uproot.concatenate
Defined in uproot.behaviors.TBranch on line 234.
- uproot.behaviors.TBranch.concatenate(files, expressions=None, cut=None, *, filter_name=<function no_filter>, filter_typename=<function no_filter>, filter_branch=<function no_filter>, aliases=None, language=uproot.language.python.PythonLanguage(), entry_start=None, entry_stop=None, decompression_executor=None, interpretation_executor=None, library='ak', ak_add_doc=False, how=None, custom_classes=None, allow_missing=False, **options)
- Parameters:
files – See below.
expressions (None, str, or list of str) – Names of
TBranchesor aliases to convert to arrays or mathematical expressions of them. Uses thelanguageto evaluate. If None, allTBranchesselected by the filters are included.cut (None or str) – If not None, this expression filters all of the
expressions.filter_name (None, glob string, regex string in
"/pattern/i"syntax, function of str → bool, or iterable of the above) – A filter to selectTBranchesby name.filter_typename (None, glob string, regex string in
"/pattern/i"syntax, function of str → bool, or iterable of the above) – A filter to selectTBranchesby type.filter_branch (None or function of uproot.TBranch → bool, uproot.interpretation.Interpretation, or None) – A filter to select
TBranchesusing the full uproot.TBranch object. If the function returns False or None, theTBranchis excluded; if the function returns True, it is included with its standard interpretation; if an uproot.interpretation.Interpretation, this interpretation overrules the standard one.aliases (None or dict of str → str) – Mathematical expressions that can be used in
expressionsor other aliases (without cycles). Uses thelanguageengine to evaluate. If None, only the aliases are available.language (uproot.language.Language) – Language used to interpret the
expressionsandaliases.entry_start (None or int) – The first entry to include. If None, start at zero. If negative, count from the end, like a Python slice.
entry_stop (None or int) – The first entry to exclude (i.e. one greater than the last entry to include). If None, stop at num_entries. If negative, count from the end, like a Python slice.
decompression_executor (None or Executor with a
submitmethod) – The executor that is used to decompressTBaskets; if None, a uproot.TrivialExecutor is created.interpretation_executor (None or Executor with a
submitmethod) – The executor that is used to interpret uncompressedTBasketdata as arrays; if None, a uproot.TrivialExecutor is created.library (str or uproot.interpretation.library.Library) – The library that is used to represent arrays. Options are
"np"for NumPy,"ak"for Awkward Array, and"pd"for Pandas.ak_add_doc (bool | dict) – If True and
library="ak", add the TBranchtitleto the Awkward__doc__parameter of the array. if dict = {key:value} andlibrary="ak", add the TBranchvalueto the Awkwardkeyparameter of the array.how (None, str, or container type) – Library-dependent instructions for grouping. The only recognized container types are
tuple,list, anddict. Note that the container type itself must be passed ashow, not an instance of that type (i.e.how=tuple, nothow=()).custom_classes (None or dict) – If a dict, override the classes from the uproot.ReadOnlyFile or
uproot.classes.allow_missing (bool) – If True, skip over any files that do not contain the specified
TTree.options – See below.
Returns an array with data from a set of files concatenated into one.
For example:
>>> array = uproot.concatenate("files*.root:tree", ["x", "y"])
Depending on the number of files, the number of selected
TBranches, and the size of your computer’s memory, this function might not have enough memory to run.Allowed types for the
filesparameter:str/bytes: relative or absolute filesystem path or URL, without any colons other than Windows drive letter or URL schema. Examples:
"rel/file.root","C:\abs\file.root","http://where/what.root"str/bytes: same with an object-within-ROOT path, separated by a colon. Example:
"rel/file.root:tdirectory/ttree"pathlib.Path: always interpreted as a filesystem path or URL only (no object-within-ROOT path), regardless of whether there are any colons. Examples:
Path("rel:/file.root"),Path("/abs/path:stuff.root")glob syntax in str/bytes and pathlib.Path. Examples:
Path("rel/*.root"),"/abs/*.root:tdirectory/ttree"dict: keys are filesystem paths, values are objects-within-ROOT paths. Example:
{{"/data_v1/*.root": "ttree_v1", "/data_v2/*.root": "ttree_v2"}}already-open TTree objects.
iterables of the above.
Options (type; default):
handler (uproot.source.chunk.Source class; None)
timeout (float for HTTP, int for XRootD; 30)
max_num_elements (None or int; None)
num_workers (int; 1)
use_threads (bool; False on the emscripten platform (i.e. in a web browser), else True)
num_fallback_workers (int; 10)
begin_chunk_size (memory_size; 403, the smallest a ROOT file can be)
minimal_ttree_metadata (bool; True)
Other file entry points:
uproot.open: opens one file to read any of its objects.
uproot.iterate: iterates through chunks of contiguous entries in
TTrees.uproot.concatenate (this function): returns a single concatenated array from
TTrees.uproot.dask: returns an unevaluated Dask array from
TTrees.