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[gnuastro-commits] master a8e125a: Version 0.9 final touches
From: |
Mohammad Akhlaghi |
Subject: |
[gnuastro-commits] master a8e125a: Version 0.9 final touches |
Date: |
Wed, 17 Apr 2019 13:07:13 -0400 (EDT) |
branch: master
commit a8e125ab2e176578c9d3e638fcf7c197dd75d722
Author: Mohammad Akhlaghi <address@hidden>
Commit: Mohammad Akhlaghi <address@hidden>
Version 0.9 final touches
After running a spell-check on the parts of the book added since version
0.8, some typos were found and fixed.
Also, the NEWS file is updated to have the new software and shared library
versions and date.
The webpage source was also corrected to have the new versions and date.
---
NEWS | 2 +-
doc/announce-acknowledge.txt | 12 +++-----
doc/gnuastro.en.html | 8 +++---
doc/gnuastro.fr.html | 8 +++---
doc/gnuastro.texi | 67 ++++++++++++++++++++++----------------------
doc/release-checklist.txt | 5 ++--
6 files changed, 49 insertions(+), 53 deletions(-)
diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS
index d7c6cbe..39557c3 100644
--- a/NEWS
+++ b/NEWS
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ GNU Astronomy Utilities NEWS -*-
outline -*-
Copyright (C) 2015-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
See the end of the file for license conditions.
-* Noteworthy changes in release X.X (library X.X.X) (YYYY-MM-DD) [stable]
+* Noteworthy changes in release 0.9 (library 7.0.0) (2019-04-17) [stable]
** New features
diff --git a/doc/announce-acknowledge.txt b/doc/announce-acknowledge.txt
index 1113948..89f5bcb 100644
--- a/doc/announce-acknowledge.txt
+++ b/doc/announce-acknowledge.txt
@@ -1,13 +1,9 @@
Alphabetically ordered list to acknowledge in the next release.
-Roberto Baena Gallé
-Leindert Boogaard
-Elham Eftekhari
-Raúl Infante Sainz
-Lee Kelvin
-Javier Román
-David Valls-Gabaud
-Ignacio Trujillo
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/doc/gnuastro.en.html b/doc/gnuastro.en.html
index a0cd4e2..eba3998 100644
--- a/doc/gnuastro.en.html
+++ b/doc/gnuastro.en.html
@@ -85,9 +85,9 @@ for entertaining and easy to read real world examples of using
<p>
The current stable release
- is <a href="http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.8.tar.gz">Gnuastro
- 0.8</a> (December 28th, 2018).
- Use <a href="http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.8.tar.gz">a
+ is <a href="http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.9.tar.gz">Gnuastro
+ 0.9</a> (April 17th, 2019).
+ Use <a href="http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.9.tar.gz">a
mirror</a> if possible.
<!-- Comment the test release notice when the test release is not more
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ for entertaining and easy to read real world examples of using
To stay up to date, please subscribe.</p>
<p>For details of the significant changes in this release, please see the
- <a
href="https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnuastro.git/plain/NEWS?id=gnuastro_v0.8">NEWS</a>
+ <a
href="https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnuastro.git/plain/NEWS?id=gnuastro_v0.9">NEWS</a>
file.</p>
<p>The
diff --git a/doc/gnuastro.fr.html b/doc/gnuastro.fr.html
index 043a1d5..ee9f654 100644
--- a/doc/gnuastro.fr.html
+++ b/doc/gnuastro.fr.html
@@ -85,15 +85,15 @@ h3 { clear: both; }
<h3 id="download">Téléchargement</h3>
<p>La version stable actuelle
- est <a href="https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.8.tar.gz">Gnuastro
- 0.8</a> (sortie le 28 décembre
- 2018). Utilisez <a
href="https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.8.tar.gz">un
+ est <a href="https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.9.tar.gz">Gnuastro
+ 0.9</a> (sortie le 28 avril
+ 2019). Utilisez <a
href="https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.9.tar.gz">un
miroir</a> si possible. <br />Les nouvelles publications sont annoncées
sur <a
href="https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnuastro">info-gnuastro</a>.
Abonnez-vous pour rester au courant.</p>
<p>Les changements importants sont décrits dans le
- fichier <a
href="https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnuastro.git/plain/NEWS?id=gnuastro_v0.8">
+ fichier <a
href="https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnuastro.git/plain/NEWS?id=gnuastro_v0.9">
NEWS</a>.</p>
<p>Le lien
diff --git a/doc/gnuastro.texi b/doc/gnuastro.texi
index 684636f..34346ac 100644
--- a/doc/gnuastro.texi
+++ b/doc/gnuastro.texi
@@ -1745,23 +1745,24 @@ particular in collaboration with Johan Knapen and
Ignacio Trujillo.
In general, we would like to gratefully thank the following people for
their useful and constructive comments and suggestions (in alphabetical
order by family name): Valentina Abril-melgarejo, Marjan Akbari, Roland
-Bacon, Karl Berry, Leindert Boogaard, Nicolas Bouch@'e, Fernando Buitrago,
-Adrian Bunk, Rosa Calvi, Nushkia Chamba, Benjamin Clement, Nima Dehdilani,
-Antonio Diaz Diaz, Pierre-Alain Duc, Gaspar Galaz, Th@'address@hidden Godefroy,
-Madusha Gunawardhana, Stephen Hamer, Takashi Ichikawa, Ra@'ul Infante
-Sainz, Brandon Invergo, Oryna Ivashtenko, Aur@'elien Jarno, Lee Kelvin,
-Brandon Kelly, Mohammad-Reza Khellat, Johan Knapen, Geoffry Krouchi,
-Floriane Leclercq, Alan Lefor, Guillaume Mahler, Juan Molina Tobar,
-Francesco Montanari, Dmitrii Oparin, Bertrand Pain, William Pence, Mamta
-Pommier, Bob Proulx, Teymoor Saifollahi, Yahya Sefidbakht, Alejandro
-Serrano Borlaff, Jenny Sorce, Lee Spitler, Richard Stallman, Michael Stein,
-Ole Streicher, Alfred M. Szmidt, Michel Tallon, Juan C. Tello, @'Eric
-Thi@'ebaut, Ignacio Trujillo, David Valls-Gabaud, Aaron Watkins,
-Christopher Willmer, Sara Yousefi Taemeh, Johannes Zabl. The GNU French
-Translation Team is also managing the French version of the top Gnuastro
-webpage which we highly appreciate. Finally we should thank all the
-(sometimes anonymous) people in various online forums which patiently
-answered all our small (but important) technical questions.
+Bacon, Roberto Baena Gall\'e, Karl Berry, Leindert Boogaard, Nicolas
+Bouch@'e, Fernando Buitrago, Adrian Bunk, Rosa Calvi, Nushkia Chamba,
+Benjamin Clement, Nima Dehdilani, Antonio Diaz Diaz, Pierre-Alain Duc,
+Elham Eftekhari, Gaspar Galaz, Th@'address@hidden Godefroy, Madusha
Gunawardhana,
+Stephen Hamer, Takashi Ichikawa, Ra@'ul Infante Sainz, Brandon Invergo,
+Oryna Ivashtenko, Aur@'elien Jarno, Lee Kelvin, Brandon Kelly,
+Mohammad-Reza Khellat, Johan Knapen, Geoffry Krouchi, Floriane Leclercq,
+Alan Lefor, Guillaume Mahler, Juan Molina Tobar, Francesco Montanari,
+Dmitrii Oparin, Bertrand Pain, William Pence, Mamta Pommier, Bob Proulx,
+Teymoor Saifollahi, Yahya Sefidbakht, Alejandro Serrano Borlaff, Jenny
+Sorce, Lee Spitler, Richard Stallman, Michael Stein, Ole Streicher, Alfred
+M. Szmidt, Michel Tallon, Juan C. Tello, @'Eric Thi@'ebaut, Ignacio
+Trujillo, David Valls-Gabaud, Aaron Watkins, Christopher Willmer, Sara
+Yousefi Taemeh, Johannes Zabl. The GNU French Translation Team is also
+managing the French version of the top Gnuastro webpage which we highly
+appreciate. Finally we should thank all the (sometimes anonymous) people in
+various online forums which patiently answered all our small (but
+important) technical questions.
All work on Gnuastro has been voluntary, but the authors are most grateful
to the following institutions (in chronological order) for hosting us in
@@ -10373,7 +10374,7 @@ The reason you need to use @key{/} as the keyword name
for setting a title
is that @key{/} is the first non-white character.
The title(s) is(are) written into the FITS with the same order that
address@hidden is called. Therefore in one run of the Fits progarm, you
address@hidden is called. Therefore in one run of the Fits program, you
can specify many different titles (with their own keywords under them). For
example the command below that builds on the previous example and adds
another group of keywords named @code{A1} and @code{A2}.
@@ -10463,7 +10464,7 @@ will print @code{NOT-PRESENT}, and if they cannot be
verified it will print
can't be verified), the Fits program will also return with a failure.
By default this function will also print a short description of the
address@hidden AND @code{CHECKSUM} keywords. You can supress this extra
address@hidden AND @code{CHECKSUM} keywords. You can suppress this extra
information with @code{--quiet} option.
@item --copykeys=INT:INT
@@ -10505,7 +10506,7 @@ Interpret the value of the given keyword in the FITS
date format (most
generally: @code{YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.ddd...}) and return the corresponding
Unix epoch time (number of seconds that have passed since 00:00:00
Thursday, January 1st, 1970). The @code{Thh:mm:ss.ddd...} section
-(specifing the time of day), and also the @code{.ddd...} (specifying the
+(specifying the time of day), and also the @code{.ddd...} (specifying the
fraction of a second) are optional. The value to this option must be the
FITS keyword name that contains the requested date, for example
@option{--datetosec=DATE-OBS}.
@@ -11290,7 +11291,7 @@ $ asttable plaintext.txt --output=table.fits
--tabletype=fits-binary
Table's input dataset can be given either as a file or from Standard input
(see @ref{Standard input}). In the absence of selected columns, all the
input's columns and rows will be written to the output. If any output file
-is explicity requested (with @option{--output}) the output table will be
+is explicitly requested (with @option{--output}) the output table will be
written in it. When no output file is explicitly requested the output table
will be written to the standard output.
@@ -12321,9 +12322,9 @@ The first popped operand to this operator must be a
positive integer number
which specifies how many further operands should be popped from the
stack. All the subsequently popped operands must have the same type and
size. This operator (and all the variable-operand operators similar to it
-that are discussed below) will work in multithreaded mode unless Arithmetic
-is called with the @option{--numthreads=1} option, see @ref{Multi-threaded
-operations}.
+that are discussed below) will work in multi-threaded mode unless
+Arithmetic is called with the @option{--numthreads=1} option, see
address@hidden operations}.
Each pixel of the output of the @code{min} operator will be given the
minimum value of the same pixel from all the popped operands/images. For
@@ -12380,13 +12381,13 @@ Combine the specified number of inputs into a single
output that contains
the number of remaining elements after @mymath{\sigma}-clipping on each
element/pixel (for more on @mymath{\sigma}-clipping, see @ref{Sigma
clipping}). This operator is very similar to @command{min}, with the
-exception that it expects two operands (paramters for sigma-clipping)
+exception that it expects two operands (parameters for sigma-clipping)
before the total number of inputs. The first popped operand is the
termination criteria and the second is the multiple of @mymath{\sigma}.
For example in the command below, the first popped operand (@command{0.2})
is the sigma clipping termination criteria. If the termination criteria is
-larger than 1 it is interpretted as the number of clips to do. But if it is
+larger than 1 it is interpreted as the number of clips to do. But if it is
between 0 and 1, then it is the tolerance level on the standard deviation
(see @ref{Sigma clipping}). The second popped operand (@command{5}) is the
multiple of sigma to use in sigma-clipping. The third popped operand
@@ -12888,7 +12889,7 @@ $ astarithmetic image.fits set-i i i 5 gt nan where
@end example
@item tofile-AAA
-Write the top oprand on the operands stack into a file called @code{AAA}
+Write the top operand on the operands stack into a file called @code{AAA}
(can be any FITS file name) without changing the operands stack. If you
don't need the dataset any more and would like to free it, see the
@code{tofilefree} operator below.
@@ -12991,7 +12992,7 @@ as a file.
The name of the final file can be specified with the @option{--output}
option, but if its not given, Arithmetic will use ``automatic output'' on
the name of the first FITS image encountered to generate an output file
-name, see @ref{Automatic output}. By default, if the output file aready
+name, see @ref{Automatic output}. By default, if the output file already
exists, it will be deleted before Arithmetic starts operation. However,
this can be disabled with the @option{--dontdelete} option (see below). At
any point during Arithmetic's operation, you can also write the top operand
@@ -13003,7 +13004,7 @@ dataset will be taken from the first input image (that
contains a WCS) on
the command-line. This can be modified with the @option{--wcsfile} and
@option{--wcshdu} options described below. When the @option{--quiet} option
isn't given, the name and extension of the dataset used for the output's
-WCS is printed on the commandline.
+WCS is printed on the command-line.
Through operators like those starting with @code{collapse-}, the
dimensionality of the inputs may not be the same as the outputs. By
@@ -13065,7 +13066,7 @@ file on the command-line with WCS) will be used in the
output.
This option will mostly be used when the default file (first of the set of
inputs) is not the one containing your desired WCS. But with this option,
-you can also use Arithmetic to rewrite/chage the WCS of an existing FITS
+you can also use Arithmetic to rewrite/change the WCS of an existing FITS
dataset from another file:
@example
@@ -22394,7 +22395,7 @@ is based on the western (Gregorian) calendar. Dates
that are stored in this
format are complicated for automatic processing: a night starts in the
final hours of one calendar day, and extends to the early hours of the next
calendar day. As a result, to identify datasets from one night, we commonly
-need to search for two dates. However calendar peculiarites can make this
+need to search for two dates. However calendar peculiarities can make this
identification very difficult. For example when an observation is done on
the night separating two months (like the night starting on March 31st and
going into April 1st), or two years (like the night starting on December
@@ -26434,7 +26435,7 @@ string @code{fitsdate} (see description of
@code{gal_fits_key_date_to_struct_tm} above).
The Unix epoch time is in units of seconds, but the FITS date format allows
-sub-second accuracy. The las two arguments are for the (optional)
+sub-second accuracy. The last two arguments are for the (optional)
sub-second portion. If @code{fitsdate} contains sub-second accuracy, then
the starting of the sub-second part is stored in the @code{char *} pointer
that @code{subsecstr} points to, and @code{subsec} will the corresponding
@@ -29093,7 +29094,7 @@ frequency plot (CFP, see @ref{Histogram and Cumulative
Frequency
Plot}). Imagine setting the horizontal axis of the input's CFP to a range
of 0 to 100, and finding the first part where its slope is
constantly/contiguously flat for a certain fraction/width of the whole
-dataset's range. Below we'll descibe this in more detail.
+dataset's range. Below we'll describe this in more detail.
This function will first remove all the blank elements and sort the
remaining elements. If @code{inplace} is non-zero this step will be done in
diff --git a/doc/release-checklist.txt b/doc/release-checklist.txt
index 6ebb751..e1762d6 100644
--- a/doc/release-checklist.txt
+++ b/doc/release-checklist.txt
@@ -59,9 +59,7 @@ all the commits needed for this release have been completed.
$ git shortlog gnuastro_vP.P...HEAD --numbered --summary > ~/people.txt
$ cat doc/announce-acknowledge.txt >> ~/people.txt
- [STABLE] Clean `doc/announce-acknowledge.txt':
- $ echo "Alphabetically ordered list to acknowledge in the next release." \
- > doc/announce-acknowledge.txt
+ [STABLE] Remove the names in `doc/announce-acknowledge.txt'.
- [STABLE] Correct the version links in the webpage
@@ -78,6 +76,7 @@ all the commits needed for this release have been completed.
- Update Gnulib and Autoconf archives, then remove all the non-version
controlled files and bootstrap Gnuastro:
+ $ git clean -fxd
$ ./bootstrap --copy --gnulib-srcdir=/path/to/updated/gnulib
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