parsing_example.py
¶
Basic quadrant, strike/dip, and rake parsing.
mplstereonet expects measurements to follow the âright-hand-ruleâ (RHR) to indicate dip direction.
If you have a set of measurements that donât necessarily follow the RHR, there are a number of parsing and standardization functions in mplstereonet to correct for this.
import mplstereonet print('Parse quadrant azimuth measurements') for original in ['N30E', 'E30N', 'W10S', 'N 10 W']: azi = mplstereonet.parse_quadrant_measurement(original) print('"{}" --> {:.1f}'.format(original, azi)) print('\nParse quadrant strike/dip measurements.') print('Note that the output follows the right-hand-rule.') def parse_sd(original, seperator): strike, dip = mplstereonet.parse_strike_dip(*original.split(seperator)) print('"{}" --> Strike: {:.1f}, Dip: {:.1f}'.format(original, strike, dip)) parse_sd('215/10', '/') parse_sd('215/10E', '/') parse_sd('215/10NW', '/') parse_sd('N30E/45NW', '/') parse_sd('E10N\t20 N', '\t') parse_sd('W30N/46.7 S', '/') print("\nSimilarly, you can parse rake measurements that don't follow the RHR.") def split_rake(original, sep1=None, sep2=None): components = original.split(sep1) if len(components) == 3: return components strike, rest = components dip, rake = rest.split(sep2) return strike, dip, rake def display_rake(original, sep1, sep2=None): components = split_rake(original, sep1, sep2) strike, dip, rake = mplstereonet.parse_rake(*components) template = '"{}" --> Strike: {:.1f}, Dip: {:.1f}, Rake: {:.1f}' print(template.format(original, strike, dip, rake)) original = 'N30E/45NW 10NE' display_rake(original, '/') original = '210 45\t30N' display_rake(original, None) original = 'N30E/45NW raking 10SW' display_rake(original, '/', 'raking')Result¶
Parse quadrant azimuth measurements "N30E" --> 30.0 "E30N" --> 60.0 "W10S" --> 260.0 "N 10 W" --> 350.0 Parse quadrant strike/dip measurements. Note that the output follows the right-hand-rule. "215/10" --> Strike: 215.0, Dip: 10.0 "215/10E" --> Strike: 35.0, Dip: 10.0 "215/10NW" --> Strike: 215.0, Dip: 10.0 "N30E/45NW" --> Strike: 210.0, Dip: 45.0 "E10N 20 N" --> Strike: 260.0, Dip: 20.0 "W30N/46.7 S" --> Strike: 120.0, Dip: 46.7 Similarly, you can parse rake measurements that don't follow the RHR. "N30E/45NW 10NE" --> Strike: 210.0, Dip: 45.0, Rake: 170.0 "210 45 30N" --> Strike: 210.0, Dip: 45.0, Rake: 150.0 "N30E/45NW raking 10SW" --> Strike: 210.0, Dip: 45.0, Rake: 10.0
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