Hi Erik, thank you for the example. It works for me and it could be a starting point for something more systematic / user friendly.
Thanks, David > On Feb 8, 2016, at 9:25 AM, Erik Schnetter <[email protected]> wrote: > > David Radice and I recently discussed reading Carpet HDF5 data into > Julia <http://julialang.org>. A few weeks ago, I converted a Python > visualization script to Julia. This was quite easy to do, and I thus > thought I'd post it here for others to see. > > The Julia script is an Ipython (now: Jupyter) notebook. The link below > should lead to a tarball in my Google Drive folder that anybody can > download. In addition to the script, there is also some sample Carpet > output that the script uses to create a movie, as well as the movie > itself that is generated by the script. > > <https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bz4t5SPjhOSSN28wQjlMODgwaWs/view?usp=sharing> > > This isn't a cleaned-up example that's easy to use, but rather a > straight copy of the script I'm using to experiment with the data. I > hope it works for others (after adapting the obvious path names in the > script). If you find it interesting and encounter problems, I'll be > happy to help, and if this is generally useful, it could probably be > cleaned up into a much nicer example. > > Enjoy, > -erik > > -- > Erik Schnetter <[email protected]> > http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/personal/eschnetter/ > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.einsteintoolkit.org/mailman/listinfo/users
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