save_syserror¶
-
sherpa.ui.
save_syserror
(id, filename=None, clobber=False, sep=' ', comment='#', linebreak='\n', format='%g')¶ Save the statistical errors to a file.
Parameters: - id (int or str, optional) – The identifier for the data set to use. If not given then the default identifier is used, as returned by get_default_id.
- filename (str) – The name of the file to write the array to.
- clobber (bool, optional) – If filename is not
None
, then this flag controls whether an existing file can be overwritten (True
) or if it raises an exception (False
, the default setting). - sep (str, optional) – The separator character. The default is
' '
. - comment (str, optional) – The comment character. The default is
'#'
. - linebreak (str, optional) – Indicate a new line. The default is
'\n'
. - format (str, optional) – The format used to write out the numeric values. The
default is
'%g%'
.
Raises: sherpa.utils.err.IOErr
– If the data set does not contain any systematic errors.sherpa.utils.err.IOErr
– If filename already exists and clobber isFalse
.
See also
load_syserror()
- Load the systematic errors from a file.
save_error()
- Save the errors to a file.
save_staterror()
- Save the statistical errors to a file.
Notes
The function does not follow the normal Python standards for parameter use, since it is designed for easy interactive use. When called with a single un-named argument, it is taken to be the filename parameter. If given two un-named arguments, then they are interpreted as the id and filename parameters, respectively. The remaining parameters are expected to be given as named arguments.
The output file contains the columns
X
andSYS_ERR
.Examples
Write out the systematic errors from the default data set to the file ‘errs.dat’.
>>> save_syserror('errs.dat')
Over-write the file it it already exists, and take the data from the data set “jet”:
>>> save_syserror('jet', 'err.out', clobber=True)