for details on using pid-
       dles in the dimensions list.



       ones

       construct a one filled piddle

        $a = ones([type], $nx, $ny, $nz,...);
        etc. (see 'zeroes')

        see zeroes() and add one

       See also new_from_specification for details on using pid-
       dles in the dimensions list.

       reshape

       Change the shape (i.e. dimensions) of a piddle, preserving
       contents.

        $x->reshape(e); reshape($x, NEWDIMS);

       The data elements are preserved, obviously they will wrap
       differently and get truncated if the new array is shorter.
       If the new array is longer it will be zero-padded.

       Note: an explicit copy is forced - this is the only way
       (for now) of stopping a crash if $x is a slice.

        perldl> $x = sequence(e)
        perldl> reshape $x,3,4; p $x
        [
         [0 1 2]
         [3 4 5]
         [6 7 8]
         [9 0 0]
        ]
        perldl> reshape $x,5; p $x
        [0 1 2 3 4]


       flat

       flatten a piddle (alias for "$pdl-"clump(-1)>)

         $srt = $pdl->flat->qsort;

       Useful method to make a 1D piddle from an arbitrarily
       sized input piddle. Data flows back and forth as usual
       with slicing routines.  Falls through if argument already
       1D, 0D args are promoted to 1D.

       convert

       Generic datatype conversion function

        $y = convert($x, $newtype);

        $y = convert $x, long
        $y = convert $x, ushort

       $newtype is a type number, for convenience they are
       returned by "long()" etc when called without arguments.

       Datatype_conversions

       byte|short|ushort|long|float|double convert shorthands

        $y = double $x; $y = ushort [1..10];
        # all of byte|short|ushort|long|float|double behave similarly

       When called with a piddle argument, they convert to the
       specific datatype.

       When called with a numeric or list / listref argument they
       construct a new piddle. This is a convenience to avoid
       having to be long-winded and say "$x = long(pdl(l))"

       Thus one can say:

        $a = float(1,2,3,4);           # 1D
        $a = float([1,2,3],[4,5,6]);   # 2D
        $a = float([[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]); # 2D

       Note the last two are equivalent - a list is automatically
       converted to a list reference for syntactic convenience.
       i.e. you can omit the outer "[]"

       When called with no arguments return a special type token.
       This allows syntactical sugar like:

        $x = ones byte, 1000,1000;

       This example creates a large piddle directly as byte
       datatype in order to save memory.

       In order to control how undefs are handled in converting
       from perl lists to PDLs, one can set the variable
       $PDL::undefval; see the function pdl() for more details.

        perldl> p $x=sqrt float [1..10]
        [1 1.41421 1.73205 2 2.23607 2.44949 2.64575 2.82843 3 3.16228]
        perldl> p byte $x
        [1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 3 3]


       byte

       Convert to byte datatype - see 'Datatype_conversions'

       short

       Convert to short datatype - see 'Datatype_conversions'

       ushort

       Convert to ushort datatype - see 'Datatype_conversions'

       long

       Convert to long datatype - see 'Datatype_conversions'

       float

       Convert to float datatype - see 'Datatype_conversions'

       double

       Convert to double datatype - see 'Datatype_conversions'

       type

       return the type of a piddle as a blessed type object

       A convenience function for use with the piddle construc-
       tors, e.g.

        $b = PDL->zeroes($a->type,$a->dims,3);
        die "must be float" unless $a->type == float;

       See also the discussion of the "PDL::Type" class in
       PDL::Types.  Note that the "PDL::Type" objects have over-
       loaded comparison and stringify operators so that you can
       compare and print types:

        $a = $a->float if $a->type < float;
        $t = $a->type; print "Type is $t\";


       list

       Convert piddle to perl list

        @tmp = list $x;

       Obviously this is grossly inefficient for the large
       datasets PDL is designed to handle. This was provided as a
       get out while PDL matured. It  should now be mostly super-
       seded by superior constructs, such as PP/threading. How-
       ever it is still occasionally useful and is provied for
       backwards compatibility.

        for (list $x) {
          # Do something on each value...
        }


       listindices

       Convert piddle indices to perl list

        @tmp = listindices $x;

       @tmp now contains the values "0..nelem($x)".

       Obviously this is grossly inefficient for the large
       datasets PDL is designed to handle. This was provided as a
       get out while PDL matured. It  should now be mostly super-
       seded by superior constructs, such as PP/threading. How-
       ever it is still occasionally useful and is provied for
       backwards compatibility.

        for $i (listindices $x) {
          # Do something on each value...
        }


       set

       Set a single value inside a piddle

        set $piddle, @position, $value

       @position is a coordinate list, of size equal to the num-
       ber of dimensions in the piddle. Occasionally useful,
       mainly provided for backwards compatibility as superseded
       by use of slice and assigment operator ".=".



        perldl> $x = sequence 3,4
        perldl> set $x, 2,1,99
        perldl> p $x
        [
         [ 0  1  2]
         [ 3  4 99]
         [ 6  7  8]
         [ 9 10 11]
        ]


       at

       Returns a single value inside a piddle as perl scalar.

        $z = at($piddle, @position); $z=$piddle->at(@position);

       @position is a coordinate list, of size equal to the num-
       ber of dimensions in the piddle. Occasionally useful in a
       general context, quite useful too inside PDL internals.

        perldl> $x = sequence 3,4
        perldl> p $x->at(1,2)
        7


       sclr

       return a single value from a piddle as a scalar

         $val = $a(a)->sclr;
         $val = sclr inner($a,$b);

       The "sclr" method is useful to turn a piddle into a normal
       Perl scalar. Its main advantage over using "at" for this
       purpose is the fact that you do not need to worry if the
       piddle is 0D, 1D or higher dimensional.  Using "at" you
       have to supply the correct number of zeroes, e.g.

         $a = sequence(e);
         $b = $a->slice('4');
         print $b->sclr; # no problem
         print $b->at(); # error: needs at least one zero

       "sclr" is generally used when a Perl scalar is required
       instead of a one-element piddle. If the input is a multi-
       element piddle the first value is returned as a Perl
       scalar. You can optionally switch on checks to ensure that
       the input piddle has only one element:

         PDL->sclr({Check => 'warn'}); # carp if called with multi-el pdls
         PDL->sclr({Check => 'barf'}); # croak if called with multi-el pdls

       are the commands to switch on warnings or raise an error
       if a multielement piddle is passed as input. Note that
       these options can only be set when "sclr" is called as a
       class method (see example above). Use

         PDL->sclr({Check=>0});

       to switch these checks off again (default setting); When
       called as a class method the resulting check mode is
       returned (0: no checking, 1: warn, 2: barf).




       cat

       concatentate piddles to N+1 dimensional piddle

       Takes a list of N piddles of same shape as argument,
       returns a single piddle of dimension N+1

        perldl> $x = cat ones(3,3),zeroes(3,3),rvals(3,3); p $x
        [
         [
          [1 1 1]
          [1 1 1]
          [1 1 1]
         ]
         [
          [0 0 0]
          [0 0 0]
          [0 0 0]
         ]
         [
          [1 1 1]
          [1 0 1]
          [1 1 1]
         ]
        ]


       dog

       Opposite of 'cat' :). Split N dim piddle to list of N-1
       dim piddles

       Takes a single N-dimensional piddle and splits it into a
       list of N-1 dimensional piddles. The breakup is done along
       the last dimension.  Note the dataflown connection is
       still preserved by default, e.g.:

        perldl> $p = ones 3,3,3
        perldl> ($a,$b,$c) = dog $p
        perldl> $b++; p $p
        [
         [
          [1 1 1]
          [1 1 1]
          [1 1 1]
         ]
         [
          [2 2 2]
          [2 2 2]
          [2 2 2]
         ]
         [
          [1 1 1]
          [1 1 1]
          [1 1 1]
         ]
        ]

        Break => 1   Break dataflow connection (new copy)


       barf

       Standard error reporting routine for PDL.

       "barf()" is the routine PDL modules should call to report
       errors. This is because "barf()" will report the error as
       coming from the correct line in the module user's script
       rather than in the PDL module.

       It does this magic by unwinding the stack frames until it
       reaches a package NOT beginning with "PDL::". If you DO
       want it to report errors in some module PDL::Foo (e.g.
       when debugging PDL::Foo) then set the variable
       "$PDL::Foo::Debugging=1".

       Additionally if you set the variable "$PDL::Debugging=1"
       you will get a COMPLETE stack trace back up to the top
       level package.

       Finally "barf()" will try and report usage information
       from the PDL documentation database if the error message
       is of the form 'Usage: func'.

       Remember "barf()" is your friend. *Use* it!

       At the perl level:

        barf("User has too low an IQ!");

       In C or XS code:

        barf("You have made %d errors", count);

       Note: this is one of the few functions ALWAYS exported by
       PDL::Core

       gethdr

       Retrieve header information from a piddle

        $pdl=rfits('file.fits');
        $h=$pdl->gethdr;
        print "Number of pixels in the X-direction=$$h{NAXIS1}\n";

       The "gethdr" function retrieves whatever header informa-
       tion is contained within a piddle. The header can be set
       with sethdr and is always a hash reference and has to be
       dereferenced for access to the value.

       It is important to realise that you are free to insert
       whatever hash reference you want in the header, so you can
       use it to record important information about your piddle,
       and that it is not automatically copied when you copy the
       piddle.  See hdrcpy to enable automatic header copying.

       For instance a wrapper around rcols that allows your pid-
       dle to remember the file it was read from and the columns
       could be easily written (here assuming that no regexp is
       needed, extensions are left as an exercise for the reader)

        sub ext_rcols {
           my ($file, @columns)=@_;
           my $header={};
           $$header{File}=$file;
           $$header{Columns}=\@columns;

           @piddles=rcols $file, @columns;
           foreach (@piddles) { $_->sethdr($header); }
           return @piddles;
        }


       sethdr

       Set header information of a piddle

        $pdl=rfits('file.fits');
        $h=$pdl->gethdr;
        # add a FILENAME field to the header
        $$h{FILENAME} = 'file.fits';
        $pdl->sethdr( $h );

       The "sethdr" function sets the header information for a
       piddle.  Normally you would get the current header infor-
       mation with gethdr, add/change/remove fields, then apply
       those changes with "sethdr".

       The "sethdr" function must be given a hash reference.  For
       further information on the header, see gethdr and hdrcpy.

       hdrcpy

       switch on/off/examine automatic header copying

        print "hdrs will be copied" if $a->hdrcpy;
        $a->hdrcpy(y);       # switch on hdr copying
        $b = $a->sumover;    # and $b will inherit $a's hdr
        $a->hdrcpy(y);       # and now make $a non-infectious again

       Normally, the optional header of a piddle is not copied
       automatically in pdl operations. Switching on the hdrcpy
       flag using the "hdrcpy" method will enable automatic hdr
       copying. Note that copying is by reference for efficiency
       reasons. "hdrcpy" without an argument just returns the
       current setting of the flag.

AUTHOR
       Copyright (C) Karl Glazebrook (kgb@aaoepp.aao.gov.au),
       Tuomas J. Lukka, (lukka@husc.harvard.edu) and Christian
       Soeller (c.soeller@auckland.ac.nz) 1997.  All rights
       reserved. There is no warranty. You are allowed to redis-
       tribute this software / documentation under certain condi-
       tions. For details, see the file COPYING in the PDL dis-
       tribution. If this file is separated from the PDL distri-
       bution, the copyright notice should be included in the
       file.



perl v5.6.1                 2002-04-08                    Core(e)