Options and parameters

PDFgetX3 and PDFgetN3 are very flexible in allowing users to customize the actions of the program. They have a number of parameters that can be specified either in configuration file or as command line options. Here is a complete description of the parameters and options used by either program.

Note

The command line options start with a leading “-” and can be only used as command line arguments when starting the pdfgetx3 program. Within configuration file the parameter names are plain words without any leading dashes. Finally, parameters can be also set in the interactive mode as attributes of the config object, but the assignments must be valid Python statements. Here are examples of setting composition of a processed specimen using each of these forms:

  1. assigned in configuration file:

    ...
    composition = CaTiO3
    ...
    
  2. set as a command-line option when starting pdfgetx3 or pdfgetn3:

    pdfgetx3 --composition=CaTiO3
    
  3. set in the IPython interactive mode:

    pdfgetx3 -i
    ...
    In [1]: config.composition = "CaTiO3"
    

Program operation

-h, --help

Display a brief usage information with a list of command line options and exit.

-V, --version

Display the program version and exit.

--manual

Open this manual in a Web browser and exit.

-f, --find

Select input files that match all patterns. The command line arguments are by default taken as input files. However, with the --find option they are processed as file patterns and the matching files are then used as inputs. The input files are by default searched in the current directory unless there is a path entry (e.g., data/) that selects a different search path. The search patterns are interpreted as fixed strings, all of which must be present in the file name. A single argument + starts a new group of patterns to match more files that are not covered by one set of patterns. Additional pattern groups reuse the current search path unless they provide their own path value. Pattern groups containing only a path entry reuse file patterns from the last group. When pattern groups overlap the repeated matches are ignored to make the resulting list of files unique. Files starting with . are ignored unless there is ^. pattern that explicitly matches them. The search syntax provides the following special patterns:

^ match at the beginning of the string, i.e., ^start matches only filenames that start with “start”.
$ match at the end of string, for example, .chi$ selects file names ending with “.chi”. A $ on its own matches every string and can be used to select all files.
<N> match number N preceded by any number of leading zeros, e.g., <7> would match in “f7.chi”, “f007.chi”, but not in “f77.chi”.
<N-M> match an integer range from N to M inclusive. The matched number may have one or more leading zeros.
<7-> match number 7 or larger.
<-7> match number 7 or smaller.
<-> match any integer number.
+ start a new pattern group, for example, .chi$ + .dat$
/ set search path. An argument containing the / symbol is taken as the search path, for example, data/ or ./. Each pattern group may provide its own search path effective for that and any subsequent pattern group.

The ^$<> characters are often special to Unix or Windows command shells, therefore they need to be enclosed in double quotes (") when used on command line.

See also

tutorial on matching input files

-l, --list

List all input files and exit. This is useful with the --find option to verify if input files are matched as intended.

Configuration file options

-c CONFIG, --config=CONFIG

Read custom configuration file after loading the default ones. Do not load any configuration file when “NONE”.

-s NAME, --section=NAME

Load the custom configuration file section [SectionName] after loading the [DEFAULT] section. This is useful for creating several configuration variants in a single configuration file.

--createconfig=FILE

Write template configuration to a new FILE and exit. Write to the standard output when FILE is “-“.

See also the configuration file section for further details.

Input and output options

inputfile

This parameter allows to specify one or more input files in the configuration file, one file per line. The inputfile is only used if no input files were provided on the pdfgetx3 or pdfgetn3 command line.

dataformat
--format=FORMAT

Format of input files. Available formats are: twotheta, QA, Qnm corresponding to a two-column text data where the first column is either the scattering angle 2Θ in degrees, Q in inverse ångströms or Q in inverse nanometers.

backgroundfile
-b FILE, --background=FILE

Optional datafile with background intensities from an empty sample holder. It must be in the same dataformat as other input files.

datapath
-d DATAPATH, --datapath=DATAPATH

One or more extra directories to be searched for input or background data files. The -d option can be specified several times to add more directories, these are prepended in front of any default value. Within configuration file the datapath directories have to be listed each on a separate line.

A special value “NONE” (or “none”) clears any previously defined paths and only the further paths, if any, would be searched for inputs.

output
-o OUTPUT, --output=OUTPUT

Output file name, write to the standard output when “-“. The -t, --outputtypes option controls what results are being saved. Normally the OUTPUT is used as a custom basename for the output files. The OUTPUT may contain @f, @h, @r, @e, @t, @b, @o tokens, which are expanded as follows:

token example definition
@h dir1/dir2 the input file directory or “.”
@r dir1/dir2/filename the input path with extension removed
@e dat the input file extension without “.”
@t filename.dat the tail component of the input file
@b filename the tail component with extension removed
@o gr the output extension iq, sq, fq or gr

An empty value works the same as “@b.@o” and saves the data in the current directory with a proper extension for the saved results. When “@o” is not present in the OUTPUT, it is appended as a default filename extension.

outputtypes
-t TYPES, --outputtypes=TYPES

Result types to be saved, one or more comma separated values. Supported values are “iq”, “sq”, “fq”, “gr”, corresponding to the I(Q), S(Q), F(Q) and G(r) curves; these are also used as output file extensions.

Result files are not written when empty, “none” or “NONE”.

force
--force=FORCE

Overwrite existing output files. By default the output files are not written if they already exist. Possible values in a configuration file are “true”, “yes”, “on”, “1” or “false”, “no”, “off”, “0” or “once”. The special value “once” permits one overwrite and then resets config.force to False. Note that in interactive mode the values assigned to config.force are converted to Python bool unless equal to “once”.

PDF parameters

mode
--mode=STRING

The PDF conversion mode, i.e., the name of the pdfgetter() setup. The available modes correspond to the radiation type used in powder diffraction experiment and can be “xray” or “neutron”.

wavelength
-w FLOAT, --wavelength=FLOAT

X-ray wavelength in ångströms. This value is required for the “twotheta” dataformat in order to convert the scattering angles 2Θ to a momentum transfer Q. For other data formats the wavelength is not necessary and may be left undefined.

twothetazero
--twothetazero=FLOAT

Position of the zero scattering angle in diffractometer degrees. This parameter corrects for a constant offset in the measured 2Θ values. When loading configuration file it is assumed 0 unless specified otherwise. This parameter is only effective for the “twotheta” dataformat.

composition
--composition=STRING

Chemical composition of the sample. Supported formats are “PbTi0.5Zr0.5O3”, “Pb 1 Ti 1/2 Zr 1/2 O 3” or “CH3 (CH2)3 OH”. Space characters are ignored, unit counts can be omitted, but it is important to use a proper upper and lower case in atom symbols. Elements can appear several times in the formula, e.g., “CH3 CH3”, and the formula may contain parentheses or fractional stoichiometries.

bgscale
--bgscale=FLOAT

Scaling of the background intensities loaded from the backgroundfile, by default 1.

rpoly
--rpoly=FLOAT

r-limit for the maximum frequency in the F(Q) correction polynomial. The PDF is unreliable at shorter r, however a very small rpoly would disable polynomial correction and give noisy PDF. Larger values produce closer fits with a higher degree polynomial, but when too large, they might smooth-out a useful signal in the data. The default is 0.9.

qmaxinst
--qmaxinst

The Q cutoff for the meaningful input intensities in inverse ångströms. Some data files may contain trailing zeros or unreliable intensities at the upper bound of the detector range. The qmaxinst defines a threshold for unreliable data. The parameter is also used as an upper boundary for the polynomial fit correction of the S(Q) data.

qmin
--qmin

The lower Q-limit for the Fourier transformation of the F(Q) curve in inverse ångströms.

qmax
--qmax

The upper Q-limit for the Fourier transformation of the F(Q) curve in inverse ångströms. This is essentially a limit, where sample signal decays to the level of data noise.

rmin
--rmin=FLOAT

Lower bound of the r-grid for the calculated PDF in ångströms.

rmax
--rmax=FLOAT

Upper bound of the r-grid for the calculated PDF in ångströms.

rstep
--rstep=FLOAT

Spacing of the r-grid for the calculated PDF in ångströms.

Other parameters

plot
-p TYPES, --plot=TYPES

Plot the specified results. A comma separated list with one or more items from “iq”, “sq”, “fq”, “gr”. No plot is produced when empty, “none” or “NONE”. Setting this option turns on the interactive mode.

interact
-i, --interact

Start an IPython interactive session after processing all files. Useful for tuning the configuration parameters or interactive plotting. This is always on when plot option has been set. See also Interactive mode for further details.

verbose
--verbose=VALUE

Level of detail for the program to report about its actions. Possible values are “error”, “warning”, “info”, “debug”, “all” or an integer number from 0 to 5. Messages are completely suppressed when 0, all messages are printed when verbose is 5 (“all”) or higher. This option is useful for diagnostics of any unexpected behavior in the program.