Peter Clodius wrote: > It's one scan which consists of a topographic scan (256x256 points), > spectroscopic data (one spectrum of 1023 datapoints) for every five or > six mesured points (this may varry for each scan, up to obne spectrum > for each point) and two single spectra of 1023 points.
Thanks for the sample. The format is binary and apparently quite complex. So reverse engineering would also be rather difficult, requiring you to prepare or find files with different dimensions, data types and other properties (possibly dozens of them), sending them to me with descriptions/screenshot of their content and me trying to find how the information is represented in the files. Spectra are usually much more difficult to get right than topographic data. I am not sure if it's worth it but we can try... I must say I also doubt DME has lost all information about their own file format, no matter if still used or not, but if they are not willing to provide it we cannot do much about it. Regards, Yeti ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Start uncovering the many advantages of virtual appliances and start using them to simplify application deployment and accelerate your shift to cloud computing. http://p.sf.net/sfu/novell-sfdev2dev _______________________________________________ Gwyddion-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gwyddion-users
