It is often useful to compare one checklist to another. This project uses pretty much the same algorithms as GNverifier, but does not require an external database and can be used offline.
GNdiff is a complementary tool to GNverifier. It is made to compare a checklist with checklists that are not in GNverifier database. If you need to compare a list of names that are already in GNverifier, either use GNverifier web app or install it locally and run:
gnvrifier names.txt -o -s 12,1
where -s
option provides id
/ids
of selected GNverifier data-sources,
and -o
flag (--only-preferred
) limits results to data-sources set by -s
option.
If both checklists of scientific names are local, use GNdiff.
Using Homebrew on Mac OS X, Linux, and Linux on Windows (WSL2)
Homebrew is a popular package manager for Open Source software originally developed for Mac OS X. Now it is also available on Linux, and can easily be used on MS Windows 10 or 11, if Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) is installed.
Note that Homebrew requires some other programs to be installed, like Curl,
Git, a compiler (GCC compiler on Linux, Xcode on Mac). If it is too much,
go to the Linux and Mac without Homebrew
section.
To use GNdiff
with Homebrew:
-
Install Homebrew
-
Open terminal and run the following commands:
brew tap gnames/gn
brew install gndiff
Download the latest GNdiff release, untar, and install binary somewhere in your path.
tar xvf gndiff-linux-0.1.1.tar.gz
# or tar xvf gndiff-mac-0.1.1.tar.gz
sudo mv gndiff /usr/local/bin
Download the latest GNdiff release, unzip.
One possible way would be to create a default folder for executables and place
GNdiff
there.
Use Windows+R
keys
combination and type "cmd
". In the appeared terminal window type:
mkdir C:\Users\your_username\bin
copy path_to\gndiff.exe C:\Users\your_username\bin
Add C:\Users\your_username\bin
directory to your PATH
environment variable.
Another, simpler way, would be to use cd C:\Users\your_username\bin
command
in cmd
terminal window. The GNdiff
program then will be automatically
found by Windows operating system when you run its commands from that
directory.
Install Go according to installation instructions and run:
go install github.com/gnames/gndiff/gndiff@latest
Prepare two files with names. There are 3 possible file formats:
- A simple list of scientific names, one name per line.
- Comma-separated or Tab-separated (CSV) file with a
ScientificName
field. - Tab-separated (TCV) file with a
ScientificName
field.
For both CSV and TSV files the fields TaxonID
and Family
are also ingested
if given, any capitalization of either of the fields names is accepted.
The Family
field indicates a family a particular species are assigned to
according to the dataset. Normally this field is not needed, but in case of
tricky homonyms it helps to resolve taxa from each other.
Run command:
gndiff query.csv reference.csv
The first of the two files should contain names that need to be matched. The second file should contain reference names.
Any combination of these 3 formats would work:
gndiff file.csv names.txt
gndiff file.tsv file.csv
gndiff name.txt file.tsv
# etc.
To see how it works you can use tests files from the GNdiff project for example
ebird.csv and ioc-bird.csv. These files contain avian names from eBird
and eBird and IOC Bird checklists correspondingly.
Open each link and use Ctrl-S
on Windows/Linux or ⌘-S
on Mac to save
these files on your computer. You can then run:
gndiff path/to/ebird.csv path/to/ioc-bird.csv
# or
gndiff path/to/ioc-bird.csv path/to/ebird.csv
According to POSIX standard flags and options can be given either before or after file-paths arguments.
gndiff -h
# or
gndiff --help
# or
gndiff
gndiff -V
# or
gndiff --version
Sets the format of the comparison result and can take the following values:
csv
: Comma-separated formattsv
: Tab-separated formatcompact
: JSON as one linepretty
: JSON in a human-readable format with indentations and lines separation.
The default format is CSV.
gndiff query.txt ref.txt -f pretty
# or
gndiff query.txt ref.txt --format=pretty
When port
is set, GNdiff
works as a web server with its RESTful API
exposed at the given port.
gndiff -p 8080
# or
gndiff --port 8080
This flag supresses warnings log, showing only the matching results.
gndiff query.txt ref.txt -q
# or
gndiff query.txt ref.txt --quiet
Please note, that matching result uses STDOUT
, while log uses STDERR
,
so a similar result can be achieved by redirecting STDERR
to /dev/null
gndiff query.txt ref.txt 2> /dev/null
Family sometimes help to distinquish homonyms in names lists. For example, there are homonyms within one nomenclatural code, and homonyms in between two nomenclatural codes.
For example, in zoology a genus name Echidna
has 3 homonyms:
-
Moray eel
Family
Muraenidae
-> GenusEchidna J. R. Forster
-
Egg-laying mammal Echidna
Family
Tachyglossidae
->Echidna Cuvier, 1797
(junior homonym)Currently genus
Tachyglossus Illiger, 1811
-
Snake
Family
Viperidae
->Echidna Merrem, 1820
(junior homonym)Currently genus
Bitis Gray, 1842
Such homonyms are not allowed within the same code and eventually they get corrected. However historical records still contain them and have to be disambiguated.
There are no rules how to deal with homonyms that are treated by different (for example Botanical and Zoological) nomenclatural codes.
-
Sea Snail (Zoological Nomenclatural Code)
Family
Ficidae
->Ficus variegata Röding, 1798
-
Red fig (Botanical Nomenclatural Code)
Family
Moraceae
->Ficus variegata Blume