Introduction to the cf.FieldList
object¶
A cf.FieldList
object is an ordered sequence of cf.Field
objects.
It supports nearly all of the python list-like operations, the exceptions being the arithmetic and comparison operators for which it has its own definitions. For example:
>>> fl
[<CF Field: x_wind(grid_latitude(110), grid_longitude(106)) m s-1>,
<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>]
>>> fl[0]
<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>
>>> fl[::-1]
[<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>,
<CF Field: x_wind(grid_latitude(110), grid_longitude(106)) m s-1>]
>>> fl[slice(1, -1, 2)]
[<CF Field: x_wind(grid_latitude(110), grid_longitude(106)) m s-1>]
Note that an integer index returns an individual field, but other types of index always return a field list.
>>> len(fl)
2
>>> f = fl.pop()
>>> f
<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>
>>> len(fl)
1
>>> fl.append(f)
>>> len(fl)
2
>>> f in fl
True
>>> from operator import attrgetter
>>> fl
[<CF Field: x_wind(grid_latitude(110), grid_longitude(106)) m s-1>,
<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>]
>>> fl.sort(key=attrgetter('standard_name'))
[<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>,
<CF Field: x_wind(grid_latitude(110), grid_longitude(106)) m s-1>]
Field list methods¶
A subset of a field’s callable methods are also available to a field
list object (see the list of field list methods). In general, these are methods which, on a
field, return a field or None
. On a field list the same methods
return a field list or None
respectively:
>>> gl = fl.max()
>>> fl.max(i=True)
is exactly equivalent to
>>> gl = cf.FieldList([f.max() for f in fl])
>>> for f in fl:
... f.max(i=True)
The subspace
attribute .....
>>> fl
[<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>,
<CF Field: air_pressure(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) hPa>]
>>> fl.subspace[0]
[<CF Field: air_temperature(time(1), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>,
<CF Field: air_pressure(time(1), latitude(73), longitude(96)) hPa>]
>>> fl.subspace(latitude=0)
[<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(1), longitude(96)) K>,
<CF Field: air_pressure(time(12), latitude(1), longitude(96)) hPa>]
For cases for which there is no field list method to apply changes to each field element, fields must be updated individually; For example: list are easily carried out in a loop:
>>> fl[-1].standard_name = 'y_wind'
>>> for f in fl:
... f.long_name = 'An even longer ' + f.long_name
Arithmetic and comparison¶
Any arithmetic and comparison operation is applied independently to each field element, so all of the operators defined for a field are allowed.
In particular, the usual python list-like arithmetic and
comparison operator behaviours do not
apply. For example, the +
operator will concatenate two built-in
lists, but adding 2
to a field list will add 2
to the data
array of each of its fields.
For example these commands:
>>> gl = fl + 2
>>> gl = 2 // fl
>>> gl = fl == 0
>>> fl += 2
are exactly equivalent to:
>>> gl = cf.FieldList(f + 2 for f in fl)
>>> gl = cf.FieldList(2 // f for f in fl)
>>> gl = cf.FieldList(f == 0 for f in fl)
>>> for f in fl:
... f += 2
Field versus field list¶
In some contexts, whether an object is a field or a field list is not
known. So to avoid awkward type testing, some aspects of the
cf.FieldList
interface are shared by a cf.Field
object and vice
versa.
A field may be used in the same iterative contexts as a field list:
>>> f
<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>
>>> f is f[0] is f[slice(-1, None, -1)] is f[::-1]
True
>>> for g in f:
... print repr(g)
...
<CF Field: air_temperature(time(12), latitude(73), longitude(96)) K>
Field methods which