NAME¶
r.mapcalc
DESCRIPTION¶
r.mapcalc performs arithmetic on raster map layers. New raster map layers
can be created which are arithmetic expressions involving existing raster map
layers, integer or floating point constants, and functions.
PROGRAM USE¶
If used without command line arguments,
r.mapcalc will read its input,
one line at a time, from standard input (which is the keyboard, unless
redirected from a file or across a pipe). Otherwise, the expression on the
command line is evaluated.
r.mapcalc expects its input to have the
form:
result=expression
where
result is the name of a raster map layer to contain the result of
the calculation and
expression is any legal arithmetic expression
involving existing raster map layers, integer or floating point constants, and
functions known to the calculator. Parentheses are allowed in the expression
and may be nested to any depth.
result will be created in the user's
current mapset.
The formula entered to
r.mapcalc by the user is recorded both in the
result map title (which appears in the category file for
result)
and in the history file for
result.
Some characters have special meaning to the command shell. If the user is
entering input to
r.mapcalc on the command line, expressions should be
enclosed within single quotes. See NOTES, below.
OPERATORS AND ORDER OF PRECEDENCE¶
The following operators are supported:
Operator Meaning Type Precedence
--------------------------------------------------------------
- negation Arithmetic 12
~ one's complement Bitwise 12
! not Logical 12
^ exponentiation Arithmetic 11
% modulus Arithmetic 10
/ division Arithmetic 10
* multiplication Arithmetic 10
+ addition Arithmetic 9
- subtraction Arithmetic 9
<< left shift Bitwise 8
>> right shift Bitwise 8
>>> right shift (unsigned) Bitwise 8
> greater than Logical 7
>= greater than or equal Logical 7
< less than Logical 7
<= less than or equal Logical 7
== equal Logical 6
!= not equal Logical 6
& bitwise and Bitwise 5
| bitwise or Bitwise 4
&& logical and Logical 3
&&& logical and[1] Logical 3
|| logical or Logical 2
||| logical or[1] Logical 2
?: conditional Logical 1
(modulus is the remainder upon division)
[1] The &&& and ||| operators handle null values differently to
other operators. See the section entitled
NULL support below for more
details.
The operators are applied from left to right, with those of higher precedence
applied before those with lower precedence. Division by 0 and modulus by 0 are
acceptable and give a NULL result. The logical operators give a 1 result if
the comparison is true, 0 otherwise.
RASTER MAP LAYER NAMES¶
Anything in the expression which is not a number, operator, or function name is
taken to be a raster map layer name. Examples:
elevation
x3
3d.his
Most GRASS raster map layers meet this naming convention. However, if a raster
map layer has a name which conflicts with the above rule, it should be quoted.
For example, the expression
x = a-b
would be interpreted as: x equals a minus b, whereas
x = "a-b"
would be interpreted as: x equals the raster map layer named
a-b
Also
x = 3107
would create
x filled with the number 3107, while
x = "3107"
would copy the raster map layer
3107 to the raster map layer
x.
Quotes are not required unless the raster map layer names look like numbers or
contain operators, OR unless the program is run non-interactively. Examples
given here assume the program is run interactively. See NOTES, below.
r.mapcalc will look for the raster map layers according to the user's
current mapset search path. It is possible to override the search path and
specify the mapset from which to select the raster map layer. This is done by
specifying the raster map layer name in the form:
name@mapset
For example, the following is a legal expression:
result = x@PERMANENT / y@SOILS
The mapset specified does not have to be in the mapset search path. (This method
of overriding the mapset search path is common to all GRASS commands, not just
r.mapcalc.)
THE NEIGHBORHOOD MODIFIER¶
Maps and images are data base files stored in raster format, i.e.,
two-dimensional matrices of integer values. In
r.mapcalc, maps may be
followed by a
neighborhood modifier that specifies a relative offset
from the current cell being evaluated. The format is
map[r,c], where
r is the row offset and
c is the column offset. For example,
map[1,2] refers to the cell one row below and two columns to the right
of the current cell,
map[-2,-1] refers to the cell two rows above and
one column to the left of the current cell, and
map[0,1] refers to the
cell one column to the right of the current cell. This syntax permits the
development of neighborhood-type filters within a single map or across
multiple maps.
RASTER MAP LAYER VALUES FROM THE CATEGORY FILE¶
Sometimes it is desirable to use a value associated with a category's
label instead of the category value itself. If a raster map layer name
is preceded by the
@ operator, then the labels in the category file for
the raster map layer are used in the expression instead of the category value.
For example, suppose that the raster map layer
soil.ph (representing soil
pH values) has a category file with labels as follows:
cat label
------------------
0 no data
1 1.4
2 2.4
3 3.5
4 5.8
5 7.2
6 8.8
7 9.4
Then the expression:
result = @soils.ph
would produce a result with category values 0, 1.4, 2.4, 3.5, 5.8, 7.2, 8.8 and
9.4.
Note that this operator may only be applied to raster map layers and produces a
floating point value in the expression. Therefore, the category label must
start with a valid number. If the category label is integer, it will be
represented by a floating point number. I the category label does not start
with a number or is missing, it will be represented by NULL (no data) in the
resulting raster map.
GREY SCALE EQUIVALENTS AND COLOR SEPARATES¶
It is often helpful to manipulate the colors assigned to map categories. This is
particularly useful when the spectral properties of cells have meaning (as
with imagery data), or when the map category values represent real quantities
(as when category values reflect true elevation values). Map color
manipulation can also aid visual recognition, and map printing.
The # operator can be used to either convert map category values to their grey
scale equivalents or to extract the red, green, or blue components of a raster
map layer into separate raster map layers.
result = #map
converts each category value in
map to a value in the range 0-255 which
represents the grey scale level implied by the color for the category. If the
map has a grey scale color table, then the grey level is what #map evaluates
to. Otherwise, it is computed as:
0.10 * red + 0.81 * green + 0.01 * blue
Alternatively, you can use:
result = y#map
to use the NTSC weightings:
0.30 * red + 0.59 * green + 0.11 * blue
Or, you can use:
result = i#map
to use equal weightings:
0.33 * red + 0.33 * green + 0.33 * blue
The # operator has three other forms: r#map, g#map, b#map. These extract the
red, green, or blue components in the named raster map, respectively. The
GRASS shell script
r.blend extracts each of these components from two
raster map layers, and combines them by a user-specified percentage. These
forms allow color separates to be made. For example, to extract the red
component from
map and store it in the new 0-255 map layer
red,
the user could type:
red = r#map
To assign this map grey colors type:
r.colors map=red color=rules
black
white
To assign this map red colors type:
r.colors map=red color=rules
black
red
FUNCTIONS¶
The functions currently supported are listed in the table below. The type of the
result is indicated in the last column.
F means that the functions
always results in a floating point value,
I means that the function
gives an integer result, and
* indicates that the result is float if
any of the arguments to the function are floating point values and integer if
all arguments are integer.
function description type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
abs(x) return absolute value of x *
acos(x) inverse cosine of x (result is in degrees) F
asin(x) inverse sine of x (result is in degrees) F
atan(x) inverse tangent of x (result is in degrees) F
atan(x,y) inverse tangent of y/x (result is in degrees) F
cos(x) cosine of x (x is in degrees) F
double(x) convert x to double-precision floating point F
eval([x,y,...,]z) evaluate values of listed expr, pass results to z
exp(x) exponential function of x F
exp(x,y) x to the power y F
float(x) convert x to single-precision floating point F
graph(x,x1,y1[x2,y2..]) convert the x to a y based on points in a graph F
if decision options: *
if(x) 1 if x not zero, 0 otherwise
if(x,a) a if x not zero, 0 otherwise
if(x,a,b) a if x not zero, b otherwise
if(x,a,b,c) a if x > 0, b if x is zero, c if x < 0
int(x) convert x to integer [ truncates ] I
isnull(x) check if x = NULL
log(x) natural log of x F
log(x,b) log of x base b F
max(x,y[,z...]) largest value of those listed *
median(x,y[,z...]) median value of those listed *
min(x,y[,z...]) smallest value of those listed *
mode(x,y[,z...]) mode value of those listed *
not(x) 1 if x is zero, 0 otherwise
pow(x,y) x to the power y *
rand(a,b) random value x : a <= x < b
round(x) round x to nearest integer I
sin(x) sine of x (x is in degrees) F
sqrt(x) square root of x F
tan(x) tangent of x (x is in degrees) F
xor(x,y) exclusive-or (XOR) of x and y I
Internal variables:
row() current row of moving window
col() current col of moving window
x() current x-coordinate of moving window
y() current y-coordinate of moving window
ewres() current east-west resolution
nsres() current north-south resolution
null() NULL value
Note, that the row() and col() indexing starts with 1.
FLOATING POINT VALUES IN THE EXPRESSION¶
Floating point numbers are allowed in the expression. A floating point number is
a number which contains a decimal point:
2.3 12.0 12. .81
Floating point values in the expression are handled in a special way. With
arithmetic and logical operators, if either operand is float, the other is
converted to float and the result of the operation is float. This means, in
particular that division of integers results in a (truncated) integer, while
division of floats results in an accurate floating point value. With functions
of type * (see table above), the result is float if any argument is float,
integer otherwise.
Note: If you calculate with integer numbers, the resulting map will be integer.
If you want to get a float result, add the decimal point to integer number(s).
If you want floating point division, at least one of the arguments has to be a
floating point value. Multiplying one of them by 1.0 will produce a
floating-point result, as will using float():
r.mapcalc "ndvi=float(lsat.4 - lsat.3) / (lsat.4 + lsat.3)"
NULL support¶
- Division by zero should result in NULL.
- Modulus by zero should result in NULL.
-
NULL-values in any arithmetic or logical operation should result in NULL.
(however, &&& and ||| are treated specially, as described
below).
- The &&& and ||| operators observe the following axioms
even when x is NULL:
x &&& false == false
false &&& x == false
x ||| true == true
true ||| x == true
-
NULL-values in function arguments should result in NULL (however, if(),
eval() and isnull() are treated specially, as described below).
- The eval() function always returns its last argument
- The situation for if() is:
if(x)
NULL if x is NULL; 0 if x is zero; 1 otherwise
if(x,a)
NULL if x is NULL; a if x is non-zero; 0 otherwise
if(x,a,b)
NULL if x is NULL; a if x is non-zero; b otherwise
if(x,n,z,p)
NULL if x is NULL; n if x is negative;
z if x is zero; p if x is positive
-
The (new) function isnull(x) returns: 1 if x is NULL; 0 otherwise. The
(new) function null() (which has no arguments) returns an integer
NULL.
- Non-NULL, but invalid, arguments to functions should result in NULL.
Examples:
log(-2)
sqrt(-2)
pow(a,b) where a is negative and b is not an integer
NULL support: Please note that any math performed with NULL cells always results
in a NULL value for these cells. If you want to replace a NULL cell
on-the-fly, use the isnull() test function in a if-statement.
Example: The users wants the NULL-valued cells to be treated like zeros. To add
maps A and B (where B contains NULLs) to get a map C the user can use a
construction like:
C=A + if(isnull(B),0,B)
NULL and conditions:
For the one argument form:
if(x) = NULL if x is NULL
if(x) = 0 if x = 0
if(x) = 1 otherwise (i.e. x is neither NULL nor 0).
For the two argument form:
if(x,a) = NULL if x is NULL
if(x,a) = 0 if x = 0
if(x,a) = a otherwise (i.e. x is neither NULL nor 0).
For the three argument form:
if(x,a,b) = NULL if x is NULL
if(x,a,b) = b if x = 0
if(x,a,b) = a otherwise (i.e. x is neither NULL nor 0).
For the four argument form:
if(x,a,b,c) = NULL if x is NULL
if(x,a,b,c) = a if x > 0
if(x,a,b,c) = b if x = 0
if(x,a,b,c) = c if x < 0
More generally, all operators and most functions return NULL if *any* of their
arguments are NULL.
The functions if(), isnull() and eval() are exceptions.
The function isnull() returns 1 if its argument is NULL and 0 otherwise. If the
user wants the opposite, the ! operator, e.g. "!isnull(x)" must be
used.
All forms of if() return NULL if the first argument is NULL. The 2, 3 and 4
argument forms of if() return NULL if the "selected" argument is
NULL, e.g.:
if(0,a,b) = b regardless of whether a is NULL
if(1,a,b) = a regardless of whether b is NULL
eval() always returns its last argument, so it only returns NULL if the last
argument is NULL.
Note: The user cannot test for NULL using the == operator, as that
returns NULL if either or both arguments are NULL, i.e. if x and y are both
NULL, then "x == y" and "x != y" are both NULL rather than
1 and 0 respectively.
The behaviour makes sense if the user considers NULL as representing an unknown
quantity. E.g. if x and y are both unknown, then the values of "x ==
y" and "x != y" are also unknown; if they both have unknown
values, the user doesn't know whether or not they both have the same value.
NOTES¶
Extra care must be taken if the expression is given on the command line. Some
characters have special meaning to the UNIX shell. These include, among
others:
* ( ) > & |
It is advisable to put single quotes around the expression; e.g.:
result = 'elevation * 2'
Without the quotes, the *, which has special meaning to the UNIX shell, would be
altered and
r.mapcalc would see something other than the *.
In general, it's preferable to do as much as possible in each r.mapcalc command.
E.g. rather than:
r.mapcalc "$GIS_OPT_OUTPUT.r = r#$GIS_OPT_FIRST * .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT + (1.0
- .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT) * r#$GIS_OPT_SECOND"
r.mapcalc "$GIS_OPT_OUTPUT.g = g#$GIS_OPT_FIRST * .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT + (1.0
- .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT) * g#$GIS_OPT_SECOND"
r.mapcalc "$GIS_OPT_OUTPUT.b = b#$GIS_OPT_FIRST * .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT + (1.0
- .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT) * b#$GIS_OPT_SECOND"
use:
r.mapcalc <<EOF
$GIS_OPT_OUTPUT.r = r#$GIS_OPT_FIRST * .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT + (1.0 -
.$GIS_OPT_PERCENT) * r#$GIS_OPT_SECOND
$GIS_OPT_OUTPUT.g = g#$GIS_OPT_FIRST * .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT + (1.0 -
.$GIS_OPT_PERCENT) * g#$GIS_OPT_SECOND
$GIS_OPT_OUTPUT.b = b#$GIS_OPT_FIRST * .$GIS_OPT_PERCENT + (1.0 -
.$GIS_OPT_PERCENT) * b#$GIS_OPT_SECOND
EOF
as the latter will read each input map only once. If the input comes directly
from the keyboard and the
result raster map layer exists, the user will
be asked if it can be overwritten. Otherwise, the
result raster map
layer will automatically be overwritten if it exists.
Quoting
result is not allowed. However, it is never necessary to quote
result since it is always taken to be a raster map layer name.
For formulas that the user enters from standard input (rather than from the
command line), a line continuation feature now exists. If the user adds a
backslash to the end of an input line,
r.mapcalc assumes that the
formula being entered by the user continues on to the next input line. There
is no limit to the possible number of input lines or to the length of a
formula.
If the
r.mapcalc formula entered by the user is very long, the map title
will contain only some of it, but most (if not all) of the formula will be
placed into the history file for the
result map.
When the user enters input to
r.mapcalc non-interactively on the command
line, the program will not warn the user not to overwrite existing map layers.
Users should therefore take care to assign program outputs raster map names
that do not yet exist in their current mapsets.
The environment variable GRASS_RND_SEED is read to initialise the random number
generator.
EXAMPLES¶
To compute the average of two raster map layers
a and
b:
ave = (a + b)/2
To form a weighted average:
ave = (5*a + 3*b)/8.0
To produce a binary representation of the raster map layer
a so that
category 0 remains 0 and all other categories become 1:
mask = a != 0
This could also be accomplished by:
mask = if(a)
To mask raster map layer
b by raster map layer
a:
result = if(a,b)
To change all values below 5 to NULL:
newmap = if(map<5, null(), 5)
The graph() function allows users to specify a x-y conversion using pairs of x,y
coordinates. In some situations a transformation from one value to another is
not easily established mathematically, but can be represented by a 2-D graph
and then linearly interpolated. The graph() function provides the opportunity
to accomplish this. An x-axis value is provided to the graph function along
with the associated graph represented by a series of x,y pairs. The x values
must be monotonically increasing (each larger than or equal to the previous).
The graph function linearly interpolates between pairs. Any x value lower the
lowest x value (i.e. first) will have the associated y value returned. Any x
value higher than the last will similarly have the associated y value
returned. Consider the request:
newmap = graph(map, 1,10, 2,25, 3,50)
X (map) values supplied and y (newmap) values returned:
0, 10
1, 10
1.5, 17.5
2.9, 47.5
4, 50
100, 50
BUGS¶
Continuation lines must end with a \ and have NO trailing white space (blanks or
tabs). If the user does leave white space at the end of continuation lines,
the error messages produced by
r.mapcalc will be meaningless and the
equation will not work as the user intended. This is important for the eval()
function.
Error messages produced by
r.mapcalc are almost useless. In future,
r.mapcalc should make some attempt to point the user to the offending
section of the equation, e.g.:
x = a * b ++ c
ERROR: somewhere in line 1: ... b ++ c ...
Currently, there is no comment mechanism in
r.mapcalc. Perhaps adding a
capability that would cause the entire line to be ignored when the user
inserted a # at the start of a line as if it were not present, would do the
trick.
The function should require the user to type "end" or "exit"
instead of simply a blank line. This would make separation of multiple scripts
separable by white space.
r.mapcalc does not print a warning in case of operations on NULL cells. It is
left to the user to utilize the isnull() function.
SEE ALSO¶
r.mapcalc: An Algebra for GIS and Image Processing, by Michael
Shapiro and Jim Westervelt, U.S. Army Construction Engineering Research
Laboratory (March/1991).
Performing Map Calculations on GRASS Data: r.mapcalc Program
Tutorial, by Marji Larson, Michael Shapiro and Scott Tweddale, U.S. Army
Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (December 1991)
Grey scale conversion is based on the C.I.E. x,y,z system where y represents
luminance. See "Fundamentals of Digital Image Processing," by Anil
K. Jain (Prentice Hall, NJ, 1989; p 67).
g.region, r.bitpattern, r.blend, r.colors,
r.fillnulls
AUTHORS¶
Michael Shapiro, U.S.Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory
Glynn Clements
Last changed: $Date: 2013-09-14 05:15:47 +0200 (Sat, 14 Sep 2013) $
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