conflicting packages
GRDEDIT(l) | GRDEDIT(l) |
NAME¶
grdedit - Modifying the header in a 2-D grdfileSYNOPSIS¶
grdedit grdfile [ -A ] [ -Dxunit/yunit/zunit/scale/offset/title/remark ] [ -Rwest/east/south/north[ r] ] [ -S ] [ -V ]DESCRIPTION¶
grdedit reads the header information in a binary 2-D grdfile and replaces the information with values provided on the command line [if any]. As an option, global, geographical grids (with 360 degrees longitude range) can be rotated in the east-west direction. grdedit only operates on files containing a grdheader.No space between the option flag and the associated arguments. Use upper case for the option flags and lower case for modifiers.
- grdfile
- Name of the 2-D grdfile to modify
OPTIONS¶
- -A
- If necessary, adjust the file's x_inc, y_inc to be compatible with its domain (or a new domain set with -R). Older gridfiles (i.e., created prior to GMT 3.1) often had excessive slop in' x_inc, y_inc and an adjustment is necessary. Newer files are created correctly.
- -D
- Give new values for xunit, yunit, zunit, scale, offset, title, and remark. To leave some of the values untouched, specify = as the new value.
- -R
- west, east, south, and north specify the Region of interest. To specify boundaries in degrees and minutes [and seconds], use the dd:mm[:ss] format. Append r if lower left and upper right map coordinates are given instead of wesn. The new w/e/s/n values will replace those in the grid, and the x_inc, y_inc values are adjusted, if necessary.
- -S
- For global, geographical grids only. Grid values will be shifted laterally according to the new borders given in -R.
- -V
- Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to stderr [Default runs "silently"].
EXAMPLES¶
Let us assume the file data.grd covers the area 300/310/10/30. We want to change the boundaries from geodetic longitudes to geographic and put a new title in the header. We accomplish this bySEE ALSO¶
gmt(1gmt), grd2xyz(1gmt), xyz2grd(1gmt)1 Jan 2004 |