"Vijay,
I have used SixPack sometimes. The programming is a little less forgiving
than Athena and Artemis for inputting of data. What I would try if I were
you is first importing your data into Athena. I've only used this program
for PCA and LCF so I don't know if this will work for the other types of
analysis but this is what I do to get my data working.
1) Import the data into Athena (which requires that you specify your
mu0, muE)
2) Click on the checkbox for the individual file that you want to make
"ready" for SixPack
3) Go to file -> saved marked group to file as -> mu(E) .. (( if you
want to export it as normalized that is fine but make sure you do your
background subtraction, I still save it as a .mu in that case anyhow but I
just choose norm(E) instead of mu(E) ))
4) Then Athena prompts you with "marked".. What you need to do is to
save it as a .mu file ((or .chi if you're doing EXAFS analysis, but I have
not done that so you're going to have to figure out how to do that if that's
what you're needing it for)).. So an example file name is one.mu.. (don't
put numbers in your file name, the compiler doesn't like it, i.e. cu2ostd.mu
is a bad file name)
5) I prefer to remove the header files from the .mu file itself (the
stuff with the '#' symbol), I forget if this upsets the SixPack program.
Please see below for what type of file output that I have been able to use.
Then in the end you should have two columns, instead of the three that you
had in your mail that you sent to the list. If you want me to send you an
example file, just e-mail me.
Example output of a file that I exported from Athena to imported into
SixPack:
7068.0174 -0.18245200
7068.9274 -0.18305700
7070.0074 -0.18422800
7070.9874 -0.18216700
7071.9974 -0.18503600
7072.8774 -0.18276100
7074.0574 -0.18661000
7075.1174 -0.18699300
7076.0174 -0.18723800
7076.9074 -0.18667400
7077.9074 -0.18584000
7079.0474 -0.19024300
I hope this helps!
Andrew Campos"
Hi all,
Thanks a lot Andrews, the procedure you describes definitely works in all the cases of SIXPack except in case of SAMView. I had asked the same question to Sam webb sir and I am lucky that I got a response from him too. The response is:
"Hi Abhijeet -
The file attached got added as text to the message, so I copied it and
pasted it into a notepad document. Make sure there is not a blank line
at the end of the data. I've attached my file.
When you load, it'll come up with the generic reader. Choose column 1
as E, column 2 as I0 and column 3 as I1. Make sure that you have "1"
line selected as the offset (to ignore the header). It should read
correctly and then make sure you plot MuT, not MuF. Worked simply for
me. Also make sure you are doing this in the viewer and not in another
module. The SamView module imports all data, and writes a 2 column
ascii. The other use a plain, 2 column ascii format.
Hope that helps.
Sam"
The file sent by Sam webb sir is attached.
Thus, now I am able to understand how to plot the data in SAMView as well as other analysis sections. Thanks to mailing list members.
with regards
Abhijeet Gaur