binheat 0.2.2

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Description:

binheat 0.2.2

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binheat converts a description of a binary relation into a PDF image of the
relation as a binary heat map (a.k.a. matrix display, adjacency matrix,
comparison chart, and probably a bunch of other names as well; see below for an
example).
Each line of the input (except for blank lines and comments, which are ignored)
must be of the form x<TAB>y<TAB>z..., denoting pairs (x, y), (x, z), etc. in the binary relation.
In the output table, the values from the first column of each input line become
the labels of the table’s rows, and the values from the second input column
onwards become the labels of the table’s columns. This can be reversed with
the --transpose option.

Installation
binheat requires Python 3.7 or higher. Just use pip for Python 3 (You have pip, right?) to install
binheat and its dependencies:
python3 -m pip install binheat


Usage
binheat [<OPTIONS>] [<infile> [<outfile>]]
Input is read from <infile> (defaulting to standard input), and the
resulting PDF is written to <outfile> (defaulting to <infile> with its
file extension changed to .pdf, or to standard output if <infile> is
standard input).

Options

-C FILE, --column-labels FILE
Use the lines in FILE (after discarding blank lines
& comments) in the order they appear as column labels
(or row labels if --transpose is in effect). Any
pairs in the input whose second column does not appear
in FILE are discarded.

-F FONT, --font FONT
Typeset text in the given font. FONT must be
either the name of a builtin PostScript font or the
path to a .ttf file. By default, text is typeset
in Times-Roman.

-f SIZE, --font-size SIZE
Set the text size to SIZE (default 12).

-R FILE, --row-labels FILE
Use the lines in FILE (after discarding blank lines
& comments) in the order they appear as row labels (or
column labels if --transpose is in effect). Any
pairs in the input whose first column does not appear
in FILE are discarded.

--sort, --no-sort
Whether to list labels in the output in lexical order
rather than in the order in which they appear in the
input file; default: --no-sort

-T, --transpose
The output will be transposed — i.e., the first column
of the input will be used for the output table’s column
labels, and the second input column onwards will be
used for the table’s row labels.





Example
The following input file:
NUL (\0, 0x00)<TAB>iscntrl
0x01..0x06<TAB>iscntrl
BEL (\a, 0x07)<TAB>iscntrl
BS (\b, 0x08)<TAB>iscntrl
TAB (\t, 0x09)<TAB>iscntrl<TAB>isspace<TAB>isblank
LF (\n, 0x0A)<TAB>iscntrl<TAB>isspace
VT (\v, 0x0B)<TAB>iscntrl<TAB>isspace
FF (\f, 0x0C)<TAB>iscntrl<TAB>isspace
CR (\r, 0x0D)<TAB>iscntrl<TAB>isspace
0x0E..0x1F<TAB>iscntrl
SPACE (0x20)<TAB>isprint<TAB>isspace<TAB>isblank
!"#$%&'()*+,-./<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>ispunct
0123456789<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>isalnum<TAB>isdigit<TAB>isxdigit
:;<=>?@<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>ispunct
ABCDEF<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>isalnum<TAB>isalpha<TAB>isupper<TAB>isxdigit
GHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>isalnum<TAB>isalpha<TAB>isupper
[\]^_`<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>ispunct
abcdef<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>isalnum<TAB>isalpha<TAB>islower<TAB>isxdigit
ghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>isalnum<TAB>isalpha<TAB>islower
{|}~<TAB>isprint<TAB>isgraph<TAB>ispunct
DEL (0x7F)<TAB>iscntrl
produces (using the default options) an output file that looks like this:

License:

For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.

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