SYNOPSIS

PERL PROGRAM NAME:

AUTHOR: Juan Lorenzo (Perl module only)

DATE:

DESCRIPTION:

Version:

USE

NOTES

Examples

SYNOPSIS

SEISMIC UNIX NOTES SUPSCUBECONTOUR - PostScript CUBE plot of a segy data set

 supscubecontour <stdin [optional parameters] >			



 Optional parameters: 							



 n2 is the number of traces per frame.  If not getparred then it	

 is the total number of traces in the data set.  			



 n3 is the number of frames.  If not getparred then it			

 is the total number of frames in the data set measured by ntr/n2	



 d1=tr.d1 or tr.dt/10^6	sampling interval in the fast dimension	

   =.004 for seismic 		(if not set)				

   =1.0 for nonseismic		(if not set)				



 d2=tr.d2			sampling interval in the slow dimension	

   =1.0 			(if not set)				



 f1=tr.f1 or tr.delrt/10^3 or 0.0  first sample in the fast dimension	



 f2=tr.f2 or tr.tracr or tr.tracl  first sample in the slow dimension	

   =1.0 for seismic		    (if not set)			

   =d2 for nonseismic		    (if not set)			



 verbose=0              =1 to print some useful information		



 tmpdir=	 	if non-empty, use the value as a directory path	

		 	prefix for storing temporary files; else if the	

	         	the CWP_TMPDIR environment variable is set use	

	         	its value for the path; else use tmpfile()	



 Note that for seismic time domain data, the "fast dimension" is	

 time and the "slow dimension" is usually trace number or range.	

 Also note that "foreign" data tapes may have something unexpected	

 in the d2,f2 fields, use segyclean to clear these if you can afford	

 the processing time or use d2= f2= to over-ride the header values if	

 not.									



 See the pscubecontour selfdoc for the remaining parameters.		



 example:   supscubecontour < infile [optional parameters]  | gv -	



 Credits:



	CWP: Dave Hale and Zhiming Li (pscube)

	     Jack K. Cohen  (suxmovie)

	     John Stockwell (supscubecontour)



 Notes:

	When n2 isn't getparred, we need to count the traces

	for pscube. Although we compute ntr, we don't allocate a 2-d array

	and content ourselves with copying trace by trace from

	the data "file" to the pipe into the plotting program.

	Although we could use tr.data, we allocate a trace buffer

	for code clarity.

User's notes (Juan Lorenzo)

untested VERSION = '0.0.2'; 2.9.23 Only redirection is allowed.

CHANGES and their DATES

Import packages

instantiation of packages

Encapsulated hash of private variables

sub Step

collects switches and assembles bash instructions by adding the program name

sub note

collects switches and assembles bash instructions by adding the program name

sub clear

sub d1

sub d2

sub f1

sub f2

sub tmpdir

sub verbose

sub get_max_index

max index = number of input variables -1