.. include:: references.txt .. _astropy.io.ascii_read: Reading tables -------------- The majority of commonly encountered ASCII tables can be easily read with the |read| function:: >>> from astropy.io import ascii >>> data = ascii.read(table) # doctest: +SKIP where ``table`` is the name of a file, a string representation of a table, or a list of table lines. By default |read| will try to `guess the table format <#guess-table-format>`_ by trying all the supported formats. If this does not work (for unusually formatted tables) then one needs give `astropy.io.ascii` additional hints about the format, for example:: >>> data = astropy.io.ascii.read('t/nls1_stackinfo.dbout', data_start=2, delimiter='|') # doctest: +SKIP >>> data = astropy.io.ascii.read('t/simple.txt', quotechar="'") # doctest: +SKIP >>> data = astropy.io.ascii.read('t/simple4.txt', format='no_header', delimiter='|') # doctest: +SKIP The |read| function accepts a number of parameters that specify the detailed table format. Different formats can define different defaults, so the descriptions below sometimes mention "typical" default values. This refers to the :class:`~astropy.io.ascii.Basic` format reader and other similar character-separated formats. .. _io_ascii_read_parameters: Parameters for ``read()`` ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ **table** : input table There are four ways to specify the table to be read: - Name of a file (string) - Single string containing all table lines separated by newlines - File-like object with a callable read() method - List of strings where each list element is a table line The first two options are distinguished by the presence of a newline in the string. This assumes that valid file names will not normally contain a newline. **format** : file format (default='basic') This specifies the top-level format of the ASCII table, for example if it is a basic character delimited table, fixed format table, or a CDS-compatible table, etc. The value of this parameter must be one of the :ref:`supported_formats`. **guess**: try to guess table format (default=True) If set to True then |read| will try to guess the table format by cycling through a number of possible table format permutations and attempting to read the table in each case. See the `Guess table format`_ section for further details. **delimiter** : column delimiter string A one-character string used to separate fields which typically defaults to the space character. Other common values might be "\\s" (whitespace), "," or "|" or "\\t" (tab). A value of "\\s" allows any combination of the tab and space characters to delimit columns. **comment** : regular expression defining a comment line in table If the ``comment`` regular expression matches the beginning of a table line then that line will be discarded from header or data processing. For the ``basic`` format this defaults to "\\s*#" (any whitespace followed by #). **quotechar** : one-character string to quote fields containing special characters This specifies the quote character and will typically be either the single or double quote character. This is can be useful for reading text fields with spaces in a space-delimited table. The default is typically the double quote. **header_start** : line index for the header line not counting comment lines This specifies in the line index where the header line will be found. Comment lines are not included in this count and the counting starts from 0 (first non-comment line has index=0). If set to None this indicates that there is no header line and the column names will be auto-generated. The default is dependent on the format. **data_start**: line index for the start of data not counting comment lines This specifies in the line index where the data lines begin where the counting starts from 0 and does not include comment lines. The default is dependent on the format. **data_end**: line index for the end of data (can be negative to count from end) If this is not None then it allows for excluding lines at the end that are not valid data lines. A negative value means to count from the end, so -1 would exclude the last line, -2 the last two lines, and so on. **converters**: dict of data type converters See the `Converters`_ section for more information. **names**: list of names corresponding to each data column Define the complete list of names for each data column. This will override names found in the header (if it exists). If not supplied then use names from the header or auto-generated names if there is no header. **include_names**: list of names to include in output From the list of column names found from the header or the ``names`` parameter, select for output only columns within this list. If not supplied then include all names. **exclude_names**: list of names to exclude from output Exclude these names from the list of output columns. This is applied *after* the ``include_names`` filtering. If not specified then no columns are excluded. **fill_values**: fill value specifier of lists This can be used to fill missing values in the table or replace strings with special meaning. See the `Bad or missing values`_ section for more information and examples. The default is that any blank table values are treated as missing. **fill_include_names**: list of column names, which are affected by ``fill_values``. If not supplied, then ``fill_values`` can affect all columns. **fill_exclude_names**: list of column names, which are not affected by ``fill_values``. If not supplied, then ``fill_values`` can affect all columns. **Outputter**: Outputter class This converts the raw data tables value into the output object that gets returned by |read|. The default is :class:`~astropy.io.ascii.TableOutputter`, which returns a :class:`~astropy.table.Table` object. **Inputter**: Inputter class This is generally not specified. **data_Splitter**: Splitter class to split data columns **header_Splitter**: Splitter class to split header columns **Reader** : Reader class (*deprecated* in favor of ``format``) This specifies the top-level format of the ASCII table, for example if it is a basic character delimited table, fixed format table, or a CDS-compatible table, etc. The value of this parameter must be a Reader class. For basic usage this means one of the built-in :ref:`extension_reader_classes`. .. _replace_bad_or_missing_values: Bad or missing values ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ASCII data tables can contain bad or missing values. A common case is when a table contains blank entries with no available data, for example:: day,precip,type Mon,1.5,rain Tues,, # <-- Weather station down Wed,1.1,snow By default |read| will interpret blank entries as being bad/missing and output a masked Table with those entries masked out by setting the corresponding mask value set to ``True``. If you have read the above table into a variable ``dat``, you would see the output below, where the ``--`` values indicate missing data:: >>> print dat # doctest: +SKIP day precip type ---- ------ ---- Mon 1.5 rain Tues -- -- Wed 1.1 snow If you want to replace the masked (missing) values with particular values, set the masked column ``fill_value`` attribute and then get the "filled" version of the table. This looks like the following:: >>> dat['precip'].fill_value = -99.9 # doctest: +SKIP >>> dat['type'].fill_value = '' # doctest: +SKIP >>> print dat.filled() # doctest: +SKIP day precip type ---- ------ ---- Mon 1.5 rain Tues -99.9 Wed 1.1 snow ASCII tables may also have other indicators of bad or missing data. For example a table may contain string values that are not a valid representation of a number, e.g. ``"..."``, or a table may have special values like ``-999`` that are chosen to indicate missing data. The |read| function has a flexible system to accommodate these cases by replacing string values in the input data before they are converted. This is done with the ``fill_values`` argument which replaces ```` with ```` before the type conversion is done. The exact value of ```` does not matter, because all fields in the table with replacements will be masked anyway in the end, but for integer columns ```` must be chosen in such a way that it can be converted to an integer, for float columns to a float etc. The default for most ascii formats is to replace missing values with ``"0"`` which can be converted to any numerical type or string. Any fill value you specify will overwrite this default. If you, e.g. want to replace missing values with ``"0"`` *and* replace ``"--"`` with -99, you need to specify ``fill_values=[("","0"), ("--", "-99")]``. If you do not want to apply any fill_values (not even the default of the format), set ``fill_values=[]``. The exact defintion for the fill values is:: fill_values = | [, , ...] = (, , , , ...) Within the ```` tuple the ```` and ```` values must be strings. These two values are then followed by zero or more column names. If column names are included the replacement is limited to those columns listed. For any replacement, ```` has to be an exact match as can be seen in the example:: >>> table = ['day rain snow', # column names ... 'Mon A 1.1', ... 'Tue AA 1.8', ... 'Wed AAA 2.5'] >>> print(ascii.read(table, fill_values=[('AA', '0.0')])) day rain snow --- ---- ---- Mon A 1.1 Tue -- 1.8 Wed AAA 2.5 If no columns are specified then the replacement is done in every column, subject to filtering by ``fill_include_names`` and ``fill_exclude_names`` (see below). The ``fill_values`` parameter in |read| takes a single ```` or a list of ```` tuples. If several ```` apply to a single occurrence of ```` then the first one determines the ```` value. For instance the following will replace an empty data value in the ``x`` or ``y`` columns with "1e38" while empty values in any other column will get "-999":: >>> ascii.read(table, fill_values=[('', '1e38', 'x', 'y'), ('', '-999')]) # doctest: +SKIP The following shows an example where string information needs to be exchanged before the conversion to float values happens. Here ``no_rain`` and ``no_snow`` is replaced by ``0.0``:: >>> table = ['day rain snow', # column names ... #--- ------- -------- ... 'Mon 3.2 no_snow', ... 'Tue no_rain 1.1', ... 'Wed 0.3 no_snow'] >>> print(ascii.read(table, fill_values=[('no_rain', '0.0'), ('no_snow', '0.0')])) day rain snow --- ---- ---- Mon 3.2 -- Tue -- 1.1 Wed 0.3 -- Sometimes these rules apply only to specific columns in the table. Columns can be selected with ``fill_include_names`` or excluded with ``fill_exclude_names``. Also, column names can be given directly with fill_values:: >>> asciidata = ['text,no1,no2', 'text1,1,1.',',2,'] >>> print ascii.read(asciidata, fill_values = ('', 'nan','no1','no2'), delimiter = ',') text no1 no2 ----- --- --- text1 1 1.0 2 -- Here, the empty value ``''`` in column ``no2`` is replaced by ``nan``, but the ``text`` column remains unaltered. If any table elements match the fill specification then |read| returns a masked `~astropy.table.Table` object with the corresponding elements masked out. .. note:: The default in |read| is ``fill_values=('','0')``. This marks blank entries as being missing for any data type (int, float, or string). If ``fill_values`` is explicitly set in the call to |read| then the default behavior of marking blank entries as missing no longer applies. For instance setting ``fill_values=None`` will disable this auto-masking without setting any other fill values. This can be useful for a string column where one of values happens to be ``""``. Guess table format ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If the ``guess`` parameter in |read| is set to True (which is the default) then |read| will try to guess the table format by cycling through a number of possible table format permutations and attempting to read the table in each case. The first format which succeeds and will be used to read the table. To succeed the table must be successfully parsed by the Reader and satisfy the following column requirements: * At least two table columns * No column names are a float or int number * No column names begin or end with space, comma, tab, single quote, double quote, or a vertical bar (|). These requirements reduce the chance for a false positive where a table is successfully parsed with the wrong format. A common situation is a table with numeric columns but no header row, and in this case ``astropy.io.ascii`` will auto-assign column names because of the restriction on column names that look like a number. The order of guessing is shown by this Python code, where ``Reader`` is the class which actually implements reading the different file formats:: for Reader in (Rdb, Tab, Cds, Daophot, SExtractor, Ipac, Latex, AASTex, HTML): read(Reader=Reader) for Reader in (CommentedHeader, Basic, NoHeader): for delimiter in ("|", ",", " ", "\\s"): for quotechar in ('"', "'"): read(Reader=Reader, delimiter=delimiter, quotechar=quotechar) Note that the :class:`~astropy.io.ascii.FixedWidth` derived-readers are not included in the default guess sequence (this causes problems), so to read such tables one must explicitly specify the format with the ``format`` keyword. If none of the guesses succeed in reading the table (subject to the column requirements) a final try is made using just the user-supplied parameters but without checking the column requirements. In this way a table with only one column or column names that look like a number can still be successfully read. The guessing process respects any values of the Reader, delimiter, and quotechar parameters that were supplied to the read() function. Any guesses that would conflict are skipped. For example the call:: >>> data = ascii.read(table, Reader=ascii.NoHeader, quotechar="'") would only try the four delimiter possibilities, skipping all the conflicting Reader and quotechar combinations. Guessing can be disabled in two ways:: import astropy.io.ascii data = astropy.io.ascii.read(table) # guessing enabled by default data = astropy.io.ascii.read(table, guess=False) # disable for this call astropy.io.ascii.set_guess(False) # set default to False globally data = astropy.io.ascii.read(table) # guessing disabled Converters ^^^^^^^^^^ :mod:`astropy.io.ascii` converts the raw string values from the table into numeric data types by using converter functions such as the Python ``int`` and ``float`` functions. For example ``int("5.0")`` will fail while float("5.0") will succeed and return 5.0 as a Python float. The default converters are:: default_converters = [astropy.io.ascii.convert_numpy(numpy.int), astropy.io.ascii.convert_numpy(numpy.float), astropy.io.ascii.convert_numpy(numpy.str)] These take advantage of the :func:`~astropy.io.ascii.convert_numpy` function which returns a 2-element tuple ``(converter_func, converter_type)`` as described in the previous section. The type provided to :func:`~astropy.io.ascii.convert_numpy` must be a valid `numpy type `_, for example ``numpy.int``, ``numpy.uint``, ``numpy.int8``, ``numpy.int64``, ``numpy.float``, ``numpy.float64``, ``numpy.str``. The default converters for each column can be overridden with the ``converters`` keyword:: >>> import numpy as np >>> converters = {'col1': [ascii.convert_numpy(np.uint)], ... 'col2': [ascii.convert_numpy(np.float32)]} >>> ascii.read('file.dat', converters=converters) # doctest: +SKIP Advanced customization ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Here we provide a few examples that demonstrate how to extend the base functionality to handle special cases. To go beyond these simple examples the best reference is to read the code for the existing :ref:`extension_reader_classes`. **Define a custom reader functionally** :: def read_rdb_table(table): reader = astropy.io.ascii.Basic() reader.header.splitter.delimiter = '\t' reader.data.splitter.delimiter = '\t' reader.header.splitter.process_line = None reader.data.splitter.process_line = None reader.data.start_line = 2 return reader.read(table) **Define custom readers by class inheritance** :: # Note: Tab, Csv, and Rdb are included in astropy.io.ascii for convenience. class Tab(astropy.io.ascii.Basic): def __init__(self): astropy.io.ascii.Basic.__init__(self) self.header.splitter.delimiter = '\t' self.data.splitter.delimiter = '\t' # Don't strip line whitespace since that includes tabs self.header.splitter.process_line = None self.data.splitter.process_line = None # Don't strip data value spaces since that is significant in TSV tables self.data.splitter.process_val = None self.data.splitter.skipinitialspace = False class Rdb(astropy.io.ascii.Tab): def __init__(self): astropy.io.ascii.Tab.__init__(self) self.data.start_line = 2 class Csv(astropy.io.ascii.Basic): def __init(self): astropy.io.ascii.Basic.__init__(self) self.data.splitter.delimiter = ',' self.header.splitter.delimiter = ',' self.header.start_line = 0 self.data.start_line = 1 **Create a custom splitter.process_val function** :: # The default process_val() normally just strips whitespace. # In addition have it replace empty fields with -999. def process_val(x): """Custom splitter process_val function: Remove whitespace at the beginning or end of value and substitute -999 for any blank entries.""" x = x.strip() if x == '': x = '-999' return x # Create an RDB reader and override the splitter.process_val function rdb_reader = astropy.io.ascii.get_reader(Reader=astropy.io.ascii.Rdb) rdb_reader.data.splitter.process_val = process_val