pygmt.grdclip
- pygmt.grdclip(grid, *, outgrid=None, region=None, above=None, below=None, between=None, new=None, verbose=None, **kwargs)[source]
- Sets values in a grid that meet certain criteria to a new value. - Produce a clipped - outgridor- xarray.DataArrayversion of the input- gridfile.- The parameters - aboveand- belowallow for a given value to be set for values above or below a set amount, respectively. This allows for extreme values in a grid, such as points below a certain depth when plotting Earth relief, to all be set to the same value.- Full option list at https://docs.generic-mapping-tools.org/latest/grdclip.html - Aliases: - G = outgrid 
- R = region 
- Sa = above 
- Sb = below 
- Si = between 
- Sr = new 
- V = verbose 
 - Parameters
- grid (str or xarray.DataArray) – The file name of the input grid or the grid loaded as a DataArray. 
- outgrid (str or None) – The name of the output netCDF file with extension .nc to store the grid in. 
- region (str or list) – xmin/xmax/ymin/ymax[+r][+uunit]. Specify the region of interest. 
- above (str or list or tuple) – [high, above]. Set all data[i] > high to above. 
- below (str or list or tuple) – [low, below]. Set all data[i] < low to below. 
- between (str or list or tuple) – [low, high, between]. Set all data[i] >= low and <= high to between. 
- new (str or list or tuple) – [old, new]. Set all data[i] == old to new. This is mostly useful when your data are known to be integer values. 
- Select verbosity level [Default is w], which modulates the messages written to stderr. Choose among 7 levels of verbosity: - q - Quiet, not even fatal error messages are produced 
- e - Error messages only 
- w - Warnings [Default] 
- t - Timings (report runtimes for time-intensive algorithms); 
- i - Informational messages (same as - verbose=True)
- c - Compatibility warnings 
- d - Debugging messages 
 
 
- Returns
- ret (xarray.DataArray or None) – Return type depends on whether the - outgridparameter is set:- xarray.DataArrayif- outgridis not set
- None if - outgridis set (grid output will be stored in file set by- outgrid)
 
 - Example - >>> import pygmt >>> # Load a grid of @earth_relief_30m data, with an x-range of 10 to 30, >>> # and a y-range of 15 to 25 >>> grid = pygmt.datasets.load_earth_relief( ... resolution="30m", region=[10, 30, 15, 25] ... ) >>> # Report the minimum and maximum data values >>> [grid.data.min(), grid.data.max()] [179.0, 2103.0] >>> # Create a new grid from an input grid. Set all values below 1,000 to >>> # 0 and all values above 1,500 to 10,000 >>> new_grid = pygmt.grdclip( ... grid=grid, below=[1000, 0], above=[1500, 10000] ... ) >>> # Report the minimum and maximum data values >>> [new_grid.data.min(), new_grid.data.max()] [0.0, 10000.0] 
