Setup
To use it, you need three things:
- A Python 3 interpreter
- Metview 5 needs to be installed and in your PATH
- Metview's Python module needs to be accessible from Python
So, to try it right now, do the following from a terminal:
module load python3/new module swap metview/new module load metview-python
The internal installation at ECMWF also includes the cfgrib library for obtaining xarray datasets from GRIB. Metview's to_dataset()
function uses this internally from version 0.8.4 onwards.
If you plan to use the cfgrib module directly, you should also ensure that the ecCodes library is in your LD_LIBRARY_PATH:
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ECCODES_LIB_DIR:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
Test it
Here's a quick Python program to check that it's working. Copy this into a file called test-metview.py
import metview as mv # call Metview's built-in function to return a lower case string print(mv.lowercase('Hello World!')) # should output "hello world!"
and run it like this:
python3 test-metview.py
If this works, then you have successfully set up Metview's Python interface!
Further reading
For a quick start, check out some of the examples in the Gallery. Most, but not all, of them have Python code, but all of them can be written in Python.
To see the different environments you can write Metview Python scripts in, see Developing and Running Metview Python Scripts.
To understand what Metview's functions take as input and output in a Python environment, see Using Metview's Python Interface.