NCRENAME
Section: 1Misc. Reference Manual Pages (1)
NAME
ncrename - netCDF Renamer
SYNTAX
ncrename [-a
old_name,
new_name]
[-a
[-d
old_name,
new_name]
[-d
[-R] [-r] [-v
old_name,
new_name]
[-v
input-file
[
output-file]
DESCRIPTION
ncrename
renames dimensions, variables, and attributes in a
netCDF file.
Each object that has a name in the list of old names is renamed using
the corresponding name in the list of new names.
All the new names must be unique.
Every old name must exist in the input file, unless the name is preceded
by the character
..
The validity of the old names is not checked prior to the renaming.
Thus, if an old name is specified without the the
.
prefix and is
not present in
input-file,
ncrename
will abort.
ncrename
is the exception to the normal rules that the user will
be interactively prompted before an existing file is changed, and that a
temporary copy of an output file is constructed during the operation.
If only
input-file
is specified, then
ncrename
will change
the names of the
input-file
in place without prompting and without
creating a temporary copy of
input-file.
This is because the renaming operation is considered reversible if the
user makes a mistake.
The
new_name
can easily be changed back to
old_name
by using
ncrename
one more time.
Note that renaming a dimension to the name of a dependent variable can
be used to invert the relationship between an independent coordinate
variable and a dependent variable.
In this case, the named dependent variable must be one-dimensional and
should have no missing values.
Such a variable will become a coordinate variable.
According to the netCDF User's Guide, renaming properties in
netCDF files does not incur the penalty of recopying the entire file
when the
new_name
is shorter than the
old_name.
OPTIONS
- -a
-
old_name,
new_name
Attribute renaming.
The old and new names of the attribute are specified by the associated
old_name
and
new_name
values.
Global attributes are treated no differently than variable attributes.
This option may be specified more than once.
You cannot change the attribute name for one particular variable (unless
it is uniquely named); all occurrences of the attribute of a given name
will be renamed.
This is considered an oversight and will be addressed in a future
version of NCO.
- -d
-
old_name,
new_name
Dimension renaming.
The old and new names of the dimension are specified by the associated
old_name
and
new_name
values.
This option may be specified more than once.
- -v
-
old_name,
new_name
Variable renaming.
The old and new names of the variable are specified by the associated
old_name
and
new_name
values.
This option may be specified more than once.
- -i
-
Interactive.
ncrename
will prompt for confirmation before overwriting an
existing file.
EXAMPLES
Rename the variable
p
to
pressure
and
t
to
temperature
in netCDF
in.nc.
In this case
p
must exist in the input file (or
ncrename
will
abort), but the presence of
t
is optional:
-
ncrename -v p,pressure -v .t,temperature in.nc
ncrename
does not automatically attach dimensions to variables of
the same name.
If you want to rename a coordinate variable so that it remains a
coordinate variable, you must separately rename both the dimension and
the variable:
-
ncrename -d lon,longitude -v lon,longitude in.nc
Create netCDF
out.nc
identical to
in.nc
except the attribute
_FillValue
is changed to
missing_value
(in all variables
which possess it) and the global attribute
Zaire
is changed to
Congo:
-
ncrename -a _FillValue,missing_value -a Zaire,Congo in.nc out.nc
AUTHOR
NCO
manual pages written by Charlie Zender and Brian Mays.
REPORTING BUGS
COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 1995-2004 Charlie Zender
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO
The full documentation for
NCO
is maintained as a Texinfo manual called the
NCO User's Guide.
Because
NCO
is mathematical in nature, the documentation includes TeX-intensive
portions not viewable on character-based displays.
Hence the only complete and authoritative versions of the
NCO User's Guide
are the PDF (recommended), DVI, and Postscript versions at
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