.. C-Munipack - User's manual Copyright 2012 David Motl Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. $Id: flatbat_command.rst,v 1.1.1.1 2012/08/12 16:57:43 dmotl Exp $ .. index:: pair: flatbat; command .. program:: flatbat .. _flatbat-command: flatbat (command) ================= utility for flat-frame correction Synopsis -------- flatbat [ options ] *flat-file* *input-files* ... Description ----------- The :command:`flatbat` command applies flat-field correction to a set of source frames. It means, that it divides the source frames by the flat frame pixel-by-pixel and the result is multiplied by median value of the flat frame. The resulting image is written to output file. The source frames and also flat frame must be in FITS format and of same dimensions. The output file is in FITS format too. .. _flatbat-input-files: Input files ----------- Names of input files can be specified directly on a command-line as command arguments; it is allowed to use the usual wild-card notation. In case the input files are placed outside the working directory, you have to specify the proper path relative to the current working directory. Alternatively, you can also prepare a list of input file names in a text file, each input file on a separate line. It is not allowed to use the wild-card notation here. Use the -i option to instruct the program to read the file. .. _flatbat-output-files: Output files ------------ By default, output files are stored to the current working directory. Their names are derived from the command name followed by a sequential number starting by 1. Command options allows a caller to modify the default naming of output files. The -o option sets the format string; it may contain a path where the files shall be stored to. Special meaning has a sequence of question marks, it is replaced by the ordinal number of a file indented by leading zeros to the same number of decimal places as the number of the question marks. By means of the -i option, you can modify the initial value of a counter. On request, the program can write a list of output files to a text file, use the -g option to specify a file name. Options ------- Options are used to provide extra information to customize the execution of a command. They are specified as command arguments. Each option has a full form starting with two dashes and an optional short form starting with one dash only. Options are case-sensitive. It is allowed to merge two or more successive short options together. Some options require a value; in this case a value is taken from a subsequent argument. When a full form is used, an option and its value can also be separated by an equal sign. When a short form is used, its value can immediately follow the option. Whenever there is a conflict between a configuration file parameter and an option of the same meaning, the option always take precedence. .. option:: -i, --read-dirfile <filepath> read list of input files from specified file; see the :ref:`flatbat-input-files` section for details. .. option:: -g, --make-dirfile <filepath> save list of output files to specified file, existing content of the file will be overwritten; see the :ref:`flatbat-output-files` section for details. .. option:: -o, --output-mask <mask> set output file mask (default=:file:`fout????.fts`), see the :ref:`flatbat-output-files` section for details. .. option:: -c, --counter <value> set initial counter value (default=1), see the :ref:`flatbat-output-files` section for details. .. option:: -h, --help print list of command-line parameters .. option:: -q, --quiet quiet mode; suppress all messages .. option:: --version print software version string .. option:: --licence print software licence .. option:: --verbose verbose mode; print debug messages Examples -------- :: flatbat -oout.fts flat.fts in.fts The command applies flat correction to :file:`in.fts` using :file:`flat.fts` as a correction frame. The output is written to :file:`out.fts`. Exit status ----------- The command returns a zero exit status if it succeeds to process all specified files. Otherwise, it will stop immediately when an error occurs and a nonzero error code is returned.