\(\renewcommand\AA{\unicode{x212B}}\)
Table of Contents
Name | Direction | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Workspace | InOut | Workspace | Mandatory | |
ComponentName | Input | string | The name of the RectangularDetector to resize. | |
ScaleX | Input | number | 1 | The scaling factor in the X direction. Default 1.0 |
ScaleY | Input | number | 1 | The scaling factor in the Y direction. Default 1.0 |
This algorithm will resize a RectangularDetector by applying X and Y scaling factors. Each pixel’s position will be modified relative to the 0,0 point of the detector by these factors. Typically, a RectangularDetector is constructed around its center, so this would scale the detector around its center.
This only works on RectangularDetectors. Banks formed by e.g. tubes cannot be scaled in this way.
Internally, this sets the “scalex” and “scaley” parameters on the RectangularDetector. Note that the scaling is relative to the original size, and is not cumulative: that is, if you Resize * 2 and again * 3, your final detector is 3 times larger than the original, not 6 times.
Note: As of this writing, the algorithm does NOT modify the shape of individual pixels. This means that algorithms based on solid angle calculations might be off. Ray-tracing (e.g. peak finding) are unaffected.
See also
MoveInstrumentComponent v1 and RotateInstrumentComponent v1 for other ways to move components.
Example - Resize bank 1:
# a sample workspace with rectangular detectors
ws = CreateSampleWorkspace()
ResizeRectangularDetector(ws,"bank1",2.0,0.5)
i=ws.getInstrument()
bank1=i.getComponentByName('bank1')
bank2=i.getComponentByName('bank2')
print ("bank 1 was scaled and is now {:.2f} by {:.2f}".format(bank1.xsize(), bank1.ysize()))
print ("bank 2 was not scaled and remains {:.2f} by {:.2f}".format(bank2.xsize(), bank2.ysize()))
Output:
bank 1 was scaled and is now 0.16 by 0.04
bank 2 was not scaled and remains 0.08 by 0.08
Categories: AlgorithmIndex | DataHandling\Instrument
C++ header: ResizeRectangularDetector.h (last modified: 2020-03-20)
C++ source: ResizeRectangularDetector.cpp (last modified: 2020-04-07)