The Advanced Text Operations for scieNtific python, or ATON, is a package that provides powerful and comprehensive text-edition tools to edit and analyse simuation data.
In a nod to its ancient Egyptian deity counterpart, this Python package aims to provide straightforward, comprehensive tools for easily creating custom interfaces for any text-based software.
The heart and soul of ATON is the txt module, which simplifies the automation of text edition tasks. It also includes an api module with interfaces for simulation and HPC codes, such as Slurm, Quantum ESPRESSO, Phonopy and CASTEP.
The source code is available on GitHub.
Check the full documentation online.
As always, it is recommended to install your packages in a virtual environment:
python3 -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
Install or upgrade ATON with
pip install aton -U
Optionally, you can install ATON from the GitHub repo. Clone the repository or download the latest stable release as a ZIP, unzip it, and run inside it:
pip install .
The full ATON documentation is available online.
An offline version is found at docs/aton.html
.
Code examples are included in the examples/
folder.
The txt module is used to automate the editing of text files. It enables the creation of more powerful interfaces, such as those from the aton.api module.
txt.find | Search for specific content in text files |
txt.edit | Manipulate text files |
txt.extract | Extract data from raw text strings |
The api module contains Python interfaces for several ab-initio codes and related. These are powered by the aton.txt module and can be easily extended.
api.qe | Interface for Quantum ESPRESSO's pw.x module |
api.phonopy | Interface for Phonopy calculations |
api.castep | Interface for CASTEP calculations |
api.slurm | Batch jobs via Slurm |
Additional utility tools are available for common system tasks:
aton.file | Easy file manipulation |
aton.alias | Useful dictionaries for user input correction |
aton.call | Run bash scripts and related |
If you are interested in opening an issue or a pull request, please feel free to do so on GitHub.
For major changes, please get in touch first to discuss the details.
Please try to follow some general guidelines:
- Use a code style consistent with the rest of the project.
- Include docstrings to document new additions.
- Include automated tests for new features or modifications, see automated testing.
- Arrange function arguments by order of relevance. Most implemented functions follow something similar to
function(file, key/s, value/s, optional)
.
If you are modifying the source code, you should run the automated tests of the tests/
folder to check that everything works as intended.
To do so, first install PyTest in your environment,
pip install pytest
And then run PyTest inside the ATON/
directory,
pytest -vv
The documentation can be compiled automatically to docs/aton.html
with Pdoc and ATON itself, by running:
python3 makedocs.py
This runs Pdoc, updating links and pictures, and using the custom theme CSS template from the css/
folder.
ATON development started for the following paper, please cite if you use ATON in your work:
Cryst. Growth Des. 2024, 24, 391−404
Copyright (C) 2025 Pablo Gila-Herranz
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published
by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
See the attached GNU Affero General Public License for more details.