Hey Britton,
  yes the load command succeeded.  I'm in the RD0009 directory.  It looks like this:

torque:RD0009 hallman$ python starSpec.py 
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,202 Parameters: current_time              = 228.100098576
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,202 Parameters: domain_dimensions         = [32 32 32]
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,230 Parameters: domain_left_edge          = [ 0.  0.  0.]
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,231 Parameters: domain_right_edge         = [ 1.  1.  1.]
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,232 Parameters: cosmological_simulation   = 1
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,232 Parameters: current_redshift          = 0.00699900695239
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,232 Parameters: omega_lambda              = 0.732
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,232 Parameters: omega_matter              = 0.268
yt : [INFO     ] 2014-08-20 12:12:57,232 Parameters: hubble_constant           = 0.704

On Aug 20, 2014, at 12:30 PM, Britton Smith <brittonsmith@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi Eric,

Did the load command succeed.  I noticed in the code you included that you did
ds = load("RD0009")
and not
ds = load("RD0009/RD0009")

It's not that is it?

Britton


On Wed, Aug 20, 2014 at 5:18 PM, Eric Hallman <hallman@txcorp.com> wrote:
Hello again,
  I'm again running a very simple script from the cookbook, learning how to use the stellar spectrum generator.  It's just a simple tests of spectrum generation with stars of all the same age and mass. It fails with a key error on the dataset, even thought it's not really using the dataset for anything but a reference time (I think). Since it's all small, I'll clip it in below.  Here's the script itself:

from yt.mods import *
from yt.analysis_modules.star_analysis.api import *
ds = load("RD0009")

spec = SpectrumBuilder(ds, bcdir="/Users/hallman/work/data/sfData", model="chabrier")

sm = np.ones(100)
ct = np.zeros(100)

spec.calculate_spectrum(star_mass=sm, star_creation_time=ct, star_metallicity_constant=0.02)

spec.write_out(name="spec.out")


And here is the output:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "starSpec.py", line 13, in <module>
    spec.calculate_spectrum(star_mass=sm, star_creation_time=ct, star_metallicity_constant=0.02)
  File "/Users/hallman/work/yt-x86_64/src/yt-hg/yt/analysis_modules/star_analysis/sfr_spectrum.py", line 387, in calculate_spectrum
    dt = (self.time_now - self.star_creation_time * self._ds['Time']) / YEAR
  File "/Users/hallman/work/yt-x86_64/src/yt-hg/yt/data_objects/static_output.py", line 249, in __getitem__
    return self.parameters[key]
KeyError: 'Time'


Even if I modify "sfr_spectrum.py" to use the key "current_time", it still fails with the same error.  This is with yt-3.0, dataset created with the tip of enzo-dev as of about 20 minutes ago.  It fails on older enzo datasets as well with the same error.

Thanks for any help.

Eric
-- 
Eric Hallman
Tech-X Corporation               hallman@txcorp.com
5621 Arapahoe Ave, Suite A       Phone: (720) 254-5833
Boulder, CO 80303                Fax:   (303) 448-7756
--





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-- 
Eric Hallman
Tech-X Corporation               hallman@txcorp.com
5621 Arapahoe Ave, Suite A       Phone: (720) 254-5833
Boulder, CO 80303                Fax:   (303) 448-7756
--