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SPLITXYZ(1)		     Generic Mapping Tools		   SPLITXYZ(1)

NAME
       splitxyz	 -  filter  to	divide	(x,y,z[,distance,heading])  data  into
       (x,y,z) track segments.

SYNOPSIS
       splitxyz [ xyz[dh]file ]	 -Ccourse_change  [  -Aazimuth/tolerance  ]  [
       -Dminimum_distance  ]  [	 -Fxy_filter/z_filter  ]  [ -Ggap_distance ] [
       -H[i][nrec] ] [ -M ] [ -Nnamestem ] [ -Qflags ] [ -S ] [ -V ] [ -Z ]  [
       -:[i|o] ] [ -b[i|o][s|S|d|D[ncol]|c[var1/...]] ] [ -f[i|o]colinfo ]

DESCRIPTION
       splitxyz	  reads	  a   series   of  (x,y[,z])  records  [or  optionally
       (x,y,z,d,h); see -S option] from standard input	[or  xyz[dh]file]  and
       splits  this  into  separate  lists of (x,y[,z]) series, such that each
       series has a nearly constant azimuth through the x,y plane.  There  are
       options	to  choose only those series which have a certain orientation,
       to set a minimum length for series, and to high- or low-pass filter the
       z  values  and/or  the x,y values.  splitxyz is a useful filter between
       data extraction and pswiggle plotting, and can also be used to divide a
       large  x,y,z  dataset into segments.  The output is always in the ASCII
       format; input may be ASCII or binary (see -b).

       xyz[dh]file(s)
	      3 (but see -Z) [or 5] column ASCII  file	[or  binary,  see  -b]
	      holding  (x,y,z[,d,h])  data  values.  To use (x,y,z,d,h) input,
	      sorted so that d	is  non-decreasing,  specify  the  -S  option;
	      default expects (x,y,z) only.  If no file is specified, splitxyz
	      will read from standard input.

       -C     Terminate a segment when a course change exceeding course_change
	      degrees of heading is detected.

OPTIONS
       -A     Write  out  only	those  segments which are within +/- tolerance
	      degrees of azimuth in heading, measured clockwise from North, [0
	      -	 360].	[Default writes all acceptable segments, regardless of
	      orientation].

       -D     Do not write a segment out unless it is  at  least  minimum_dis‐
	      tance units long [0]

       -F     Filter  the  z  values and/or the x,y values, assuming these are
	      functions of d coordinate.  xy_filter and	 z_filter  are	filter
	      widths  in  distance units.  If a filter width is zero, the fil‐
	      tering is not performed.	The absolute value of the width is the
	      full  width  of  a cosine-arch low-pass filter.  If the width is
	      positive, the data are low-pass filtered; if negative, the  data
	      are  high-pass  filtered	by subtracting the low-pass value from
	      the observed value.  If z_filter is non-zero, the entire	series
	      of  input	 z  values is filtered before any segmentation is per‐
	      formed, so that the only edge effects in the filtering will hap‐
	      pen  at  the  beginning and end of the complete data stream.  If
	      xy_filter is non-zero, the data is first divided	into  segments
	      and then the x,y values of each segment are filtered separately.
	      This may introduce edge effects at the ends of each segment, but
	      prevents	a low-pass x,y filter from rounding off the corners of
	      track segments.  [Default = no filtering].

       -G     Do not  let  a  segment	have  a	 gap  exceeding	 gap_distance;
	      instead, split it into two segments.  [Default ignores gaps].

       -H     Input file(s) has header record(s).  If used, the default number
	      of header records is N_HEADER_RECS.  Use -Hi if only input  data
	      should  have  header  records  [Default  will  write  out header
	      records if the input data have  them].  Blank  lines  and	 lines
	      starting with # are always skipped.  Not used with binary data.

       -M     Use  Map units.  Then x,y are in degrees of longitude, latitude,
	      distances are in kilometers, and angles are azimuths.  [Default:
	      distances	 are  cartesian	 in  same  units as x,y and angles are
	      counter-clockwise from horizontal].

       -N     Create Named output files, writing each segment  to  a  separate
	      file  in	the working directory named namestem.profile#, where #
	      increases consecutively from 1.  [Default writes	entire	output
	      to stdout, separating segments by sub-headings that start with >
	      marks].

       -Q     Specify your desired output using any combination of  xyzdh,  in
	      any  order.   Do not space between the letters.  Use lower case.
	      The output will be ASCII (or binary, see -bo) columns of	values
	      corresponding  to	 xyzdh	[Default  is  -Qxyzdh (-Qxydh if -Z is
	      set)].

       -S     d and h is supplied.  In this case,  input  contains  x,y,z,d,h.
	      [Default	expects (x,y,z) input, and d,h are computed from delta
	      x, delta y, according to -M option]

       -V     Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to stderr
	      [Default runs "silently"].

       -Z     Data have x,y only (no z-column).

       -:     Toggles  between	(longitude,latitude)  and (latitude,longitude)
	      input and/or output.  [Default is (longitude,latitude)].	Append
	      i	 to  select  input  only or o to select output only.  [Default
	      affects both].

       -bi    Selects binary input.  Append s for single precision [Default is
	      d	 (double)].   Uppercase	 S  or	D  will	 force	byte-swapping.
	      Optionally, append ncol, the number of columns  in  your	binary
	      input  file if it exceeds the columns needed by the program.  Or
	      append c	if  the	 input	file  is  netCDF.  Optionally,	append
	      var1/var2/...  to specify the variables to be read.  [Default is
	      2, 3, or 5 input columns as set by -S, -Z].

       -bo    Selects binary output.  Append s for single  precision  [Default
	      is  d  (double)].	  Uppercase  S	or D will force byte-swapping.
	      Optionally, append ncol, the number of desired columns  in  your
	      binary  output  file.   [Default is 1-5 output columns as set by
	      -Q].

       -f     Special formatting of input and/or output columns (time or  geo‐
	      graphical	 data).	  Specify  i  or  o to make this apply only to
	      input or output [Default applies to both].   Give	 one  or  more
	      columns (or column ranges) separated by commas.  Append T (abso‐
	      lute calendar time), t (relative time in chosen TIME_UNIT	 since
	      TIME_EPOCH),  x (longitude), y (latitude), or f (floating point)
	      to each column or column range item.  Shorthand  -f[i|o]g	 means
	      -f[i|o]0x,1y (geographic coordinates).

ASCII FORMAT PRECISION
       The ASCII output formats of numerical data are controlled by parameters
       in your .gmtdefaults4  file.   Longitude	 and  latitude	are  formatted
       according  to  OUTPUT_DEGREE_FORMAT, whereas other values are formatted
       according to D_FORMAT.  Be aware that the format in effect can lead  to
       loss  of	 precision  in	the output, which can lead to various problems
       downstream.  If you find the output is not written with	enough	preci‐
       sion, consider switching to binary output (-bo if available) or specify
       more decimals using the D_FORMAT setting.

EXAMPLES
       Suppose you want to make a wiggle plot of magnetic  anomalies  on  seg‐
       ments  oriented	approximately  east-west from a cruise called cag71 in
       the region -R300/315/12/20.  You want to use a 100km low-pass filter to
       smooth  the tracks and a 500km high-pass filter to detrend the magnetic
       anomalies.  Try this:

       gmtlist cag71 -R 300/315/12/20 -F xyzdh | splitxyz -A 90/15 -F 100/-500
       -M  -D 100 -S -V | pswiggle -R 300/315/12/20 -Jm 0.6 -Ba 5f1:.cag71: -T
       1 -W 0.75p -G gray -Z 200 > cag71_wiggles.ps

       MGD-77 users: For this application we recommend that you extract	 d,  h
       from mgd77list rather than have splitxyz compute them separately.

       Suppose	you have been given a binary, double-precision file containing
       lat, lon, gravity values from a survey, and you want to split  it  into
       profiles named survey.profile# (when gap exceeds 100 km).  Try this:

       splitxyz survey.bin -N survey -V -G 100 -D 100 -: -M -bi3

SEE ALSO
       GMT(1), mgd77list(1), pswiggle(1)

GMT 4.5.14			  1 Nov 2015			   SPLITXYZ(1)
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