Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Create bins with totals and percentage Post 303044095 by RudiC on Thursday 13th of February 2020 04:14:42 PM
Old 02-13-2020
How far would this small adaption to your code get you:
Code:
awk '
BEGIN   {delta = (delta=="")?2:delta
        }

        {bucketNr = int(($1+delta) / delta)
         cnt[bucketNr] += $2
         TOT           += $2
         numBuckets = (numBuckets > bucketNr ? numBuckets : bucketNr)
        }

END     {for (bucketNr=1; bucketNr<=numBuckets; bucketNr++)     {end = beg + delta
                                                                 printf "%2.0f - %2.0f\t%d\t%4.1f%%\n", beg, end, cnt[bucketNr], cnt[bucketNr] / TOT *100
                                                                 beg = end
                                                                }
        }
' file
 0 -  2    0     0.0%
 2 -  4    0     0.0%
 4 -  6    0     0.0%
 6 -  8    0     0.0%
 8 - 10    5     6.8%
10 - 12    5     6.8%
12 - 14    13    17.8%
14 - 16    0     0.0%
16 - 18    23    31.5%
18 - 20    19    26.0%
20 - 22    8     11.0%

This User Gave Thanks to RudiC For This Post:
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Calculating totals in AWK

Hello, With the following small script I list the size of documents belonging to a certain user by each time selecting the bytes-field of that file ($7). Now it fills the array with every file it finds so in the end the output of some users contains up to 200.000 numbers. So how can I calculate... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hille
7 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

summarising totals in awk

awk ' FILENAME == "all" { balance += substr($0,17,13) dt = substr($0,6,8) } END { for ( name in balance ) printf("%013s %3s of %8s\n", balance/100,name,dt) | "sort " } ' all > summation using this code i wanted to take summary totals of... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: paresh n doshi
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Report Totals

Hello, I have written a script in a previous server and its being migrated to a new server. I'm trying to debug my script since i've had to make minor changes to it to get it to work. I'm having a hard time getting my totals to populate here is the syntax DUMP_COUNT=`sqlplus -S... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: senormarquez
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Totals in a file - incorrectly displaying

Afternoon, I have a script which creates/modifies data into a formatted csv. The trailer record should display 2 columns, the first is a static entry of "T" to identify it as a trailer record. The 2nd is a total of amounts in a column throughout the entire file. My total isn't displaying... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: mcclunyboy
8 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Calculating frequency of values within bins

Hi, I am working with files containing 2 columns in which i need to come up with the frequency/count of values in col. 2 falling within specifics binned values of col. 1. the contents of a sample file is shown below: 15 12.5 15 11.2 16 0.2 16 1.4 17 1.6 18 4.5 17 5.6 12 8.6 11 7.2 9 ... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: ida1215
13 Replies

6. Solaris

Redirecting print to optional output bins

Guys We have a HP P4015 laserjet printer with a 5 bin mailbox attached & configured. We can print to the specific output bins from Oracle e-Business suite, however our print output format is incompatible so it prints out random characters instead of the letter content. I have looked... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: s1977
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

awk solution for taking bins

Hi all, I'm looking for an awk solution for taking bins of data set. For example, if I have two columns of data that I wish to use for a scatter plot, and it contains 5 million lines, how can I take averages of every 100 points, 1000, 10000 etc... The idea is to take bins of the 5,000,000 points... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: torchij
7 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grand totals in awk

I have a one-liner script like this that gives a total of everything in various directories: for i in *; do (cd $i && cd statelist && echo $i && ls -la |awk 'NR>3 {SUM += $5}\ END { print "Total number of elements " SUM }');done It works just great but at the end I want to print a grand... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie2010
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk to select 2D data bins

I wish to use AWK to do something akin: Select all 2D data with 1<$1<2 and -7.5<$2<-6.5 But it's not working awk 'END {print ($1<=2&&$1>=1&&$2<=-6.5&&$2>=-7.5)}' bla Data: -1.06897 -8.04482 -61.469 -1.13613 -8.04482 -61.2271 -1.00182 -8.04482 -61.2081 -1.06897 -8.13518 -60.8544... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: chrisjorg
2 Replies
funhist(1)							SAORD Documentation							funhist(1)

NAME
funhist - create a 1D histogram of a column (from a FITS binary table or raw event file) or an image SYNOPSIS
funhist [-n|-w|-T] <iname> [column] [[lo:hi:]bins] OPTIONS
-n # normalize bin value by the width of each bin -w # specify bin width instead of number of bins in arg3 -T # output in rdb/starbase format (tab separators) DESCRIPTION
funhist creates a one-dimensional histogram from the specified columns of a FITS Extension binary table of a FITS file (or from a non-FITS raw event file), or from a FITS image or array, and writes that histogram as an ASCII table. Alternatively, the program can perform a 1D projection of one of the image axes. The first argument to the program is required, and specifies the Funtools file: FITS table or image, raw event file, or array. If "stdin" is specified, data are read from the standard input. Use Funtools Bracket Notation to specify FITS extensions, and filters. For a table, the second argument also is required. It specifies the column to use in generating the histogram. If the data file is of type image (or array), the column is optional: if "x" (or "X"), "y" (or "Y") is specified, then a projection is performed over the x (dim1) or y (dim2) axes, respectively. (That is, this projection will give the same results as a histogram performed on a table containing the equiva- lent x,y event rows.) If no column name is specified or "xy" (or "XY") is specified for the image, then a histogram is performed on the values contained in the image pixels. The argument that follows is optional and specifies the number of bins to use in creating the histogram and, if desired, the range of bin values. For image and table histograms, the range should specify the min and max data values. For image histograms on the x and y axes, the range should specify the min and max image bin values. If this argument is omitted, the number of output bins for a table is calcu- lated either from the TLMIN/TLMAX headers values (if these exist in the table FITS header for the specified column) or by going through the data to calculate the min and max value. For an image, the number of output bins is calculated either from the DATAMIN/DATAMAX header val- ues, or by going through the data to calculate min and max value. (Note that this latter calculation might fail if the image cannot be fit in memory.) If the data are floating point (table or image) and the number of bins is not specified, an arbitrary default of 128 is used. For binary table processing, the -w (bin width) switch can be used to specify the width of each bin rather than the number of bins. Thus: funhist test.ev pha 1:100:5 means that 5 bins of width 20 are used in the histogram, while: funhist -w test.ev pha 1:100:5 means that 20 bins of width 5 are used in the histogram. The data are divvied up into the specified number of bins and the resulting 1D histogram (or projection) is output in ASCII table format. For a table, the output displays the low_edge (inclusive) and hi_edge (exclusive) values for the data. For example, a 15-row table con- taining a "pha" column whose values range from -7.5 to 7.5 can be processed thus: [sh] funhist test.ev pha # data file: /home/eric/data/test.ev # column: pha # min,max,bins: -7.5 7.5 15 bin value lo_edge hi_edge ------ --------- --------------------- --------------------- 1 22 -7.50000000 -6.50000000 2 21 -6.50000000 -5.50000000 3 20 -5.50000000 -4.50000000 4 19 -4.50000000 -3.50000000 5 18 -3.50000000 -2.50000000 6 17 -2.50000000 -1.50000000 7 16 -1.50000000 -0.50000000 8 30 -0.50000000 0.50000000 9 16 0.50000000 1.50000000 10 17 1.50000000 2.50000000 11 18 2.50000000 3.50000000 12 19 3.50000000 4.50000000 13 20 4.50000000 5.50000000 14 21 5.50000000 6.50000000 15 22 6.50000000 7.50000000 [sh] funhist test.ev pha 1:6 # data file: /home/eric/data/test.ev # column: pha # min,max,bins: 0.5 6.5 6 bin value lo_edge hi_edge ------ --------- --------------------- --------------------- 1 16 0.50000000 1.50000000 2 17 1.50000000 2.50000000 3 18 2.50000000 3.50000000 4 19 3.50000000 4.50000000 5 20 4.50000000 5.50000000 6 21 5.50000000 6.50000000 [sh] funhist test.ev pha 1:6:3 # data file: /home/eric/data/test.ev # column: pha # min,max,bins: 0.5 6.5 3 bin value lo_edge hi_edge ------ --------- --------------------- --------------------- 1 33 0.50000000 2.50000000 2 37 2.50000000 4.50000000 3 41 4.50000000 6.50000000 For a table histogram, the -n(normalize) switch can be used to normalize the bin value by the width of the bin (i.e., hi_edge-lo_edge): [sh] funhist -n test.ev pha 1:6:3 # data file: test.ev # column: pha # min,max,bins: 0.5 6.5 3 # width normalization (val/(hi_edge-lo_edge)) is applied bin value lo_edge hi_edge ------ --------------------- --------------------- --------------------- 1 16.50000000 0.50000000 2.50000000 2 6.16666667 2.50000000 4.50000000 3 4.10000000 4.50000000 6.50000000 This could used, for example, to produce a light curve with values having units of counts/second instead of counts. For an image histogram, the output displays the low and high image values (both inclusive) used to generate the histogram. For example, in the following example, 184 pixels had a value of 1, 31 had a value of 2, while only 2 had a value of 3,4,5,6, or 7: [sh] funhist test.fits # data file: /home/eric/data/test.fits # min,max,bins: 1 7 7 bin value lo_val hi_val ------ --------------------- --------------------- --------------------- 1 184.00000000 1.00000000 1.00000000 2 31.00000000 2.00000000 2.00000000 3 2.00000000 3.00000000 3.00000000 4 2.00000000 4.00000000 4.00000000 5 2.00000000 5.00000000 5.00000000 6 2.00000000 6.00000000 6.00000000 7 2.00000000 7.00000000 7.00000000 For the axis projection of an image, the output displays the low and high image bins (both inclusive) used to generate the projection. For example, in the following example, 21 counts had their X bin value of 2, etc.: [sh] funhist test.fits x 2:7 # data file: /home/eric/data/test.fits # column: X # min,max,bins: 2 7 6 bin value lo_bin hi_bin ------ --------------------- --------------------- --------------------- 1 21.00000000 2.00000000 2.00000000 2 20.00000000 3.00000000 3.00000000 3 19.00000000 4.00000000 4.00000000 4 18.00000000 5.00000000 5.00000000 5 17.00000000 6.00000000 6.00000000 6 16.00000000 7.00000000 7.00000000 [sh] funhist test.fits x 2:7:2 # data file: /home/eric/data/test.fits # column: X # min,max,bins: 2 7 2 bin value lo_bin hi_bin ------ --------------------- --------------------- --------------------- 1 60.00000000 2.00000000 4.00000000 2 51.00000000 5.00000000 7.00000000 You can use gnuplot or other plotting programs to graph the results, using a script such as: #!/bin/sh sed -e '1,/---- .*/d /^$/,$d' | awk ' BEGIN{print "set nokey; set title "funhist"; set xlabel "bin"; set ylabel "counts"; plot "-" with boxes"} {print $3, $2, $4-$3}' | gnuplot -persist - 1>/dev/null 2>&1 Similar plot commands are supplied in the script funhist.plot: funhist test.ev pha ... | funhist.plot gnuplot SEE ALSO
See funtools(7) for a list of Funtools help pages version 1.4.2 January 2, 2008 funhist(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:20 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy