ppc64le/linux/: uvtools-0.2.0+ppc64le1 metadata and description

Simple index

Tools useful for the handling, visualization, and analysis of interferometric data.

author HERA Team
classifiers
  • Programming Language :: Python :: 3
  • Environment :: MetaData :: IBM Python Ecosystem
description_content_type text/markdown
dynamic license-file
license MIT
license_file LICENSE
provides_extras dev
requires_dist
  • numpy
  • six
  • scipy
  • pyuvdata
  • astropy>5.1
  • aipy>=3.0.5; extra == "aipy"
  • pytest; extra == "dev"
  • pytest-cov; extra == "dev"
  • aipy>=3.0.5; extra == "dev"
  • pre-commit; extra == "dev"
requires_python >=3.8
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uvtools-0.2.0+ppc64le1-py3-none-any.whl
Size
4 MB
Type
Python Wheel
Python
3

uvtools

Build Status codecov

Tools useful for the handling, visualization, and analysis of interferometric data.

Installation

Best method is to install from [pypi] with pip install uvtools

Developer install from the github repo by cloning/pulling and then in ./uvtools/ run pip install .

If you use conda (preferred), then you may wish to install the following packages manually before installing uvtools (if you don't have them already)::

$ conda install -c conda-forge numpy scipy "aipy>=3.0rc2"

If you are developing uvtools, you will also require nose and pyuvdata to run tests. All of these packages can be installed with the following commands::

$ conda create -n uvtools python=3
$ conda activate uvtools
$ conda env update -n uvtools -f environment.yml
$ pip install -e .

To test the package, execute the following command::

$ nosetests uvtools/tests/test_dspec.py uvtools/tests/test_utils.py

Making a Release

To make a release of uvtools (both on Github and PyPI), head to the most current Draft Release and note the suggested release version. Contact the maintainers with your intention to make a release either to that version (or, if appropriate, to a different version), and publish the release via the Github UI. All done!

Export Classification Notice

The software hosted on this website consists of publicly available open‑source packages. To the extent U.S. export regulations apply, software that is publicly available as described in 15 C.F.R. §§ 734.7 (for non-encryption software) or 742.15(b) (for encryption software) is not subject to the Export Administration Regulations (EAR). Users are responsible for complying with all applicable export laws and regulations.