Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: hypnotoad
Version: 0.1.1
Summary: Grid generator for BOUT++
Home-page: https://github.com/boutproject/hypnotoad
Author: John Omotani, Ben Dudson and the BOUT++ team
Author-email: john.omotani@ukaea.uk
License: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License v3 or later (GPLv3+)
Description: Dependencies
        ------------
        
        - options module ('pip3 install --user options')
        - yaml module ('pip3 install --user PyYAML')
        - scipy (recent enough version, tested with 1.3.0 'pip3 install --user --upgrade scipy')
        
        
        Installation
        ------------
        
        #### From PyPi
        
        The simplest way to get hypnotoad is by simply running
        
            $ pip install --user hypnotoad
        
        #### git repo
        
        If you need to modify the hypnotoad code, or get development versions, clone
        from github
        
            $ git clone git@github.com:boutproject/hypnotoad.git
        
        You can install from the git repo with ``pip``, this is useful to get the
        executables added to your path. Make sure to do an 'editable' install using
        ``-e`` or ``--editable`` option like
        
            $ cd hypnotoad
            $ pip install -e .
        
        This installs executables which use the code that's currently in the git repo,
        so if you edit or update it you will see the updates. If you install with ``pip
        install .`` (without the ``-e``) then ``pip`` can get confused because it can't
        tell which version number is newer, as the git repo versions have a version
        number based on the git hash, not a simple x.y.z; then pip may for example not
        uninstall hypnotoad correctly.
        
        
        Usage
        -----
        
        Options are read and set up in the Equilibrium (child-)class object, and passed
        from there to the Mesh (child-)class object.
        
        User-settable options, with their current values, are printed when an
        Equilibrium object is created.  Internal options should not need to be set by
        the user, but can be overridden with keyword arguments to the Equilibrium
        constructor.
        
        Hypnotoad can be run either as an executable, which just reads from an input
        file, or interactively from a Python shell. To ensure reproducibility, it is
        suggested to create your final grid non-interactively. The interactive mode is
        intended to make it easier to prototype the grid and find a good set of input
        parameters. Once you have found a configuration you are happy with, you can
        save the current input parameters with
        Equilibrium.saveOptions(filename='hypnotoad\_options.yaml'); this may be
        especially useful if you have changed some options from the Python shell with
        keyword-arguments.
        
        Grid generation can take a while with the default options, which are set for
        high accuracy. When prototyping, it is suggested to temporarily use lower
        accuracy. The following may be a good starting point:
        - finecontour\_Nfine=100. This speeds up the creation of the internal,
          high-resolution, fixed-spacing representation of contours, and also
          calculations of distance along contours and some interpolation functions.
        - gradPsiRtol=2.e-6 and gradPsiAtol=1.e-6. These control the maximum error on
          the integration along grad(psi) used to trace grid lines orthogonal to the
          flux surfaces. They do not usually make a huge difference, but affect the
          time spent in 'Following perpendicular'.
        - If your wall is given by a large number of points (say more than 20) it might
          be worth creating a simpler one with fewer points for prototyping. This will
          speed up the 'finding wall intersections' stage. Note that the wall only
          matters where it intersects the grid.
        - Decreasing the resolution of the grid will also help. The grid points will
          probably not be in exactly the same place, but the algorithms are intended to
          produce grid spacings that are inversely proportional to the total number of
          points, so the structure should be very similar.
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License v3 or later (GPLv3+)
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Requires-Python: >=3.6
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Provides-Extra: gui-pyside2
Provides-Extra: gui-PyQt5
