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: http://www.apo.nmsu.edu/35m_operations/TUI/Scripts/ScriptingTutorial/GetInfo.html
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It is easy to incorporate information from an instrument or the telescope into your scripts. Most information you might want is available in various "models" within TUI. These include a model for each instrument (TUI.Inst.DIS.DISModel, etc.), a telescope model (TUI.TCC.TCCModel) and the exposure models you have already seen (TUI.Inst.ExposeModel).
Most models primarily consist of a set of "keyword variables", one per keyword that instrument outputs. Keyword variables may be read using sr.getKeyVar or sr.waitKeyVar. Models often also include a few constants, preferences and/or convenience functions (such as formatExpCmd
). To obtain a model, import the appropriate code and call getModel()
as per the example here. To find out what is in a model, I suggest you read its code. (There are also good ways to get help from within Python; see the Programming manual for details.)
Note that the telescope model contains some important of information about the current instrument, including its name, image scale and size—all information that is not available from the instrument model.
The following example shows a good use of querying information. DIS always does something when you ask its motors to move, even if they are already in the right place. In particular, the gratings are always homed, which is very slow, and the turret detent is temporarily retracted. In the following example, current DIS status is queried and only items that need to be changed are moved.
Note that whenever you read input, you need to think about debug mode (because in that mode you only get None back). In this case, if we're in debug mode then we don't check that the current instrument is DIS. In this example we don't have to mess with the getKeyVar statements because getKeyVar returns None in debug mode, making the commands run, which is perfect.
import TUI.TCC.TCCModel import TUI.Inst.DIS.DISModel from TUI.Inst.DIS.StatusConfigInputWdg import StatusConfigInputWdg InstName = "DIS" class ScriptClass(object): """Simple script to configure DIS. """ def __init__(self, sr): """Display DIS configuration.""" # if True, run in debug-only mode (which doesn't DO anything, it just pretends) sr.debug = False statusWdg = StatusConfigInputWdg(sr.master) statusWdg.grid(row=0, column=0) def run(self, sr): """Configure DIS It is inefficient to tell DIS to move something that is already in the right location, so check each item before moving. """ disModel = TUI.Inst.DIS.DISModel.getModel() tccModel = TUI.TCC.TCCModel.getModel() # settings turretPos = 1 # grating set 1 is typically high blue/high red maskID = 1 filterID = 1 # 1 is clear rlambda = 7300 # in Angstroms blambda = 4400 # in Angstroms # Make sure the current instrument is DIS if not sr.debug: currInstName = sr.getKeyVar(self.tccModel.instName) if not currInstName.lower().startswith(InstName.lower()): raise sr.ScriptError("%s is not the current instrument!" % InstName) # notes: # - set turret before setting gratings to make sure that # disModel.cmdLambdas is for the correct turret. # - DIS only moves one motor at a time, # so the following code is about as efficient as it gets if turretPos != sr.getKeyVar(disModel.turretPos): yield sr.waitCmd( actor = "dis", cmdStr = "motors turret=%d" % turretPos, ) if maskID != sr.getKeyVar(disModel.maskID): yield sr.waitCmd( actor = "dis", cmdStr = "motors mask=%d" % maskID, ) if filterID != sr.getKeyVar(disModel.filterID): yield sr.waitCmd( actor = "dis", cmdStr = "motors filter=%d" % filterID, ) # test against disModel.cmdLambdas, not disModel.actLambdas, # because the gratings cannot necessarily go *exactly* where requested # but do the best they can if blambda != sr.getKeyVar(disModel.cmdLambdas, ind=0): yield sr.waitCmd( actor = "dis", cmdStr = "motors b%dlambda=%d" % (turretPos, blambda), ) if rlambda != sr.getKeyVar(disModel.cmdLambdas, ind=1): yield sr.waitCmd( actor = "dis", cmdStr = "motors r%dlambda=%d" % (turretPos, rlambda), )
Comments:
sr.getKeyVar
returns the current value of the specified "keyword variable" without waiting. If you prefer to wait (e.g. to get the next value or to make sure there is a valid value) then use yield sr.waitKeyVar
instead. Note that sr.wait functions return values in sr.value (because there's no other way when using yield); thus, for example:
yield sr.waitKeyVar(disModel.cmdLambdas, ind=0) blambda = sr.value