photobiology (version 0.9.30)

interpolate_spct: Map a spectrum to new wavelength values.

Description

This function gives the result of interpolating spectral data from the original set of wavelengths to a new one.

Usage

interpolate_spct(spct, w.length.out = NULL, fill = NA, length.out = NULL)

interpolate_mspct( mspct, w.length.out = NULL, fill = NA, length.out = NULL, .parallel = FALSE, .paropts = NULL )

Arguments

spct

generic_spct

w.length.out

numeric vector of wavelengths (nm)

fill

a value to be assigned to out of range wavelengths

length.out

numeric value

mspct

an object of class "generic_mspct"

.parallel

if TRUE, apply function in parallel, using parallel backend provided by foreach

.paropts

a list of additional options passed into the foreach function when parallel computation is enabled. This is important if (for example) your code relies on external data or packages: use the .export and .packages arguments to supply them so that all cluster nodes have the correct environment set up for computing.

Value

A new spectral object of the same class as argument spct.

Details

If length.out it is a numeric value, then gives the number of rows in the output, if it is NULL, the values in the numeric vector w.length.out are used. If both are not NULL then the range of w.length.out and length.out are used to generate a vector of wavelength. A value of NULL for fill prevents extrapolation. If both w.length.out and length.out are NULL the input is returned as is. If w.length.out has length equal to zero, zero rows from the input are returned.

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
interpolate_spct(sun.spct, 400:500, NA)
interpolate_spct(sun.spct, 400:500, NULL)
interpolate_spct(sun.spct, seq(200, 1000, by=0.1), 0)
interpolate_spct(sun.spct, c(400,500), length.out=201)

# }

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