SurfDist


Usage: SurfDist  [OPTIONS] <SURFACE> <NODEPAIRS>
       Output shortest distance between NODEPAIRS along
       the nesh of SURFACE, or the Euclidean distance.

Mandatory options:
  <SURFACE> : Surface on which distances are computed.
              (For option's syntax, see
              'Specifying input surfaces' section below).
  <NODEPAIRS> : Specifying node pairs can be done in two ways

     <FROM_TO_NODES>: A dataset of two columns where each row
               specifies a node pair.
               (For option's syntax, see
              'SUMA dataset input options' section below).
   or
     <-from_node START>: Specify one starting node.
     <TO_NODES>: Specify one column of 'To' node indices.
                 Node pairs are between START and each node
                 in TO_NODES.
               (For option's syntax, see
              'SUMA dataset input options' section below).

Optional stuff:
  -node_path_do PATH_DO: Output the shortest path between
                         each node pair as a SUMA Displayable
                         object.
  -Euclidean: Calculate Euclidean distance, rather than graph distance.
  -Euclidian: synonym for '-Euclidean'.
  -graph: Calculate distance along the mesh (default).

  example 1:
     echo make a toy surface
     CreateIcosahedron
     echo Create some nodepairs
     echo 2 344 > nodelist.1D
     echo 416 489 >> nodelist.1D
     echo 415 412 >> nodelist.1D
     echo 123 32414 >> nodelist.1D
     echo Get distances and write out results in a 1D file
     SurfDist -i CreateIco_surf.asc \
              -input nodelist.1D \
              -node_path_do node_path   > example.1D
     echo 'The internode distances are in this file:'
     cat example.1D
     echo 'And you can visualize the paths this way:'
     suma -niml &
     DriveSuma -com show_surf -label ico \
                       -i_fs CreateIco_surf.asc \
               -com viewer_cont -load_do node_path.1D.do

  example 2: (for tcsh)
     echo Say one has a filled ROI called: Area.niml.roi on
     echo a surface called lh.smoothwm.asc.
     set apref = Area
     set surf = lh.smoothwm.asc
     echo Create a dataset from this ROI with:
     ROI2dataset -prefix ${apref} -input ${apref}.niml.roi
     echo Get the nodes column forming the area
     ConvertDset -i ${apref}.niml.dset'[i]' -o_1D_stdout \
                              > ${apref}Nodes.1D
     echo Calculate distance from node 85329 to each of ${apref}Nodes.1D
     SurfDist  -from_node 85329 -input ${apref}Nodes.1D \
               -i ${surf}   > ${apref}Dists.1D
     echo Combine node indices and distances from node  85329
     1dcat ${apref}Nodes.1D ${apref}Dists.1D'[2]' \
                                  > welt.1D.dset
     echo Now load welt.1D.dset and overlay on surface
     echo Distances are in the second column
     echo 'And you can visualize the distances this way:'
     suma -niml &
     sleep 4
     DriveSuma -com show_surf -label oke \
                       -i_fs ${surf} \
               -com  pause hit enter when surface is ready \
               -com surf_cont -load_dset welt.1D.dset \
                              -I_sb 1 -T_sb 1 -T_val 0.0

  example 3:
     echo make a toy surface
     CreateIcosahedron
     echo Create some nodepairs
     echo 2 344 > nodelist.1D
     echo 416 489 >> nodelist.1D
     echo 415 412 >> nodelist.1D
     echo 123 32414 >> nodelist.1D
     echo Get Euclidean distances and write out results to file
     SurfDist -i CreateIco_surf.asc \
              -input nodelist.1D \
              -Euclidian   > example3.1D
 Specifying input surfaces using -i or -i_TYPE options:
    -i_TYPE inSurf specifies the input surface,
            TYPE is one of the following:
       fs: FreeSurfer surface.
           If surface name has .asc it is assumed to be
           in ASCII format. Otherwise it is assumed to be
           in BINARY_BE (Big Endian) format.
           Patches in Binary format cannot be read at the moment.
       sf: SureFit surface.
           You must specify the .coord followed by the .topo file.
       vec (or 1D): Simple ascii matrix format.
            You must specify the coord (NodeList) file followed by
            the topo (FaceSetList) file.
            coord contains 3 floats per line, representing
            X Y Z vertex coordinates.
            topo contains 3 ints per line, representing
            v1 v2 v3 triangle vertices.
       ply: PLY format, ascii or binary.
            Only vertex and triangulation info is preserved.
       stl: STL format, ascii or binary.
            This format of no use for much of the surface-based
            analyses. Objects are defined as a soup of triangles
            with no information about which edges they share. STL is only
            useful for taking surface models to some 3D printing
            software.
       mni: MNI .obj format, ascii only.
            Only vertex, triangulation, and node normals info is preserved.
       byu: BYU format, ascii.
            Polygons with more than 3 edges are turned into
            triangles.
       bv: BrainVoyager format.
           Only vertex and triangulation info is preserved.
       dx: OpenDX ascii mesh format.
           Only vertex and triangulation info is preserved.
           Requires presence of 3 objects, the one of class
           'field' should contain 2 components 'positions'
           and 'connections' that point to the two objects
           containing node coordinates and topology, respectively.
       gii: GIFTI XML surface format.
       obj: OBJ file format for triangular meshes only. The following
            primitives are preserved: v (vertices), f (faces, triangles
            only), and p (points)
 Note that if the surface filename has the proper extension,
 it is enough to use the -i option and let the programs guess
 the type from the extension.

 You can also specify multiple surfaces after -i option. This makes
 it possible to use wildcards on the command line for reading in a bunch
 of surfaces at once.

     -onestate: Make all -i_* surfaces have the same state, i.e.
                they all appear at the same time in the viewer.
                By default, each -i_* surface has its own state.
                For -onestate to take effect, it must precede all -i
                options with on the command line.
     -anatomical: Label all -i surfaces as anatomically correct.
                Again, this option should precede the -i_* options.

 More variants for option -i:
-----------------------------
 You can also load standard-mesh spheres that are formed in memory
 with the following notation
     -i ldNUM:  Where NUM is the parameter controlling
                the mesh density exactly as the parameter -ld linDepth
                does in CreateIcosahedron. For example:
                    suma -i ld60
                create on the fly a surface that is identical to the
                one produced by: CreateIcosahedron -ld 60 -tosphere
     -i rdNUM: Same as -i ldNUM but with NUM specifying the equivalent
               of parameter -rd recDepth in CreateIcosahedron.

 To keep the option confusing enough, you can also use -i to load
 template surfaces. For example:
           suma -i lh:MNI_N27:ld60:smoothwm
 will load the left hemisphere smoothwm surface for template MNI_N27
 at standard mesh density ld60.
 The string following -i is formatted thusly:
     HEMI:TEMPLATE:DENSITY:SURF where:
     HEMI specifies a hemisphere. Choose from 'l', 'r', 'lh' or 'rh'.
          You must specify a hemisphere with option -i because it is
          supposed to load one surface at a time.
          You can load multiple surfaces with -spec which also supports
          these features.
     TEMPLATE: Specify the template name. For now, choose from MNI_N27 if
               you want to use the FreeSurfer reconstructed surfaces from
               the MNI_N27 volume, or TT_N27
               Those templates must be installed under this directory:
                 /home/afniHQ/.afni/data/
               If you have no surface templates there, download
                 https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/tgz/suma_MNI_N27.tgz
               and/or
                 https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/tgz/suma_TT_N27.tgz
               and/or
                 https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/tgz/suma_MNI152_2009.tgz
               and untar them under directory /home/afniHQ/.afni/data/
     DENSITY: Use if you want to load standard-mesh versions of the template
              surfaces. Note that only ld20, ld60, ld120, and ld141 are in
              the current distributed templates. You can create other
              densities if you wish with MapIcosahedron, but follow the
              same naming convention to enable SUMA to find them.
     SURF: Which surface do you want. The string matching is partial, as long
           as the match is unique.
           So for example something like: suma -i l:MNI_N27:ld60:smooth
           is more than enough to get you the ld60 MNI_N27 left hemisphere
           smoothwm surface.
     The order in which you specify HEMI, TEMPLATE, DENSITY, and SURF, does
     not matter.
     For template surfaces, the -sv option is provided automatically, so you
     can have SUMA talking to AFNI with something like:
             suma -i l:MNI_N27:ld60:smooth &
             afni -niml /home/afniHQ/.afni/data/suma_MNI_N27

 Specifying surfaces using -t* options:
   -tn TYPE NAME: specify surface type and name.
                  See below for help on the parameters.
   -tsn TYPE STATE NAME: specify surface type state and name.
        TYPE: Choose from the following (case sensitive):
           1D: 1D format
           FS: FreeSurfer ascii format
           PLY: ply format
           MNI: MNI obj ascii format
           BYU: byu format
           SF: Caret/SureFit format
           BV: BrainVoyager format
           GII: GIFTI format
        NAME: Name of surface file.
           For SF and 1D formats, NAME is composed of two names
           the coord file followed by the topo file
        STATE: State of the surface.
           Default is S1, S2.... for each surface.
 Specifying a Surface Volume:
    -sv SurfaceVolume [VolParam for sf surfaces]
       If you supply a surface volume, the coordinates of the input surface.
        are modified to SUMA's convention and aligned with SurfaceVolume.
        You must also specify a VolParam file for SureFit surfaces.
 Specifying a surface specification (spec) file:
    -spec SPEC: specify the name of the SPEC file.
     As with option -i, you can load template
     spec files with symbolic notation trickery as in:
                    suma -spec MNI_N27
     which will load the all the surfaces from template MNI_N27
     at the original FreeSurfer mesh density.
  The string following -spec is formatted in the following manner:
     HEMI:TEMPLATE:DENSITY where:
     HEMI specifies a hemisphere. Choose from 'l', 'r', 'lh', 'rh', 'lr', or
          'both' which is the default if you do not specify a hemisphere.
     TEMPLATE: Specify the template name. For now, choose from MNI_N27 if
               you want surfaces from the MNI_N27 volume, or TT_N27
               for the Talairach version.
               Those templates must be installed under this directory:
                 /home/afniHQ/.afni/data/
               If you have no surface templates there, download one of:
                 https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/tgz/suma_MNI_N27.tgz
                 https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/tgz/suma_TT_N27.tgz
                 https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/tgz/suma_MNI152_2009.tgz
               and untar them under directory /home/afniHQ/.afni/data/
     DENSITY: Use if you want to load standard-mesh versions of the template
              surfaces. Note that only ld20, ld60, ld120, and ld141 are in
              the current distributed templates. You can create other
              densities if you wish with MapIcosahedron, but follow the
              same naming convention to enable SUMA to find them.
              This parameter is optional.
     The order in which you specify HEMI, TEMPLATE, and DENSITY, does
     not matter.
     For template surfaces, the -sv option is provided automatically, so you
     can have SUMA talking to AFNI with something like:
             suma -spec MNI_N27:ld60 &
             afni -niml /home/afniHQ/.afni/data/suma_MNI_N27

 Specifying a surface using -surf_? method:
    -surf_A SURFACE: specify the name of the first
            surface to load. If the program requires
            or allows multiple surfaces, use -surf_B
            ... -surf_Z .
            You need not use _A if only one surface is
            expected.
            SURFACE is the name of the surface as specified
            in the SPEC file. The use of -surf_ option
            requires the use of -spec option.

  SUMA dataset input options:
      -input DSET: Read DSET1 as input.
                   In programs accepting multiple input datasets
                   you can use -input DSET1 -input DSET2 or
                   input DSET1 DSET2 ...
       NOTE: Selecting subsets of a dataset:
             Much like in AFNI, you can select subsets of a dataset
             by adding qualifiers to DSET.
           Append #SEL# to select certain nodes.
           Append [SEL] to select certain columns.
           Append {SEL} to select certain rows.
           The format of SEL is the same as in AFNI, see section:
           'INPUT DATASET NAMES' in 3dcalc -help for details.
           Append [i] to get the node index column from
                      a niml formatted dataset.
           *  SUMA does not preserve the selection order
              for any of the selectors.
              For example:
              dset[44,10..20] is the same as dset[10..20,44]
              Also, duplicate values are not supported.
              so dset[13, 13] is the same as dset[13].
              I am not proud of these limitations, someday I'll get
              around to fixing them.



 SUMA mask options:
      -n_mask INDEXMASK: Apply operations to nodes listed in
                            INDEXMASK  only. INDEXMASK is a 1D file.
      -b_mask BINARYMASK: Similar to -n_mask, except that the BINARYMASK
                          1D file contains 1 for nodes to filter and
                          0 for nodes to be ignored.
                          The number of rows in filter_binary_mask must be
                          equal to the number of nodes forming the
                          surface.
      -c_mask EXPR: Masking based on the result of EXPR.
                    Use like afni's -cmask options.
                    See explanation in 3dmaskdump -help
                    and examples in output of 3dVol2Surf -help
      NOTE: Unless stated otherwise, if n_mask, b_mask and c_mask
            are used simultaneously, the resultant mask is the intersection
            (AND operation) of all masks.


   [-novolreg]: Ignore any Rotate, Volreg, Tagalign,
                or WarpDrive transformations present in
                the Surface Volume.
   [-noxform]: Same as -novolreg
   [-setenv "'ENVname=ENVvalue'"]: Set environment variable ENVname
                to be ENVvalue. Quotes are necessary.
             Example: suma -setenv "'SUMA_BackgroundColor = 1 0 1'"
                See also options -update_env, -environment, etc
                in the output of 'suma -help'
  Common Debugging Options:
   [-trace]: Turns on In/Out debug and Memory tracing.
             For speeding up the tracing log, I recommend
             you redirect stdout to a file when using this option.
             For example, if you were running suma you would use:
             suma -spec lh.spec -sv ... > TraceFile
             This option replaces the old -iodbg and -memdbg.
   [-TRACE]: Turns on extreme tracing.
   [-nomall]: Turn off memory tracing.
   [-yesmall]: Turn on memory tracing (default).
  NOTE: For programs that output results to stdout
    (that is to your shell/screen), the debugging info
    might get mixed up with your results.


Global Options (available to all AFNI/SUMA programs)
  -h: Mini help, at time, same as -help in many cases.
  -help: The entire help output
  -HELP: Extreme help, same as -help in majority of cases.
  -h_view: Open help in text editor. AFNI will try to find a GUI editor
  -hview : on your machine. You can control which it should use by
           setting environment variable AFNI_GUI_EDITOR.
  -h_web: Open help in web browser. AFNI will try to find a browser.
  -hweb : on your machine. You can control which it should use by
          setting environment variable AFNI_GUI_EDITOR.
  -h_find WORD: Look for lines in this programs's -help output that match
                (approximately) WORD.
  -h_raw: Help string unedited
  -h_spx: Help string in sphinx loveliness, but do not try to autoformat
  -h_aspx: Help string in sphinx with autoformatting of options, etc.
  -all_opts: Try to identify all options for the program from the
             output of its -help option. Some options might be missed
             and others misidentified. Use this output for hints only.



Compile Date:
   Oct 17 2024