The Atmospheric data Community Toolkit (ACT) is an open source Python toolkit for working with atmospheric time-series datasets of varying dimensions. The toolkit has functions for every part of the scientific process; discovery, IO, quality control, corrections, retrievals, visualization, and analysis. It is a community platform for sharing code with the goal of reducing duplication of effort and better connecting the science community with programs such as the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) User Facility. Overarching development goals will be updated on a regular basis as part of the Roadmap .
Please report any issues or feature requests by sumitting an Issue. Additionally, our discussions boards are open for ideas, general discussions or questions, and show and tell!
Following GitHub standards for a more open community and inclusiveness, ACT main branch will be renamed from master to main.
https://github.com/github/renaming https://www.git-tower.com/learn/git/faq/git-rename-master-to-main
For those using ACT with anaconda and pip, there will be no changes . If you are using a fork of ACT with GitHub under branch settings on GitHub you can rename the branch to main.
commands to switch naming locally can be found here: https://www.git-tower.com/learn/git/faq/git-rename-master-to-main
- Documentation: https://arm-doe.github.io/ACT/
- Examples: https://arm-doe.github.io/ACT/source/auto_examples/index.html
- Issue Tracker: https://github.com/ARM-DOE/ACT/issues
If you use ACT to prepare a publication, please cite the DOI listed in the badge above, which is updated with every version release to ensure that contributors get appropriate credit. DOI is provided through Zenodo.
- MPL2NC Reading binary MPL data.
- Cartopy Mapping and geoplots
- MetPy >= V1.0 Skew-T plotting and some stabilities indices calculations
- scikit-posthocs Using interquartile range or generalized Extreme Studentized Deviate quality control tests
ACT can be installed a few different ways. One way is to install using pip. When installing with pip, the ACT dependencies found in requirements.txt will also be installed. To install using pip:
pip install act-atmos
The easiest method for installing ACT is to use the conda packages from the latest release. To do this you must download and install Anaconda or Miniconda. With Anaconda or Miniconda install, it is recommended to create a new conda environment when using ACT or even other packages. To create a new environment based on the environment.yml:
conda env create -f environment.yml
Or for a basic environment and downloading optional dependencies as needed:
conda create -n act_env -c conda-forge python=3.7 act-atmos
Basic command in a terminal or command prompt to install the latest version of ACT:
conda install -c conda-forge act-atmos
To update an older version of ACT to the latest release use:
conda update -c conda-forge act-atmos
If you do not wish to use Anaconda or Miniconda as a Python environment or want to use the latest, unreleased version of ACT see the section below on Installing from source.
Installing ACT from source is the only way to get the latest updates and enhancement to the software that have no yet made it into a release. The latest source code for ACT can be obtained from the GitHub repository, https://github.com/ARM-DOE/ACT. Either download and unpack the zip file of the source code or use git to checkout the repository:
git clone https://github.com/ARM-DOE/ACT.git
To install in your home directory, use:
python setup.py install --user
To install for all users on Unix/Linux:
python setup.py build sudo python setup.py install
ACT is an open source, community software project. Contributions to the package are welcomed from all users.
The latest source code can be obtained with the command:
git clone https://github.com/ARM-DOE/ACT.git
If you are planning on making changes that you would like included in ACT, forking the repository is highly recommended.
We welcome contributions for all uses of ACT, provided the code can be distributed under the BSD 3-clause license. A copy of this license is available in the LICENSE.txt file in this directory. For more on contributing, see the contributor's guide.
After installation, you can launch the test suite from outside the source directory (you will need to have pytest installed):
$ pytest --mpl --pyargs act
In-place installs can be tested using the pytest command from within the source directory.