cf.Domain.construct¶
-
Domain.
construct
(identity, default=ValueError())[source]¶ Select a metadata construct by its identity.
New in version 1.7.0.
Parameters: identity: optional
Select constructs that have the given identity. If exactly one construct is selected then it is returned, otherwise an exception is raised.
The identity is specified by a string (e.g.
'latitude'
,'long_name=time'
, etc.); or a compiled regular expression (e.g.re.compile('^atmosphere')
), for which all constructs whose identities match (viare.search
) are selected.Each construct has a number of identities, and is selected if any of them match any of those provided. A construct’s identities are those returned by its
identities
method. In the following example, the constructc
has four identities:>>> c.identities() ['time', 'long_name=Time', 'foo=bar', 'ncvar%T']
In addition, each construct also has an identity based its construct key (e.g.
'key%dimensioncoordinate2'
)Note that in the output of a
print
call ordump
method, a construct is always described by one of its identities, and so this description may always be used as an identity argument.- default: optional
Return the value of the default parameter if the property has not been set. If set to an
Exception
instance then it will be raised instead.
Returns: The selected construct.
Examples:
>>> print(f.constructs) Constructs: {'cellmethod0': <CellMethod: area: mean>, 'dimensioncoordinate0': <DimensionCoordinate: latitude(5) degrees_north>, 'dimensioncoordinate1': <DimensionCoordinate: longitude(8) degrees_east>, 'dimensioncoordinate2': <DimensionCoordinate: long_name=time(1) days since 2018-12-01 >, 'domainaxis0': <DomainAxis: size(5)>, 'domainaxis1': <DomainAxis: size(8)>, 'domainaxis2': <DomainAxis: size(1)>}
Select the construct that has the “standard_name” property of ‘latitude’:
>>> f.construct('latitude') <DimensionCoordinate: latitude(5) degrees_north>
Select the cell method construct that has a “method” of ‘mean’:
>>> f.construct('method:mean') <CellMethod: area: mean>
Attempt to select the construct whose “standard_name” start with the letter ‘l’:
>>> import re >>> f.construct(re.compile('^l')) ValueError: Can't return 2 constructs >>> f.construct(re.compile('^l'), default='no construct') 'no construct'