Difference between revisions of "Phyphox file format"

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             <value label="Frequency" unit="Hz">
 
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             <graph label="Sensor data x" labelX="Time (s)" labelY="Amplitude">
 
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: The default value of the edit box. The experiment will start with this value.
 
: The default value of the edit box. The experiment will start with this value.
 
: ''optional'', default: 0.0
 
: ''optional'', default: 0.0
 
  
 
== Block: export ==
 
== Block: export ==

Revision as of 12:22, 8 January 2016


This page discusses technical details. There is a simpler and probably more convenient approach by using the visual experiment editor.


This page is highly technical and meant for advanced users who want to control every minute detail of their experiment. On this page you will learn, how the phyphox file format works and how to create a phyphox experiment - all you need is a text editor. Some experience about the XML format is recommended.

Structure

The phyphox format is based on xml. The entire experiment is encapsulated within a phyphox root tag. Within this block, there are multiple blocks which allow to define data-containers, inputs, outputs, translations, analysis etc.

<phyphox version="1.0">
    <title>Experiment title</title>
    <category>Experiment category</category>
    <icon>
        ... Defines which icon should be shown ...
    </icon>
    <description>
        ... A description of the experiment ...
    </description>
    <translations>
        ... Translations into other languages than English ...
    </translations>
    <data-containers>
        ... Defines data buffers to hold sensor and result data ...
    </data-containers>
    <input>
        ... Inputs like sensors or the microphone ...
    </input>
    <output>
        ... Outputs like the speaker ...
    </output>
    <views>
        ... Different views, defining how the results are presented to the user ...
    </views>
    <analysis>
        ... All the math goes in here ...
    </analysis>
    <export>
        ... Export sets define how data-containers are grouped and named when exporting them to a file ...
    </export>
</phyphox>

Block: phyphox

The entire experiment is defined within the phyphox block. It has a single attribute, which is the version of the file format (not the version of the app). If the file format changes in future version, this version number will increase. If phyphox (the app) encounters a file version newer than what it can read, it will not load the file but ask the user to update the app.

Tag: Title

<title>TITLE</title>

The title of the experiment. This is just a simple string. Try to keep it short and concise.

Tag: category

<category>CATEGORY</category>

The category of the experiment. This is just a simple string used by the app to group the experiments. Try to keep it short and concise.

Note that this can and should be translated if you use translations (see below) as the app uses the localized version of this string and cannot match your experiment to the default group if the category is given in a different language.

Tag: icon

<icon format="FORMAT">ICON</icon>

The icon of the experiment. The attribute format controls whether ICON is just a string or a base64 encoded image. If it is a string, phyphox will take the first three characters (using fewer characters is ok) and create a simple icon with these. If it is a base64-encoded image, phyphox will decode it and display the image.

We recommend to use a small PNG with few colors as an icon. There are various web-based tools to create a base64-encoded PNG from a PNG file.

format
Can be string or base64 and controls whether the icon should be interpreted as a string or as a base64 encoded image.
optional, default: string

Tag: description

<description>DESCRIPTION</description>

A description of the experiment. The first line should be a very short information of what the experiment does as this line will be shown in the experiment list. Any white spaces at the beginning and end of DESCRIPTION as well as in each line will be stripped.

Block: translations

The translation block may hold one or more translation block (note: singular), describing the translations of strings shown to the user. Any string outside the translations block should be in English and then translated to other languages from within the translations block.

<phyphox version="1.0">
    <title>My experiment</title>
    <category>Example</category>
    ...
    <translations>
        <translation locale="de">
            <title>Mein Experiment</title>
            <category>Beispiel</category>
            <string original="Some string used in the experiment.">Ein im Experiment genutzter String.</string>
            ...
        </translation>
        <translation locale="fr">
            <title>Mon expérience</title>
            <category>Exemple</category>
            <string original="Some string used in the experiment.">Une chaîne de caractères utilisèe dans l'experiénce.</string>
            ...
        </translation>
    </translations>
    ...
</phyphox>

Block: translation

Each translation block holds all the translations for a single language. The attribute

locale
Defines the two-character iso language code for the translations within this language block. (for example "de" for German or "fr" for French)
required


Tag: title

<title>TITLE</title>

Localized version of the title tag in the phyphox-block (see above). If the user's locale matches the locale of the translation block, the title will be replaced by this entry.


Tag: category

<category>CATEGORY</category>

Localized version of the category tag in the phyphox-block (see above). If the user's locale matches the locale of the translation block, the title will be replaced by this entry. Note that phyphox will group experiments by the localized version of the category.

Tag: description

<description>DESCRIPTION</description>

Localized version of the description tag in the phyphox-block (see above). If the user's locale matches the locale of the translation block, the title will be replaced by this entry.


Tag: string

<string original="ORIGINAL">TRANSLATION</string>

Use the string-tag to translate any string shown to the user besides the title, description or category. If the text of a label, view etc. matches the string in ORIGINAL, phyphox will display TRANSLATION instead. (Of course, this only applies if the user's locale matches the translation locale.)

original
The string which should be translated with TRANSLATION. This has to be an exact match.
required

Block: data-containers

In data-containers all buffers are defined. Any input (sensors, microphone) write to these buffers, any analysis module performs its operations on these buffers, the output modules read from these buffers and the results are shown to the user from these buffers. The buffers connect every module of the experiment.

<phyphox version="1.0">
    ...
    <data-containers>
        <container>Buffer 1</container>
        <container size="1000">Buffer 2</container>
        <container type="buffer">Buffer 3</container>
    </data-containers>
    ...
</phyphox>

Tag: container

<container size="INTEGER" static="BOOLEAN">NAME</container>

The container tag defines the name of a single data container. For now, the only container type is buffer, so the attribute type can be left out - It is only there for future new container types.

The buffer type is a queue of a fixed length. New data is appended until the buffer is full. If data is appended to a full buffer, old data is removed from the other end. Any module reading from the buffer will receive the whole data set. However, if the module only requires a single value, it may access the last added value directly.

The size can be set by the size attribute, which defaults to 1.

type
The only type supported right now is buffer. This attribute can be ignored for now, but other container types may be added in the future.
optional, default: buffer
size
The size of the data-container. For the buffer type this is the number of values, the buffer can hold.
optional, default: 1
static
If set to true, the content of this buffer should only be written once. Analysis modules writing to this buffer will not execute if all output buffers are static to improve performance. This should be set if the content does not depend on measured data.
optional, default: false

Block: input

The input block defines all hardware inputs such as sensors or the microphone used in the experiment.

<phyphox version="1.0">
    ...
    <input>
        <sensor type="pressure">
            <output component="x">Pressure</output>
        </sensor>
        <sensor type="accelerometer" average="true" rate="0.5">
            <output component="x">AccX</output>
            <output component="y">AccY</output>
            <output component="z">AccZ</output>
            <output component="t">AccT</output>
        </sensor>
        <audio rate="48000">
            <output>recording</output>
        </audio>
    </input>
    ...
</phyphox>

Input module: sensor

<sensor type="TYPE" average="BOOLEAN" rate="FLOAT">
    <output component="x">BUFFER</output>
    ...
    <output component="t">BUFFER</output>
</sensor>

The sensor block defines a sensor as an input. The data will be written to the output buffers at the rate as it is provided from the sensor. Alternatively, you may define a different rate, in which case the latest reading is picked at the given rate. In addition you may turn on averaging in combination with the forced rate, in which case all data during the interval of the rate is averaged and only the average is written to the buffer.

Note that many sensors (accelerometer, magnetometer, gyroscope) are 3D sensors writing to a total of four buffers (x, y, z and timestamp t), but you do not need to attach a buffer to all outputs. Also some sensors are only 1D (pressure, light) and will only fill the x buffers. The outputs are mapped to data-containers by simple output-tags. Each requires a component attribute set to x, y, z or t to map the data o the data-container.

If a sensor is not available on the device, the experiment will notify the user and refuse to work.

type
Defines the sensor type to be used. Allowed values:
accelerometer
The accelerometer in m/s². This gives the earth's acceleration when the device is resting.
linear_acceleration
A virtual sensor giving the actual acceleration of the device. Should give zero when the device is resting.
magnetic_field
Readings from the magnetometer in µT
gyroscope
Readings from the gyroscope in rad/s.
light
The illuminance from the light sensor in lx
pressure
The air pressure from the barometer in hPa
required
rate
The rate at which sensor data will be provided in Hz. A value of 0.0 means "as fast as possible". Note that the maximum rate of a sensor is device-specific and will limit the rate set with this attribute.
optional, default: 0.0
average
If set to true, instead of just giving the latest reading at the defined rate, the sensor data will be averaged over a period of the rate. This only makes sense if a rate is set, which is lower than the maximum rate the device can achieve.
optional, default: false

Input module: audio

<audio rate="INTEGER">
    <output>BUFFER</output>
</audio>

The audio tag defines audio as a data source (i.e. a microphone). Phyphox will record continously and write the recording to the buffer at the beginning of an analysis execution (see analysis block). The target buffer is defined with a simple output-tag.

The default recording rate is 48kHz, but can be changed using the rate attribute (in Hz). However, this is not recommended if the experiment targets a wide audience since supported recording rates are very device specific.

rate
The recording rate in Hz.
optional, default: 48000


Block: output

The input block defines all hardware outputs such as the speaker used in the experiment.

<phyphox version="1.0">
    ...
    <output>
        <audio rate="48000" loop="true">
            <input>waveform</input>
        </audio>
    </output>
    ...
</phyphox>

Output module: audio

<audio rate="INTEGER" loop="BOOLEAN">
    <input>BUFFER</input>
</audio>

The audio tag defines audio as an output (i.e. a speaker). At the end of an analysis period phyphox will write the input buffer to an internal audio buffer and start the playback, so the sound is played after each analysis execution. The input target is defined with a simple input-tag. If the input buffer is static, phyphox will only write it once to the audio buffer, but still play it after each analysis execution.

If the loop attribute is set to true, the playback is looped. If the input buffer is not entirely filled, it will be written periodically until the audio buffer is full. This repeated data should not be played as the looping is done by defining a loop over the length of the buffer data. However, if the loop interval becomes too short, some devices refuse to loop over such short ranges and in this case, the loop will happen because of the repeated data. This will lead to irregular loops if the buffer length is not a multiple of the written data.

The default playback rate is 48kHz, but can be changed using the rate attribute (in Hz). However, this is not recommended if the experiment targets a wide audience since supported playback rates are very device specific.

rate
The recording rate in Hz.
optional, default: 48000

Block: analysis

The analysis block describes all the math required for the experiment. Each element within this block is executed consecutively and usually reads from a data-container, performs a mathematical operation on the data and writes the results to another data-container.

In most experiments the analysis block is executed in a loop, so the experiment data is analysed as fast as possible. However, if you need to aquire a certain amount of data first (mostly when recording from the microphone) or if the results only change if the user changes a parameter, you can define the attributes sleep and/or onUserInput to pause the analysis loop.

sleep
The minimum time in seconds before the whole analysis block is executed again after the last execution has finished. Decimal values allowed.
optional, default: '0.0' (immediately)
onUserInput
If true, the analysis block will not be executed again unless the user changes the content of an input view.
optional, default: 'false'
<phyphox version="1.0">
    ...
    <analysis sleep="2.0" onUserInput="false">
        <add>
            <input>Buffer1</input>
            <input type="buffer">Buffer 2</input>
            <output>sumBuffer</output>
        </add>
        <divide>
            <input type="value" as="dividend">1</input>
            <input as="divisor">sumBuffer</input>
            </output>inverseSum</output>
        </divide>
    </analysis>
    ...
</phyphox>

Analysis modules in general

<input type="TYPE" as="AS">BUFFER/VALUE</input>
<output as="AS">BUFFER</output>

Almost all analysis modules take inputs and write their results to an output buffer. All inputs and outputs are defined as input and output tags within the analysis module. While the output always has to be a data-container, the input may also be a floating point value which can be defined by setting the attribute type to value. If type is not set, it defaults to buffer and the given name has to match a data-container.

Both, inputs and outputs, can be given a specific function by the as attribute. For many modules this attribute can be omited if it is obvious. For example the add module takes an arbitrary number of inputs in an arbitrary order (a+b equals b+a), but the subtract module needs an explicit mapping for the minuend and the subtrahend (a-b does not equal b-a). Similarly, a single output does not need to be mapped, while multiple outputs (for example value and position of a maximum in the max module) need to be mapped.

Additionally, some analysis modules take parameters that are not dynamically defined, but as an attribute to the analysis module tag. As an example, the threshold module searches the point at which the input values cross a given threshold and the attribute falling can switch it to look for a crossing from larger to smaller values.

The specific mappings, attributes and functionality of the analysis modules are documented below.

input-tag
Attributes for input tags:
as
The mapping of the input to a function
optional or required depending on the module
type
Can be set to buffer or value and indicates whether the content of the the tag is a numeric value or refers to a data-container
optional, default: buffer
output-tag
Attributes for output tags:
as
The mapping of the input to a function
optional or required depending on the module

Analysis module: add

Calculates the sum of all inputs element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the biggest input buffer. If a buffer is shorter than the others (especially if one input is a single value), its last value will be repeated.

summand
input
as not required
Number of inputs: At least one
sum
output
as not required

Analysis module: subtract

Calculates the difference of multiple subtrahends from a single minuend element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the biggest input buffer. If a buffer is shorter than the others (especially if one input is a single value), its last value will be repeated.

For this simple function you can leave out the as attribute. If you do so, the first input will be used as minuend and all subsequent values as subtrahends.

minuend
input
as not required, but order matters if left out
Number of inputs: Exactly one
subtrahend
input
as not required, but order matters if left out
Number of inputs: Arbitrary
difference
output
as not required

Analysis module: multiply

Calculates the product of all inputs element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the biggest input buffer. If a buffer is shorter than the others (especially if one input is a single value), its last value will be repeated.

factor
input
as not required
Number of inputs: At least one
product
output
as not required

Analysis module: divide

Calculates the quotient of multiple divisors from a single dividend element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the biggest input buffer. If a buffer is shorter than the others (especially if one input is a single value), its last value will be repeated.

For this simple function you can leave out the as attribute. If you do so, the first input will be used as dividend and all subsequent values as divisors.

dividend
input
as not required, but order matters if left out
Number of inputs: Exactly one
divisor
input
as not required, but order matters if left out
Number of inputs: Arbitrary
quotient
output
as not required

Analysis module: power

Calculates the power of a base and an exponent element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the biggest input buffer. If a buffer is shorter than the others (especially if one input is a single value), its last value will be repeated.

base
input
as required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
exponent
input
as required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
power
output
as not required

Analysis module: gcd (greatest common divisor)

Calculates the greatest common divisor of two inputs element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the biggest input buffer. If a buffer is shorter than the others (especially if one input is a single value), its last value will be repeated.

value
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly two
gcd
output
as not required

Analysis module: lcm (least common multiple)

Calculates the least common multiple of two inputs element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the biggest input buffer. If a buffer is shorter than the others (especially if one input is a single value), its last value will be repeated.

value
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly two
lcm
output
as not required


Analysis module: abs (absolute)

Calculates the absolute value of a single input element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the input buffer.

value
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
abs
output
as not required

Analysis module: sin

Calculates the sine of a single input (in radians) element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the input buffer.

value
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
sin
output
as not required


Analysis module: cos

Calculates the cosine of a single input (in radians) element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the input buffer.

value
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
cos
output
as not required

Analysis module: tan

Calculates the tangens of a single input (in radians) element-wise and writes it to a single output buffer. This module will write as many values as there are values in the input buffer.

value
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
tan
output
as not required

Analysis module: first

Retrieves the first entry of each buffer and appends it to each output buffer.

value
input
as not required
Number of inputs: At least one
first
output
as not required
Multiple may be defined!

Analysis module: max

Returns the maximum and its position. This module takes at least one input y and looks for the maximum of this buffer, but may also take a second input x. If x is defined, it will return the position of this maximum in terms of the associated x value. If x is not defined, position will be the index of the maximum.

This module will return exactly one value per call.

x
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
y
input
as required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
max
output
as required
position
output
as required


Analysis module: threshold

This module takes at least one input y and looks for position at which the values cross a given threshold. the input threshold is interpreted as a single value (last added element). This module may also take a third input x. If x is defined, it will return the position of the crossing in terms of the associated x value. If x is not defined, position will be the index of the crossing.

You can also define the attribute falling as true to search for a crossing from larger to smaller values.

This module will return exactly one value per call.

falling
attribute
optional, default: false
x
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
y
input
as required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
threshold
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none (defaults to 0.0)
position
output
as not required

Analysis module: append

This module appends all the values of the input buffers to a single output buffer. The order of the buffers will match the order their values appear in the output buffer. This module will return as many value as the sum of the input buffer sizes.

in
input
as not required
Number of inputs: At least one
out
output
as not required

Analysis module: fft

This module will perform a fast fourier transform of a complex input and will write the complex result to the output buffers. For input and output the complex data is defined by two buffers re and im corresponding to the real and imaginary part. The imaginary buffer is optional and will be filled with zeros if omitted. This module will return as many values as provided by the input buffer.

re
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
im
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
re
output
as not required
im
output
as required

Analysis module: autocorrelation

This module will calculate the autocorrelation. It takes at least one input buffer y, but can take a second input x as well. If x is omitted, it will be filled with indices. Additionally, single value inputs minX and maxX can be set as well. These limit the x range over which the autocorrelation is calculated to improve performance. The module will return as many values as provided by the input buffer and fill the output buffer y with the normalized autocorrelation of the y input buffer. The x output buffer will be filled with the relative x of the autocorrelation based on the x input buffer.

x
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
y
input
as required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
minX
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
maxX
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
y
output
as required
x
output
as required


Analysis module: differentiate

Performs a simple differentiation of a single input by calculating the difference of consecutive elements. It will write the result to the output buffer with exactly one value less than there are values in the input buffer.

in
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
out
output
as not required

Analysis module: integrate

Performs a simple integration of a single input by summing all elements and returning each step of the summation as a value. It will write as many values as there are values in the input buffer. So, if the input is a three-value array [v1, v2, v3], the output will be [v1, v1+v2, v1+v2+v3].

in
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
out
output
as not required

Analysis module: crosscorrelation

This module will calculate a crosscorrelation of two inputs. It will only calculate the part of the crosscorrelation for which the smaller buffer is entirely covered by the larger one. So with one input buffer of size n and one input of size m it will return exactly abs(m-n) values. If you need the crosscorrelation of two buffers of similar size, you will need to pad one of them with zeros first.

in
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly two
out
output
as not required

Analysis module: gausssmooth

This module will smooth the data provided from the only input. The data of each point will be calculated from neighbouring points with a gaussian distribution. The width of this distribution can be controlled by the attribute sigma and is interpreted in terms of value indices. This module will output as many values as there are values in the input buffer.

sigma
attribute
optional, default: 3.0
in
input
as not required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
out
output
as not required

Analysis module: rangefilter

This module takes multiple inputs and allows to set min and max limits for each of them. The module will go through all inputs simultaneously and only return those value for which all inputs fall within their set min and max range. If one input is shorter than the others, its values are set to NaN and will not trigger the filter.

Min and max have to be defined immediately after the corresponding input and are treated as a single value (last value for buffers). The outputs correspond to the order of the inputs. Here multiple outputs can be defined with the same name!

In the following example in1 will trigger the filter if not in the range of 0 and 42, in2 will not trigger the filter at all (but if in1 or in3 trigger the filter only corresponding elements will be returned) and in3 will trigger the filter if the value is larger than the value in the buffer "limit". The results will be written to the buffers "out1", "out2" and "out3".

<rangefilter>
    <input>in1</input>
    <input as="min" type="value">0</max>
    <input as="max" type="value">42</max>
    <input>in2</input>
    <input>in3</input>
    <input as="max">limit</max>
    <output>out1</output>
    <output>out2</output>
    <output>out3</output>
</rangefilter>

in
input
as not required
Number of inputs: At least one
min
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none per in input. This always refers to the previously defined in buffer.
max
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none per in input. This always refers to the previously defined in buffer.
out
output
as not required
Multiple may be defined!

Analysis module: ramp

This module will create a ramp of values, i.e. a linear range of values. This is very usefull to create time bases for example for audio recordings. The module takes as inputs start, stop and the optional length. It will make that the first value is exactly start and the last value is stop. It will return length values or if length is not provided as many values as the size of the output buffer.

start
input
as required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
stop
input
as required
Number of inputs: Exactly one
length
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
out
output
as not required


Analysis module: const

This module will initialize a buffer to a constant value. Both inputs are optional and without any inputs it will fill the entire buffer with zero. If value is set, the buffer gets filled with this value and if length is set, only 'length values will be initialized. (This is usefull in combination with the append module to zero-pad a buffer.)

value
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
length
input
as required
Number of inputs: One or none
out
output
as not required

Block: views

The views block may hold one or more view blocks (note: singular), describing the different layout groups (views), from which the user may choose to view the experiment data.

At least one view block is required!

<phyphox version="1.0">
    ...
    <views>
        <view label="Pendulum">
            <value label="Frequency" unit="Hz">
                <input>frequencyBuffer</input>
            </value>
            <edit label="Length" unit="cm" factor="100" signed="false" default="50">
                <output>lengthBuffer</output>
            </edit>
            <info label="Example with user-input" />
        </view>
        <view label="Raw data">
            <graph label="Sensor data x" labelX="Time (s)" labelY="Amplitude">
                <input axis="x">timeBuffer</input>
                <input axis="y">sensorBuffer</input>
            </graph>
        </view>
    </views>
    ...
</phyphox>

Block: view

Each view-block groups display elements to present data to the user. The view block has a single attribute label displayed to the user to identify this view when the user switches views. The label should be short and concise.

label
The name identifying this view. Will be translated if a matching translation string is defined.
required

View-Element: info

<info label="INFOTEXT" labelsize="FLOAT" />

The info element does not take any inputs or write to any outputs. It just displays a string defined as the label attribute.

label
The text to be displayed to the user
required
labelSize
The size of the label as a factor of the default size.
optional, default: 1.0


View-Element: value

<value label="LABEL" labelsize="FLOAT" precision="INTEGER" scientific="BOOLEAN" unit="UNIT" factor="FLOAT">
    <input>BUFFER</input>
</value>

The value element displays a single value to the user. If the input buffer contains more than one value, the latest value will be displayed. The input is defined by a simple input tag within the value block and needs to be a data-container (see above).

label
A label for this element
required
labelSize
The size of the label as a factor of the default size.
optional, default: 1.0
precision
The number of digits after the decimal point.
optional, default: 2
scientific
If set to true, the value will be displayed in scientific notation (1.0e-3 instead of 0.001)
optional, default: false
unit
A unit to be displayed after the value
optional, default: no unit
factor
A factor to be applied to the value before displaying it. This is usually used for unit conversion. Example: The data is in meter, but should be displayed in cm. The factor would be 0.01
optional, default: 1.0

View-Element: graph

<graph label="LABEL" labelsize="FLOAT" aspectRatio="FLOAT" style="STYLE" partialUpdate="BOOLEAN" forceFullDataset="BOOLEAN" history="INTEGER" labelX="LABELX" labelY="LABELY" logX="BOOLEAN" logy="BOOLEAN">
    <input axis="x">XBUFFER</input>
    <input axis="y">YBUFFER</input>
</value>

The graph element will show a plot of the YBUFFER data against the XBUFFER data. The input buffers are defined by input tags within the value block and need to be a data-containers (see above). The input tags are linked to the axes with an additional axis attribute to the input tag, which may be x or y. You can also define a single buffer, which will be used as y - The x axis will contain indices. In this case the axis attribute is not needed.

The resulting graph can be made up of lines (default) or dots (set attribute style to dots) and you can use the history attribute to show a history of plots.

The attributes partialUpdate and forceFullDataset are used for performance optimization. PartialUpdate is used when the buffer is never changed entirely, but new data is just appended with increasing x values. PartialUpdate will then allow that only this data is transferred in the web-interface to save bandwidth. forceFullDataset on the other hand disables a display optimization of the graph. The default behaviour is that if the multiple data points would be displayed on the same display x-coordinate (same pixel on the x-axis), they are averaged and then displayed. If this is not desirable (for example because extrema get washed out), this function can be disabled by setting "forceFullDataset" to true, which will draw every single value. Note, that this may be quite a parformance hit for large datasets on old devices.

label
A label for this element
required
labelSize
The size of the label as a factor of the default size.
optional, default: 1.0
apectRatio
The ratio of the total width of this element to the total height of this element in the view. (Including labels and axes)
optional, default: 3
style
If set to dots, the graph will not connect the values with lines.
optional, default: display lines
partialUpdate
If set to true, this allows optimizations which only work if the data is appended with increasing x values. A typical example is sensor data: Only few new values are added and each data point has a greater timestamp than the previous one. In such cases this should be set to true as it allows the web interface to only transfer these new datapoints.
optional, default: false
forceFullDataset
If set to true, an optimization is enabled, which averages all data points that would end on the same x-axis pixel coordinate.
optional, default: false (= optimization enabled)
history
The number of graphs to be shown. 1 means, that the current data is shown. n means, that n graphs are shown, with n-1 graphs containing the data from the previous update.
optional, default: 1
labelX
The label of the x axis
optional, default: empty, but you should always label your axes...
labelY
The label of the y axis
optional, default: empty, but you should always label your axes...
logX
If set to true, the x axis will be on a logarithmic scale
optional, default: false
logY
If set to true, the y axis will be on a logarithmic scale
optional, default: false

View-Element: edit

<edit label="LABEL" labelsize="FLOAT" signed="BOOLEAN" decimal="BOOLEAN" unit="UNIT" factor="FLOAT" default="FLOAT">
    <output>BUFFER</output>
</value>

The edit element displays an edit box, which takes data from the user and writes it to a buffer. The output is defined by a simple output tag within the value block and needs to be a data-container (see above).

label
A label for this element
required
labelSize
The size of the label as a factor of the default size.
optional, default: 1.0
signed
If set to false the user may not enter negative numbers.
optional, default: true
decimal
If set to false the user may not enter decimal (i.e. non-integer) numbers.
optional, default: true
unit
A unit to be displayed after the value
optional, default: no unit
factor
A factor to be applied to the value before displaying it. This is usually used for unit conversion. Example: The data is in meter, but should be displayed in cm. The factor would be 0.01
optional, default: no unit
default
The default value of the edit box. The experiment will start with this value.
optional, default: 0.0

Block: export

The export block may hold one or more set blocks, grouping and naming multiple data-containers as a logical unit to be written to a file when the user wants to export the data. The user may choose from these sets and for example select if he wants only the raw data, the analysis results or everything in his exported file.

<phyphox version="1.0">
    ...
    <export>
        <set name="Results">
            <data name="Frequency">frequency</data>
            <data name="Period">period</data>
        </set>
        <set name="Raw data">
            <data name="Time t (s)">accT</data>
            <data name="Acceleration x (m/s²)">accX</data>
            <data name="Acceleration y (m/s²)">accY</data>
            <data name="Acceleration z (m/s²)">accZ</data>
        </set>
    </export>
    ...
</phyphox>

Block: set

The set block will define a group of data-containers to be exported. The attribute name will be shown to the user as he may pick which of the sets should be exported. Also these sets may be represented in the final file. For example a CSV export results in a ZIP file containing a separate CSV files for each set. In another example a Excel export will contain a separate sheet for each set.

Tag: data

<data name="NAME">BUFFER</data>

Within each set, you can define multiple data enties. Each of them maps a data-container to a name displayed to the user. Usually, this name is the column title corresponding to the data in the exported file.

name
A name describing the data
required