gnunux@silique.fr
5668520a31
Co-authored-by: Emmanuel Garette <egarette@silique.fr> Co-authored-by: gwen <gwenaelremond@free.fr> Reviewed-on: #20 Co-authored-by: gnunux@silique.fr <gnunux@silique.fr> Co-committed-by: gnunux@silique.fr <gnunux@silique.fr>
262 lines
7.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
262 lines
7.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
A family
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============
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Synopsis
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---------
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A family is a container of variables and subfamily.
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.. attention:: A family without a subfamily or subvariable will be automatically deleted.
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Name
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-------------
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It is with this name that we will be able to interact with the family.
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It's best to follow the :ref:`convention on variable names`.
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Shorthand declaration
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----------------------------
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Shorthand declaration is a way to declare a family in a single line. But you can only define family name and description.
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To create a family, just add a key with it's name and variables as values. Attention, do not declare any other attributs.
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By default, the description of the variable is the family name.
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If you add comment in same line of name, this comment is use as description:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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---
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version: '1.1'
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my_family: # This is a great family
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variable:
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Parameters
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---------------
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.. FIXME: faire une page sur la "convention on variable names"
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 15 45
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Parameter
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- Comments
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* - type, _type
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`string`
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- possile values:
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- `family` (**default value**)
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- `leadership`
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- `dynamic`
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.. note:: If a subfamily or a subvariable already has the name `"type"`, it is possible to use the `"_type"` attribute.
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* - description, _description
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`string`
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- Description of the family.
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User information to understand the usefulness of the family.
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..note:: If a subfamily or subvariable already has the name "description" it is possible to use the "_description" attribute.
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* - help, _help
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`string`
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- Additional help associated with the family.
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.. note:: If a subfamily or a subvariable already has the name "help" it is possible to use the "_help" attribute.
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* - mode, _mode
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`string`
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- Family mode.
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The default mode of a family is the smallest mode of the parent families, child variables, or child families that are contained in that family.
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This mode also allows you to define the default mode for variables or families included in this family.
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.. note:: If a subfamily or a subvariable already has the name "mode" it is possible to add the "_mode" attribute.
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* - hidden, _hidden
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`string`
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- Invisible family.
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Allows you to hide a family as well as the variables or families included in this family.
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This means that the family will no longer be visible in `read-write` mode, but only for calculations or in `read-only` mode.
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.. note:: If a subfamily or a subvariable already has the name "hidden" it is possible to add the "_hidden" attribute.
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* - disabled, _disabled
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`string`
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- Disabled family.
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Allows you to deactivate a family as well as the variables or families included in this family.
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This means that the family will no longer be visible to the user but also to a :term:`calculation`.
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.. note:: If a subfamily or a subvariable already has the name "disabled" it is possible to use the "_disabled" attribute.
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Dynamically created family
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-----------------------------
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To create a family dynamically, you must create a fictitious family linked to a calculation.
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The family name will actually be the prefix of the new name. Alternativly you can specify the suffix in the name, ie `my_{{ suffix }}_name`.
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The suffix will come from the calculation.
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Obviously if the result of calculation were to evolve, new dynamic families will appear or disappear.
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Leader or follower variable
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-----------------------------
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A leader family has a typical attribute of “leadership”. The type is required.
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A leader family
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----------------
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The leader and follower variables are placed in a leader family.
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A leader family cannot contain other families.
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The default mode of the leader family is the mode of the leader variable.
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Leader variable
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----------------
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A leader variable is a variable that will guide the length of other variables (called follower variables).
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A leader variable is a :doc:`variable` that must have the `multiple` type.
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A leader variable may be mandatory.
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The default mode corresponds to the smallest mode defined for the follower variables.
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Follower variable
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--------------------
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A follower variable is a variable whose length is not determined by itself, but is identical to that of the leader variable on which it depends.
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A follower variable is a variable placed just behind a leader variable or another follower variable.
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The order in which the tracking variables are defined is important.
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This variable can be of multiple type. In this case, for a determined index of the leading variable, it is possible to put several values to the same variable.
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A follower variable may be required. This means that when a leader variable is entered, the follower variable must also be a value at the index considered. If no value is defined for the leader variable, no value is specified for the follower variable.
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The default mode of a follower variable corresponds to the mode of the leader variable.
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If a leader variable is hidden or disabled, the follower variables will be hidden or disabled as well.
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Examples
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----------
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Simple family:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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---
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version: '1.1'
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my_family:
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type: family
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description: This is a great family
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help: This is the help of a great family
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mode: expert
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Dynamically created family
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----------------------------
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.. code-block:: yaml
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---
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version: '1.1'
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varname:
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multi: true
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default:
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- val1
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- val2
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my_dyn_family_:
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type: dynamic
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dynamic:
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type: variable
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variable: rougail.varname
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description: 'Describe'
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my_dyn_var:
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type: string
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description: 'Variable description'
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This will dynamically create two families:
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- "rougail.my_dyn_family_val1"
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- "rougail.my_dyn_family_val2"
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In the dynamic family "rougail.my_dyn_family_val1" we will find a variable "my_dyn_var".
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Here is a second example:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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---
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version: '1.1'
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varname:
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multi: true
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default:
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- val1
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- val2
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my_dyn_{{ suffix }}_family:
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type: dynamic
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dynamic:
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type: variable
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variable: rougail.varname
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description: 'Describe'
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my_dyn_var:
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type: string
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description: 'Variable description'
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This will dynamically create two families:
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- "rougail.my_dyn_val1_family"
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- "rougail.my_dyn_val2_family"
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In the dynamic family "rougail.my_dyn_val1_family" we will find a variable "my_dyn_var".
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Leader or follower variable
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-------------------------------
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Definition of leader and follower variables
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Here is an example of defining a leading variable and two following variables:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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---
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version: '1.1'
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family:
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type: leadership
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leader:
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multi: true
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follower1:
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follower2:
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multi: true
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Adding a new follower variable
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To add a new follower variable, in a new dictionary, simply define one or more new variables in the leader family:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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---
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version: '1.1'
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family:
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follower3:
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