Home

Awesome

Python Library: falwa (v2.1.0a)

Python packagecodecov.ioDocumentation StatusDOI

Important: this python package has been renamed from hn2016_falwa to falwa since version v1.0.0.

hn2016_falwa_diagram

Compute from gridded climate data the Finite-amplitude Local Wave Activity (FALWA) and flux terms introduced in:

Package Installation

Attention: substantial changes took place in release v2.0.0. Installation in develop mode is no longer available.

Since release v2.0.0, the F2PY modules in falwa is compiled with meson (See Issue #95 for details) to cope with the deprecation of numpy.disutils in python 3.12.

First-time installation

  1. To build the package from source, you need a fortran compiler (e.g., gfortran) to implement the installation.
  2. Clone the package repo by git clone https://github.com/csyhuang/hn2016_falwa.git .
  3. Navigate into the repository and set up a python environment satisfying the installation requirement by conda env create -f environment.yml. The environment name in the file is set to be falwa_env (which users can change).
  4. Install the package with the command python -m pip install .. The compile modules will be saved to python site-packages directory.
  5. If the installation is successful, you should be able to run through all unit tests in the folder tests/ by executing pytest tests/.

Get updated code from new releases

  1. To incorporate updates, first, pull the new version of the code from GitHub by git pull.
  2. Uninstall existing version of falwa: pip uninstall falwa
  3. If there is change in environment.yml, remove the existing environment by conda remove --name falwa_env --all and create the environment again from the updated YML file: conda env create -f environment.yml.
  4. Reinstall the updated version by python -m pip install ..
  5. Run through all unit tests in the folder tests/ by executing pytest tests/ to make sure the package has been properly installed.

Quick start

There are some readily run python scripts (in scripts/) and jupyter notebooks (in notebooks/) which you can start with. The netCDF files needed can be found in Clare's Dropbox folder.

Depending on what you want to do, the methods to be use may be different.

  1. If you solely want to compute equivalent latitude and local wave activity from a 2D field, you can refer to notebooks/simple/Example_barotropic.ipynb. This is useful for users who want to use LWA to quantify field anomalies.

  2. If you want to compute zonal wind reference states and wave activity fluxes in QG Formalism, look at notebooks/nh2018_science/demo_script_for_nh2018.ipynb for the usage of QGField. This notebook demonstrates how to compute wave activity and reference states presented in Nakamura and Huang (2018). To make sure the package is properly installed in your environment, run through the notebook after installation to see if there is error.

Inquiries / Issues reporting