Scripting the input file

The input file has now been made scriptable by permitting blocks of Python code to be specified between #python and #end_python commands. The code is executed when the input file is read by gprMax. You don’t need any external tools, such as MATLAB, to generate larger, more complex input files for building intricate models. Python scripting means that gprMax now includes libraries of more complex objects, such as antennas, that can be easily inserted into a model. You can also access a number of built-in constants from your Python code.

Constants/variables

You can access the following built-in constants from your Python code:

  • c is the speed of light in vacuum \(c=2.9979245 \times 10^8\) m/s

  • e0 is the permittivity of free space \(\epsilon_0=8.854187 \times 10^{-12}\) F/m

  • m0 is the permeability of free space \(\mu_0=1.256637 \times 10^{-6}\) H/m

  • z0 is the impedance of free space \(z_0=376.7303134\) Ohms

You can access the following built-in variables from your Python code:

  • current_model_run is the current run number of the model that is been executed.

  • inputfile is the path and name of the input file.

  • number_model_runs is the total number of runs specified when the model was initially executed, i.e. from python -m gprMax my_input_file -n number_of_model_runs

Functions for input commands

To make it easier to create commands within a block of Python code, there is a built-in module which contains some of the most commonly used input commands in functional form. For example, to use Python to generate a series of cylinders in a model:

#python:
from gprMax.input_cmd_funcs import *
domain = domain(0.2, 0.2, 0.2)
for x in range(0, 8):
    cylinder(0.02 + x * 0.02, 0.05, 0, 0.020 + x * 0.02, 0.05, domain[2], 0.005, 'pec’)
#end_python:

The domain function will print the #domain command to the input file and return a variable with the extent of the domain that can be used elsewhere in a Python code block, e.g. in this case with the cylinder function. The cylinder function is just a functional version of the #cylinder command which prints it to the input file.