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GRD2CPT(1)		     Generic Mapping Tools		    GRD2CPT(1)

NAME
       grd2cpt - Make a color palette table from grid files

SYNOPSIS
       grd2cpt	grdfiles  [ -Ccptmaster ] [ -D ] [ -Enlevels ] [ -I ] [ -Lmin‐
       limit/maxlimit ] [ -M ] [ -N ] [ -Q[i|o] ] [ -Rwest/east/south/north[r]
       ] [ -Szstart/zstop/zinc ] [ -T-|+|_|= ] [ -V ] [ -Z ]

DESCRIPTION
       grd2cpt	reads  one or more grid files and writes a color palette (cpt)
       file to standard output.	 The cpt file is based on an  existing	master
       cpt  file  of your choice, and the mapping from data value to colors is
       through the data's cumulative distribution function (CDF), so that  the
       colors  are histogram equalized.	 Thus if the grid(s) and the resulting
       cpt file are used in grdimage with a linear projection, the colors will
       be uniformly distributed in area on the plot.  Let z be the data values
       in the grid.  Define CDF(Z) = (# of z < Z) / (# of z in	grid).	 (NaNs
       are  ignored).	These  z-values	 are then normalized to the master cpt
       file and colors are sampled at the desired intervals.
       The color palette includes three additional colors beyond the range  of
       z-values.  These	 are the background color (B) assigned to values lower
       than the lowest z-value, the foreground color (F)  assigned  to	values
       higher  than  the  highest  z-value,  and  the  NaN  color  (N) painted
       whereever values are undefined.
       If the master cpt file includes B, F, and  N  entries,  these  will  be
       copied  into  the  new master file.  If not, the parameters COLOR_BACK‐
       GROUND, COLOR_FOREGROUND, and COLOR_NAN from the .gmtdefaults4 file  or
       the  command  line will be used. This default behavior can be overruled
       using the options -D, -M or -N.
       The color model (RGB, HSV or CMYK) of the palette  created  by  makecpt
       will  be	 the  same  as specified in the header of the master cpt file.
       When there is  no  COLOR_MODEL  entry  in  the  master  cpt  file,  the
       COLOR_MODEL  specified in the .gmtdefaults4 file or on the command line
       will be used.

       grdfiles
	      Names of one or more 2-D binary grid files used  to  derive  the
	      color  palette  table.  All grids need to have the same size and
	      dimensions.  (See GRID FILE FORMATS below).

OPTIONS
       -C     Selects the master color table  to  use  in  the	interpolation.
	      Choose  among the built-in tables (type grd2cpt to see the list)
	      or give the name of an existing cpt file [Default gives a	 rain‐
	      bow cpt file].

       -D     Select  the colors for lowest and highest z-values in the output
	      cpt file as the back- and foreground colors that will be written
	      to the cpt file [Default uses the colors specified in the master
	      file, or	those  defined	by  the	 parameters  COLOR_BACKGROUND,
	      COLOR_FOREGROUND, and COLOR_NAN].

       -E     Create  a	 linear	 color table by dividing the grid z-range into
	      nlevels equidistant slices.

       -I     Reverses the sense of color progression in the master cpt	 file.
	      Also  exchanges  the foreground and background colors, including
	      those  specified	by   the   parameters	COLOR_BACKGROUND   and
	      COLOR_FOREGROUND.

       -L     Limit  range  of	cpt file to minlimit/maxlimit, and don't count
	      data outside range when estimating CDF(Z).   [Default  uses  min
	      and max of data.]

       -M     Overrule background, foreground, and NaN colors specified in the
	      master cpt file with the values of  the  parameters  COLOR_BACK‐
	      GROUND, COLOR_FOREGROUND, and COLOR_NAN specified in the .gmtde‐
	      faults4 file or on the command line.   When  combined  with  -D,
	      only COLOR_NAN is considered.

       -N     Do  not  write  out  the	background,  foreground, and NaN-color
	      fields [Default will write them].

       -Q     Selects a logarithmic interpolation scheme [Default is  linear].
	      -Qi  expects  input z-values to be log10(z), assigns colors, and
	      writes out z [Default].  -Qo takes log10(z) first, assigns  col‐
	      ors, and writes out z.

       -R     xmin,  xmax, ymin, and ymax specify the Region of interest.  For
	      geographic regions,  these  limits  correspond  to  west,	 east,
	      south,  and north and you may specify them in decimal degrees or
	      in [+-]dd:mm[:ss.xxx][W|E|S|N] format.  Append r if  lower  left
	      and  upper  right	 map coordinates are given instead of w/e/s/n.
	      The two shorthands -Rg and -Rd stand for	global	domain	(0/360
	      and  -180/+180  in longitude respectively, with -90/+90 in lati‐
	      tude).  Alternatively, specify the name of an existing grid file
	      and the -R settings (and grid spacing, if applicable) are copied
	      from the grid.  For calendar time	 coordinates  you  may	either
	      give  (a) relative time (relative to the selected TIME_EPOCH and
	      in the selected TIME_UNIT; append t to -JX|x), or	 (b)  absolute
	      time  of	the form [date]T[clock] (append T to -JX|x).  At least
	      one of date and clock must be present; the T is always required.
	      The date string must be of the form [-]yyyy[-mm[-dd]] (Gregorian
	      calendar) or yyyy[-Www[-d]] (ISO week calendar), while the clock
	      string  must  be	of the form hh:mm:ss[.xxx].  The use of delim‐
	      iters and their type and positions must be exactly as  indicated
	      (however,	 input,	 output and plot formats are customizable; see
	      gmtdefaults).

       -S     Set steps in cpt file.   Calculate  entries  in  cpt  file  from
	      zstart  to zstop in steps of (zinc).  [Default chooses arbitrary
	      values by a crazy scheme.]

       -T     Force the color table to be symmetric about  zero	 (from	-R  to
	      +R).  Append flag to set the range R: - for R =|zmin|, + for R =
	      |zmax|, _ for R = min(|zmin|, |zmax|), or = for R =  max(|zmin|,
	      |zmax|).

       -V     Verbose  operation.  This will write CDF(Z) estimates to stderr.
	      [Default is silent.]

       -Z     Will create a continuous color palette.  [Default is discontinu‐
	      ous, i.e., constant color intervals]

GRID FILE FORMATS
       GMT  is	able to recognize many of the commonly used grid file formats,
       as well as the precision, scale and offset of the values	 contained  in
       the  grid file. When GMT needs a little help with that, you can add the
       suffix =id[/scale/offset[/nan]], where id is a two-letter identifier of
       the  grid  type	and precision, and scale and offset are optional scale
       factor and offset to be applied to all grid  values,  and  nan  is  the
       value  used  to	indicate missing data.	See grdreformat(1) and Section
       4.17 of the GMT Technical Reference and Cookbook for more information.

       When reading a netCDF file that contains multiple grids, GMT will read,
       by default, the first 2-dimensional grid that can find in that file. To
       coax GMT into reading another multi-dimensional variable	 in  the  grid
       file,  append  ?varname	to the file name, where varname is the name of
       the variable. Note that you may need to escape the special meaning of ?
       in  your	 shell	program	 by  putting a backslash in front of it, or by
       placing the filename and suffix between quotes or double	 quotes.   See
       grdreformat(1)  and  Section  4.18  of  the GMT Technical Reference and
       Cookbook for more information, particularly on how to read  splices  of
       3-, 4-, or 5-dimensional grids.

EXAMPLES
       Sometimes  you  don't  want  to make a cpt file (yet) but would find it
       helpful to know that 90% of your data lie between z1 and z2,  something
       you  cannot  learn from grdinfo.	 So you can do this to see some points
       on the CDF(Z) curve (use -V option to see more):

       grd2cpt mydata.grd -V > /dev/null

       To make a cpt file with entries from 0 to  200  in  steps  of  20,  and
       ignore data below zero in computing CDF(Z), and use the built-in master
       cpt file relief, run

       grd2cpt mydata.grd -Crelief -L0/10000 -S0/200/20 > mydata.cpt

SEE ALSO
       gmtdefaults(1), GMT(1), grdhisteq(1), grdinfo(1), makecpt(1)

GMT 4.5.14			  1 Nov 2015			    GRD2CPT(1)
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