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A Quick Tour of Metview
A Quick Tour of Metview
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Views in Metview

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A fundamental concept in Metview is the View. A View specifies the following definitions in a Metview plot:

  • type of visualisation (e.g. geographical map, cross section, vertical profile, tephigram)
  • parameters specific to that plot type (e.g. geographical area, cross section line, min/max axes values)
  • plot position within the page (several plots can share a page)
  • how to overlay different data in the same plot (e.g. icon drop rules, data overlay controlexplored in Handling Time in Metview)
  • plot decoration (e.g. draw a frame around the plot)

Without a View specification, Metview would not plot anything. If you do not provide a View, then Metview will use a sensible default View.

 

(add a picture with 4 views and highlighting the above definitions)

 

The current Metview version provides 8 Views specifications:

NameUsage (Used for plotting or Plotting specification for)
Geographical Viewgeographic-based data plots
Cartesian View plots that are not to be displayed on a map
Cross Section Viewcross section plots
Vertical Profile Viewvertical profile plots
Average Viewaverage (zonal or meridional) cross-section plots
Annotation Viewtext boxes
Hovmøller ViewHovmøller diagram plots
Thermo Viewthermodynamic diagram plots

 

The Geographical View

This is the default View for plotting geographic-based data. This view was discussed in (add the link here)

Embedded Icons

Notice that a Geographical View icon editor contains a place for an embedded Coastlines icon. If you drop a Coastlines icon here and apply the changes, then the Geographical View icon will use your new coastlines.

Image Removed

You can use your own Coastlines icons in this icon field: edit your Geographical View icon, right-click on the embedded Coastlines icon (if there is one) and select remove. Now drag the land_sea_shading icon from the visdefs desktop into the now-empty Coastlines icon field. Click Apply, then visualise your Geographical View icon.

Your Geographical View icon now contains a link to the coastlines icon - if you change the land_sea_shading icon, then those changes will be reflected the next time you visualise your Geographical View; if you edit the coastlines icon within the Map View icon editor, those changes will be applied to the land_sea_shading icon.

This method allows you to share a single Coastlines icon between multiple view icons; update the Coastlines icon and all the views will pick up the changes automatically.

Another way to share embedded icons is to use the icon help drawer. Click the arrow beside the Coastlines icon to open this drawer. Drag land_sea_shading from your desktop into it. Apply.

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Now create a new Geographical View icon and edit it. Open the Coastlines help drawer and drag land_sea_shading into the icon field. Your Geographical View is now using a copy of this Coastlines icon. This is an alternative way to share embedded icons. Note that this Coastlines icon is embedded in the Geographical View icon (notice the ‘E’ symbol on the icon); it is not a link to an icon you can see on a Metview desktop, but is contained entirely within the Geographical View icon. If you move the Geographical View icon, the embedded Coastlines icon will move with it.

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The Cartesian View

 

 

The Cross Section View

Now create a new Cross Section View icon. Visualise it and drop the t_an filter icon into the Display Window. A default cross section is generated. This is an alternative way to view your data - instead of a geographical plot for instance.

Edit the Cross Section View icon and change the transect line - click on the Geography Tool button to bring up an editor (or type the coordinate by hand). Save your changes in the Cross Section View icon and use it to re-visualise the data with this new cross section.

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Note that you can still drag any valid contour icons you may have into the Display Window when visualising a cross section.

The Vertical Profile View

Now create a new Vertical Profile View icon. Visualise it and drop the t_an filter icon into the Display Window. This view shows a vertical profile at a point (or averaged over an area). Experiment with this icon in a similar way to how you did with the Cross Section View icon.

The Average View

 

The Annotation View

 

The Hovmøller View

 

The Thermo View

 

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For instance, when you visualise a GRIB icon, a default Geographical View containing a global map in a Cylindrical projection is used.

The following customised Geographical View shows some of these concepts including plot position and coloured frames.

Image Added

The Geographical View    Image Added

This is the default View for plotting geographic-based data. This View was discussed previously in Customising Your Plot.

The Cartesian View     Image Added

This view is for plots that are not on a map, and will be covered in another session: Graph Plotting in Metview.

The Annotation View    Image Added

This will be covered in another session: Layout in Metview.

The Cross Section View    Image Added

The Cross Section View icon is a plotting specification for cross section plots along a given transect line.

Image Added

Create a new Cross Section View icon, Visualise it and drop the t_fc24.grib icon into the resulting Display Window. A default cross section along the Equator is generated.

To customise the transect line (coordinates along which the cross-section is calculated), Edit the Cross Section View icon and either click on the Geography Tool button to bring up an editor (or type the coordinates by hand).

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Save/OK the changes and re-visualise the data with this new cross section.

Note that you can still drag any valid Contouring icons you may have into the Display Window when visualising a cross section. For instance, apply the given shade icon. You may want to customise it and try different configurations.

Inspect the GRIB icon (right-click on it and choose examine) to see the type of input data this View requires - it should be gridded data (rather than spherical harmonics) and it should contain fields at multiple vertical levels. This view accepts data stored in either pressure levels or model levels (optionally supply a Logarithm of Surface Pressure field to transform model levels to pressure levels).

The Vertical Profile View    Image Added

The Vertical Profile View icon is a computation/plotting specification for vertical profiles.

Image Added

Create a new Vertical Profile View icon, Visualise it and drop the t_fc24.grib icon into the Display Window. The result shows a vertical profile at a point (or averaged over an area). Experiment with this icon in a similar way to how you did with the Cross Section View icon.

The Graph Plotting icon is the visual definition used for the plotting of graphs (e.g. lines, curves and bar charts).    Image Added

To customise the line displayed in this plot, create a new instance of Graph Plotting and rename it to vdline. Edit it, setting the following parameters:

Graph Line Style

Dash

Graph Line Colour

Black

Graph Line Thickness

5

Save/OK the changes and drag it into the Display Window.

The Average View    Image Added

The Average View icon is a plotting specification for average (zonal or meridional) cross-section plots over an area.

Image Added

Create a new Average View icon, Visualise it and drop the t_fc24.grib icon into the Display Window. A default meridional average over the global area is generated. Notice the horizontal axis - it only contains E/W co-ordinates, because the data values have been averaged along N/S meridional lines; for each point of longitude, there is one computed value per 2D field. With multiple fields in the vertical direction we can produce this plot.

Experiment with this icon in a similar way to how you did with the Cross Section View icon. You can use a Contouring icon, e.g. the shade icon, to style the contours of the plotting.

The Hovmøller View    Image Added

The Hovmoeller View icon is a computation/plotting specification for Hovmøller diagrams along a specified arbitrary transect line or a rectangular area. The diagram displays a two-dimensional graph with latitude or height as one axis, and time as the other.

Image Added

Create a new Hovmoeller View icon, Visualise it and drop the t_ts.grib icon into the Display Window. A default diagram derived from a transect line along the Equator is generated. 

Three types of Hovmøller diagrams can be produced:

  1.  Area Hovm     - diagram derived from an input rectangular area
  2.  Line Hovm      - diagram derived from an input transect line
  3.  Vertical Hovm - diagram derived from an input rectangular area and a set of levels.

For now, only consider the Area Hovm type and try a different transect line. As previously, you can use a Contouring icon to style the contours of the plotting.

This view requires data at different time steps. Examine the GRIB icon to see the fields used for this example.

The Thermo View   Image Added

The Thermo View icon is a plotting specification for Thermodynamic diagram plots from a suitable GRIB or BUFR data source. In such a diagram, temperature, humidity (represented by the dew point) and wind values are displayed with respect to pressure. Note that only the Tephigram diagram is currently available, although there exist other types of thermodynamic diagrams, such as Skew-T, Emagram and Stuve.

Image Added

Create a new Thermo View icon, Visualise it and drop the tquv_pl.grib icon into the Display Window. A default diagram related to a geographical location [0,0] is generated.

Examine the GRIB icon to see the type of input data this View requires. Fields Temperature and Specific Humidity are mandatory and they will be used to compute the Dew Point parameter. Fieldsets U and V wind components are optional, but if given they will be used to compute the wind vectors. If the data is given in model levels then a Logarithm of Surface Pressure field must be provided too in order to help the conversion to pressure levels fields.

To customise the curves displayed in this plot, you can apply (or edit it first) icon vdline. The changes will be applied to both lines. The ability to customise each line individually (temperature and dew point) is available in the Thermo Plotting icon. Try it!

The Wind Plotting icon is the visual definition responsible for specifying how wind vector data is displayed. It controls the plotting of features such as wind arrows and wind flags.    Image Added 

To customise the wind flags displayed in the plot, create a new instance of this icon and rename it to vdwind. Edit it, setting the following parameters:

Wind Field Type

Flags

Wind Flag Colour

Coral

Wind Flag Length1.3

Wind Flag Thickness

2

Save/OK the changes and drag it into the Display Window.

Macro example

Let's create a Macro program to analyse the vertical structure of temperature changes in time. This exercise reads two forecast steps, computes the differences and visualises the result in a Cross Section View.

Create a new Macro icon and rename it to xsdiff. Edit it and do the following:

  • drop the t_fc24.grib icon into the Macro Editor. A variable called t_fc24_2e_grib is assigned to the value of the read() command, which reads the GRIB data. Rename the variable to simply be t_fc24.

  • drop the t_fc96.grib icon into the Macro Editor. Rename the variable to t_fc96.

  • compute the differences: diff = t_fc96 - t_fc24
  • drop the two contouring icons, neg and pos, into the editor

  • drop the xs_europe icon into the editor
  • underneath the generated code, type the following line:
Code Block
plot(xs_europe,diff,neg,pos)

The says, "In the xs_europe view, plot the data field diff using the visual definitions neg and pos."

Your complete macro should look like this:

Code Block
t_fc96 = read("/path/to/home/metview/training/day_2/analysis views/t_fc96.grib")
t_fc24 = read("/path/to/home/metview/training/day_2/analysis views/t_fc24.grib")

diff = t_fc96 - t_fc24

pos = mcont(
    legend                         : "on",
    # <code omitted for brevity>
    )

neg = mcont(
    legend                         : "on",
    # <code omitted for brevity>
    )

xs_europe = mxsectview(
    line : [55,-6,43,16]
    )

plot(xs_europe,diff,neg,pos)

Now run the macro to generate the plot. You can also omit xs_europe from the plot() command; in this case, Metview will use the default view for GRIB data, which is a Geographic View, giving a map plot.

Finally, Examine the two input GRIB iconsto see how the fields differ in terms of date, time and step.

View / Data Modules

Metview uses a netCDF format internally for the results of some computations (this format will be covered in the session Data Part 2). Most of the Views described in this session (i.e. Cross Section, Vertical Profile, Average, Hovmøller and Thermo) do this, but the resulting data file is not available to the user. Therefore, each of these Views has a corresponding Data Module icon. If the intention is to simply plot the result, then the View icons are more useful. But to store the result data, the corresponding Data Module icon is required.

  • create both a Vertical Profile View and a Vertical Profile Data icon.
  • Edit both to see the differences.

All the parameters related to the visualisation of the result are only in the View icon, and the Data parameter exists only in the Data Module icon.

Now dealing only with the Vertical Profile Data icon:

  • drop the supplied input GRIB icon t_fc24.grib into the Data parameter box.
  • set the Point parameter to whatever you like and save the icon.
  • Examine this icon to see the resulting netCDF file in the NetCDF Examiner.
  • Save Result to save the result into a file for storage.

All of this can also be put into a Macro, where the resulting netCDF variable can be further manipulated before being written to a file (or visualised):

  • create a new Macro icon and rename it to save_vp; edit it
  • into the Macro Editor, drop the Vertical Profile Data icon that you already set up
  • write the result to a file

To write a netCDF variable to a file, the syntax is the same as for any other data type:

Code Block
languagepy
write('output_file', data)

Your macro should be 3 lines long (well, 3 commands anyway) - one to read the input GRIB file, one to compute the profile and one to write the result to disk.

Extra Work

Info
If you are attending the training course at ECMWF, please do Layout in Metview before tackling the extra work here.

Hovmoeller Types

Investigate the different types of Hovmoeller diagrams available. Please note that type Vertical Hovm requires the input GRIB data t_ts_nlevels.grib. Examine this data to see that it contains fields from different vertical levels.

Axis Customisation

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All of these views allow the ability to customise the rendering of the axes. While the view itself defines the limits and projection parameters for the plot, the axis lines themselves can be customised, for example in terms of colour and title.

Create a new Axis Plotting icon and rename it to H Axis. Edit it to change the colour of the axis and to add an axis title. Repeat the process to create a vertical axis icon.

Edit a Cross Section View icon and drop your icons into the Horizontal Axis and Vertical Axis parameter boxes. Visualise the view to see the results.

 

 dd