mirror of
https://expo.survex.com/repositories/expoweb/.git/
synced 2024-11-23 07:41:56 +00:00
273 lines
14 KiB
HTML
273 lines
14 KiB
HTML
<!DOCTYPE html>
|
|
<html>
|
|
<head>
|
|
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
|
|
<title>Expo documentation - QMs scripts</title>
|
|
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/css/main2.css" />
|
|
</head>
|
|
<body>
|
|
<style>body { background: #fff url(/images/style/bg-system.png) repeat-x 0 0 }</style>
|
|
<style>
|
|
h4 {
|
|
margin-top: 1.5em;
|
|
margin-bottom: 0;
|
|
}
|
|
p {
|
|
margin-top: 0;
|
|
margin-bottom: 0.5em;
|
|
}
|
|
var { # to match <code> but inline
|
|
font-family: monospace;
|
|
font-size: 0.9em;
|
|
#font-style: normal;
|
|
background-color: #eee;
|
|
}
|
|
</style>
|
|
<h2 id="tophead">CUCC Expedition Handbook</h2>
|
|
<h1>QMs and leads</h1>
|
|
tl;dr - use the troggle reports for each cave, e.g. <br>
|
|
<a href="/cave/qms/1623-290">QMs for Fischgesicht</a>
|
|
|
|
|
|
<h2>QMs - the fourfold path</h2>
|
|
<img class="onright" src ="../i/qm-image.jpg" />
|
|
<p>You will be familiar with <a href="../survey/qmentry.html">documenting newly found QMs</a> in the survex file when you type it in. But
|
|
QMs are only useful if they can be easily scanned by people planning the next pushing trip. That's what we are discussing here.
|
|
|
|
<p>There are half a dozen ways we have used to manage QMs:
|
|
<ol>
|
|
<li><strong>troggle and QMs in survex files</strong> - Since Sam wrote a QM svx parser in 2020 we have had the recent QMs in troggle but the report
|
|
to display them was not written until July 2022. Note that this means some duplication for 1623-161 and a few others where the same QM is
|
|
in both the survex file and the CSV file - see below.
|
|
|
|
<li><strong>troggle + perl era CSV</strong> - One of troggle's input parsers imports the
|
|
three
|
|
<var>qms.csv</var> files and produces reports by cave and individually, e.g. see <a href="/cave/qms/1623-161">the 161 QMs</a>
|
|
(slow page), which is <em>old</em> compared with the hand-edited <a href="/1623/161/qmtodo.htm">1623-161</a> page which was derived from it.
|
|
|
|
<li><strong>Hand-edited lists of QMS</strong> - only exist for 1623-161 <a href="/1623/161/qmtodo.htm">Kaninchenhöhle</a>
|
|
|
|
<li><strong>Perl script</strong> - Historically QMs were not in the survex file but typed up in a separate list <var>qms.csv</var> for
|
|
each cave system. A perl script turned that into an HTML file for the website.
|
|
But there are 3 different formats for this. The perl script is not used, but the same three CSV files (caves 161, 204 and 234)
|
|
are imported into troggle during initial data load (see above).
|
|
|
|
|
|
<li><strong>Python script</strong> - Phil Withnall's 2019 script <em>svx2qm.py</em> scans all the QMs in a single survex file. See below for how to run it on all survex files.
|
|
|
|
<li><strong>The elderly Prospecting Guide</strong> - Used to cover some of the same sorts of information as needed by someone wanting to
|
|
chase QMs. It was a troggle-generated document at <a href="/prospecting_guide/">expo.survex.com/prospecting_guide/</a>.
|
|
It has been retired because the mapping software packages it used were terminally outdated.
|
|
|
|
</ol>
|
|
|
|
|
|
<p>QMs all use <a href="../survey/qm.html">the same QM description conventions</a>.
|
|
|
|
<h2>QMs - monitoring progress</h2>
|
|
<p>Each cave has a report listing all the extant and ticked-off QMs, e.g.
|
|
<a href="/cave/qms/1623-264/">/cave/qms/1623-264/</a> or <a href="/cave/qms/1623-161/">/cave/qms/1623-161/</a>. The 161 report includes both old (spreadhseet-era) QMs and modern (2015 survex file) QMs.
|
|
|
|
<p>For the 2023 expo, we now have a check-list format report <a href="/cave/openqms/1623-290/">/cave/openqms/1623-290/</a> which more conveniently splits up the open QMs into cave passage sections and has a large square box printed against each QM for ticking off with a pencil.
|
|
|
|
<h2>QMs - how we first record them</h2>
|
|
<p>Today we write the QM into the survex file: see <a href="../survey/qmentry.html">documenting newly found QMs</a>.
|
|
<p>We used to write them into a spreadsheet file (pre-2015). These old files are today still parsed by troggle to produce reports.
|
|
|
|
<h4>troggle/parsers/survex.py</a></h4>
|
|
<p>Troggle <em>troggle/parsers/survex.py</em> currently parses and stores all the QMs it finds in survex files. The tables where the data
|
|
is put are listed in <a href="datamodel.html">the current data model</a>.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
<h4 id="qms.py">troggle/parsers/qms.py</a></h4>
|
|
<p>Troggle currently reports QMs separately collated for three historic caves and also imports all the QMs inside survex files.
|
|
Thus a recent cave such as 1623-264 (Balkhöhle) will only show QMs imported from the survex files:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>/cave/qms/<caveslug> e.g. <a href="/cave/qms/1623-264/">/cave/qms/1623-264/</a> works (slow page)
|
|
<li>/cave/<caveslug>-<year><qm_id> e.g. <a href="/cave/qms/1623-264/2019-lipstic2B">/cave/qms/1623-264/2019-lipstic2B</a> broken, no data shown
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p>There is an open issue in that although we use the name of the 'block' in the survex file to disambiguate QMs in the same cave and from
|
|
the same year, it is still possible for blocks to be named non-uniquely. This would crash the system as two QMs would have the same URL.
|
|
<p>The parser <em>troggle/parsers/qms.py</em> currently imports the <var>qm.csv</var> files used by
|
|
the 2004 perl script tablize-qms.pl (see below) into troggle using a mixture of csv and html parsers:
|
|
<code><pre>parseCaveQMs(cave='stein',inputFile=r"1623/204/qm.csv")
|
|
parseCaveQMs(cave='hauch',inputFile=r"1623/234/qm.csv")
|
|
parseCaveQMs(cave='kh', inputFile="1623/161/qmtodo.htm")
|
|
#parseCaveQMs(cave='balkonhoehle',inputFile=r"1623/264/qm.csv")</pre></code>
|
|
and reports these by cave and individually, e.g. see <a href="/cave/qms/1623-204">the 204 QMs</a> (slow page).
|
|
</p>
|
|
|
|
These URL recognisers work:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>/cave/qms/<caveslug> e.g. <a href="/cave/qms/1623-161/">/cave/qms/1623-161/</a> (slow page)
|
|
<li>/cave/<caveslug>-<year><qm_id> e.g. <a href="/cave/qms/1623-161/1997-1C">/cave/qms/1623-161/1997-1C</a>
|
|
</ul>
|
|
<p>Note that the hand-edited <var>qm.csv</var> for Balkonhohle was apparently abandoned unfinished as we transitioned to putting the QMs in the survex files instead. It contains QMs from 2014 and 2016:<br />
|
|
<a href="../../1623/264/qm.csv" download>/1623/264/qm.csv</a> - unused <br/>
|
|
|
|
<h2>QM archeology</h2>
|
|
|
|
<h4 id="QM_helper">js/QM_helper.js</h4>
|
|
<p>A relic.
|
|
<p>This is referred to in core/admin.py and appears to help with the userinterface within the
|
|
Django Admin control panel for manipulating QMs. It is not live as media/js/ is not plumbed in.
|
|
(Live javascript lives in media/jslib/ which is routed to the URL /javascript/.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
<h4 id="tabqmsqms">tablize-qms.pl</h4>
|
|
<p>This is a perl script dating from November 2004.
|
|
|
|
<p>it takes a <em>hand-edited</em> CSV file name as the program's argument and generates an HTML page listing all the QMs.
|
|
<p><a href="../../1623/258/tablize-qms.pl" download>Varient copies of it</a> (they are all slightly different) live in the three cave file folders in <em>:expoweb:/1623/</em>, in <em>258/, 234/</em>, and <em> 204/</em> . These generated html files are live pages in the cave descriptions: <br />
|
|
<a href="../../1623/258/qm.html">/1623/258/qm.html</a><br />
|
|
<a href="../../1623/234/qm.html">/1623/234/qm.html</a><br />
|
|
<a href="../../1623/204/qm.html">/1623/204/qm.html</a><br />
|
|
<p>Note that the <var>qms.csv</var> file file used as input by this script is an <em>entirely different format and table structure</em> from the <var>qms.csv</var> file produced by <a href="#svx2qm">svx2qm.py</a>.
|
|
|
|
<p>And in fact the formats of these 3 qm.csv files are <em>not the same</em> (These are the
|
|
"older or artisanal QM formats" referred to by Phil Withnall at the bottom if this page) :
|
|
|
|
Fields in 204/qm.csv are:
|
|
<code><pre><span style="font-size:small">Number, grade, area, description, page reference, nearest station, completion description, Comment
|
|
e.g.
|
|
C1999-204-09 C Wolp Hole in floor through dangerous boulders veined.10 Filled with rocks
|
|
</span></pre></code>
|
|
Fields in 258/qm.csv are:
|
|
<code><pre><span style="font-size:small">Cave, year, number, Grade, nearest station, description, completion description, found by, completed by
|
|
e.g.
|
|
258 2006 27 C 258.gknodel.4 Small passage to E in Germknödel Sandeep Mavadia and Dave Loeffler
|
|
</span></pre></code>
|
|
Fields in 264/qm.csv are:
|
|
<code><pre><span style="font-size:small">Year, number, Grade, Survey folder ref#, Surveyname, Nearest Station number, Area of the cave, Description, Y if marked on drawn-up survey,
|
|
2014 7 C 2014#11 roomwithaview 4 Room With a View Room With a View: "Probably chokes" opposite stations 4 and 5 ALREADY EXPLORED PROBABLY
|
|
</span></pre></code>
|
|
|
|
<p>There are also three versions of the QM list for cave 161 (Kaninchenhohle) apparently produced by this method but hand-edited:<br />
|
|
<a href="../../1623/161/qmaven.htm">/1623/161/qmaven.htm</a> 1996 version<br />
|
|
<a href="../../1623/161/qmtodo.htm">/1623/161/qmtodo.htm</a> 1998 version<br />
|
|
<a href="../../1623/161/qmdone.htm">/1623/161/qmdone.htm</a> 1999 (incomplete) version
|
|
</p>
|
|
<p>In the /1623/204/ folder there is a script <em>qmreader.pl</em> which apparently does the inverse of
|
|
<em>tablize-qms.pl</em>: it transforms a QMs' HTML file into a CSV file.
|
|
|
|
<p>As Wookey says (Slack, 7 Jan. 2020):
|
|
"I'm not quite sure what the best format is. Some combination of the
|
|
258 and 264 formats might be best. Including the cave number seems
|
|
pointless. Including 'conclusion' info seems like a good idea. I'm not
|
|
sure there what the benefit of separating the 'surveyname' and
|
|
'nearest station' fields is. Having an 'area of cave' field is somewhat useful
|
|
for grouping, even though it is sort-of repeating the 'survey-station' info.
|
|
|
|
If I was making a QM list I'd enter these fields:
|
|
year, number, Grade, nearest station, folder reference, description, found by, completed (Year), completion description/cave description link, completed by
|
|
|
|
with these details:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>number is just the serial number, not the whole year-serial-grade
|
|
<li>'nearest station' does not include the cave number
|
|
<li>completed is blank (for not completed) or a year for when it was done
|
|
<li>completion description should be a link to the relevant bit of cave description, but if that doesn't exist
|
|
</ul> then a short description here is OK."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
<h4 id="svx2qm">svx2qm.py</a></h4>
|
|
<p>Philip Withnall's 2019 QM extractor <em>svx2qm.py</em> (in :loser:/qms/) can be used to generate a list of all the QMs in all the svx files in either text or CSV format. When run together with <em>file</em> and <em>xargs</em> it will produce a output listing all the QMs:
|
|
<pre><code>cd loser
|
|
find -name '*.svx' | xargs qms/svx2qm.py --format csv
|
|
</code></pre>
|
|
and --format human produces a simple text format.
|
|
<p>
|
|
|
|
The 2019 copies are online in /expofiles/:
|
|
<a href="/expofiles/writeups/2019/qms2019.txt">qms2019.txt</a> and
|
|
<a href="/expofiles/writeups/2019/qms2019.csv">qms2019.csv</a>.
|
|
|
|
<p>
|
|
This will work on all survex *.svx files even those which have not yet been run through the troggle import process.
|
|
<p>Phil says (13 April 2020): <em>"The generated files are not meant to be served by the webserver, it's a tool for people to run locally. Someone could modify it to create HTML output (or post-process the CSV output to do the same), but that is work still to be done."</em>
|
|
|
|
|
|
<h4>Even older troggle archeology</a></h4>
|
|
|
|
<p>Looking through urls.py and core/view_caves.py we see a lot
|
|
of archaic code for providing new QM numbers, producing lists of QMs for a given cave and for downloading QM.csv files generated by the database.
|
|
But none of it appears to be working today (5 July 2022).
|
|
|
|
<p>Troggle has archaic URL recognisers in <var>:troggle:/urls.py</var> for:
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li>/newqmnumber/ - crashes troggle
|
|
<li>/getQMs/<caveslug> - crashes troggle
|
|
<li>/cave/<cave-id>/qm.csv - to download a <var>qm.csv</var> file (NB not qms.csv) - crashes troggle
|
|
<li>/downloadqms - crashes troggle
|
|
</ul>
|
|
So someone was busy at one time.
|
|
|
|
|
|
<h3>QMs - monitoring progress - old script</h3>
|
|
<h4 id="find-dead-qms">find-dead-qms.py</h4>
|
|
<p>This stand-alone script finds references to <em>completed</em> qms in the qm.csv files in the cave folders (/1623/ etc.) in the :expoweb: <a href="../computing/repos.html">repository</a>. It looks to see which QMs have been completed but where there is not yet a matching text in the cave description.
|
|
<blockquote><em>Quick and dirty Python script to find references to completed qms in the
|
|
cave description pages. Run this to find which bits of description
|
|
need updating.
|
|
<br>
|
|
The list of qms is read from the qm.csv file and any with an entry in the
|
|
"Completion description" column (column 7) are searched for in all the html
|
|
files.
|
|
<br>
|
|
The script prints a list of the completed qms that it found references to
|
|
and in which file.
|
|
<br>
|
|
Nial Peters - 2011
|
|
</em></blockquote>
|
|
|
|
<hr>
|
|
<pre>
|
|
From: Philip Withnall [tecnocode]
|
|
Sent: 13 April 2020 23:41
|
|
To: Philip Sargent (Gmail)
|
|
Subject: Re: svx2qm
|
|
|
|
Hi Philip,
|
|
|
|
Hope you're well, thanks for getting in touch about this.
|
|
|
|
The generated files are not meant to be served by the webserver, it's a tool for people to run locally.
|
|
Someone could modify it to create HTML output (or post-process the CSV output to do the same),
|
|
but that is work still to be done.
|
|
|
|
I can't see any problem with moving it all to expoweb/scripts/ - so long as it is
|
|
run with the loser top level directory specified - but I might be mistaken:
|
|
find /home/expo/loser -name '*.svx' | xargs ./svx2qm.py --format human
|
|
and it should go into the Makefile too at some point.
|
|
|
|
Feel free to move it wherever; I am not planning on doing any further work on it.
|
|
The script itself just expects to be passed some (relative or absolute) paths to SVX files,
|
|
so can be placed wherever, as long as it's passed appropriate relative paths.
|
|
|
|
I haven't written any other scripts which post-process the data or otherwise format it.
|
|
|
|
I guess it all depends on what questions people are trying to answer using the QM data,
|
|
as to how (and where) best to present it. I'm afraid I don't have any suggestions there.
|
|
|
|
:Rob Watson wrote some documentation about QMs
|
|
:<a href="../survey/qmentry.html">http://expo.survex.com/handbook/survey/qmentry.html</a>
|
|
:is there anything subtle missing as to how they are used ?
|
|
|
|
Nope, I think Rob's page covers it all. That page also documents the correct QM format
|
|
which is what svx2qm.py understands. (There were some older or artisanal QM formats
|
|
floating around at one point, although I think I reformatted them all so the tool
|
|
would understand them, and so people would hopefully standardise on what Rob's
|
|
documented from then on.)
|
|
|
|
Philip</pre>
|
|
|
|
<hr>
|
|
Return to: <a href="scriptsother.html">Other scripts</a><br />
|
|
Return to: <a href="trogintro.html">Troggle intro</a><br />
|
|
Troggle index:
|
|
<a href="trogindex.html">Index of all troggle documents</a><br /><hr /></body>
|
|
</html>
|