MetPy 0.7.0 has been released. This release has a wide collection of new features as well as minor bug fixes, including several contributions from our community. For full release notes see the GitHub Release Page.
[Read More]15 January 2018
MetPy 0.7.0 has been released. This release has a wide collection of new features as well as minor bug fixes, including several contributions from our community. For full release notes see the GitHub Release Page.
[Read More]Reminder: Register for MetPy Short Course at 2018 AMS Annual Meeting
12 December 2017
Unidata developers Ryan May and John Leeman, together with Kevin Goebbert from Valparaiso University, will be teaching a one-day short course titled “Python for Dynamical Meteorology Using MetPy” at the 2018 AMS Annual Meeting in Austin, Texas. The format of the course is like that of our larger Python workshop, relying on Jupyter notebooks to teach several core concepts. The crux of the course is to access remote data sets and use MetPy to perform analyses relevant to synoptic/dynamic meteorology. The goal is to go beyond the traditional introduction to Python and work on some concrete, meteorology-specific problems. As a result, familiarity with Python, NumPy, and Matplotlib is assumed.
[Read More]06 November 2017
MetPy 0.6.1 has been released with some fixes for 0.6.0. For full release notes see the GitHub Release Page.
[Read More]18 September 2017
MetPy 0.6.0 has been released. This release has a wide collection of new features as well as minor bug fixes, including several contributions from our community. For full release notes see the GitHub Release Page.
[Read More]MetPy Monday - Harvey and Irma
11 September 2017
Wow! We've had a very active couple of weeks in the Atlantic and the MetPy team is interrupting its planned series of MetPy Monday posts with a bit of timely data analysis and some interesting animations. The new (and still experimental/non-operational) GOES-16 satellite has provided us with some incredible views of hurricanes Harvey and Irma, and likely will with Jose as well.
Head over to the MetPy Mondays collection on the Unidata Developers blog to read the full article.