Easily script Starlink commands with Python.
This package requires a separate working Starlink installation to be available and the path to be passed to the package. See https://starlink.eao.hawaii.edu to download Starlink. It allows easy pythonic calling of Starlink commands from python, where you can use normal Python arguments and keywords and have access to the call signatures and help strings through the normal Python help.
There are auto-generated wrapper modules providing easy access to the Starlink packages KAPPA, CONVERT, ATOOLS, CCDPACK, CUPID, FIGARO, POLPACK, and SMURF. There are also commands to allow access to the pipelines ORAC-DR and Picard.
You should normally install this package via pip
with:
pip install starlink-pywrapper
This will also install the necessary python dependencies.
You must also have a working Starlink installation, which can be downloaded from https://starlink.eao.hawaii.edu.
To run e.g. the KAPPA stats command command on a file
myndf.sdf
, you would use the :meth:`starlink.kappa.stats`
function, after first importing the package and telling it where
your Starlink installation was
>>> from starlink import kappa
>>> kappa.wrapper.change_starpath('/path/to/my/starlink/installation')
>>> statsinfo = kappa.stats('myndf.sdf')
>>> print(statsinfo.mean)
18.3
As you can see in this example, the returned object from the command
will include all output values that you would previously have either
accessed with KAPPA's parget
, or just read from the screen output.
Many other commands will produce a new output NDF file on
disk. For example, the makesnr
command in KAPPA:
>>> snrinfo = kappa.makesnr(in_='myndf.sdf', out='snr.sdf', minvar=0.0)
>>> print(snrinfo.out)
snr.sdf
The returned object is less useful for these commands, although may contain useful information. The documentation should indicate what values are returned and what they mean, and can be accessed as normal in Python:
>>> help(kappa.makesnr)
- When using the command line starlink programs, each command will often remember certain important variables you set previously, and use those as the default for the next repeat of that command, or the next command you run. This behaviour has been deliberately not included in this package, as when writing scripts this behaviour can produce suprising results. Instead, the documented defaults should always be the default seen by your programs.
- You do not have to add shell escapes to your strings when passing them to Starlink commands.
- You do not need to use KAPPA's
parget
to read the return values of a command; instead every return value is included in the returned object (a 'namedtuple' type) as a field.- Interactive usage of commands where you are prompted to enter values is not supported; the full command must be specified when running the command.
- You should not use KAPPA's
fitslist
to access FITS header values programatically as it will only print values to the terminal (if logging is set to DEBUG), and does not provide access to them in an Python object. Instead, either use :meth:`starlink.kappa.fitsval` to read single values, or use the :meth:`starlink.utilities.get_ndf_fitshdr` to read in the entire FITS header of an NDF file and return it as an Astropy Header object (requires Astropy to be installed).