Python-metar is a python package for interpreting METAR and SPECI coded weather reports.
METAR and SPECI are coded aviation weather reports. The official coding schemes are specified in the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) Manual on Codes, vol I.1, Part A (WMO-306 I.i.A). US conventions for METAR/SPECI reports vary in a number of ways from the international standard, and are described in chapter 12 of the Federal Meteorological Handbook No.1. (FMH-1 1995), issued by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). General information about the use and history of the METAR standard can be found here.
This module extracts the data recorded in the main-body groups of reports that follow the WMO spec or the US conventions, except for the runway state and trend groups, which are parsed but ignored. The most useful remark groups defined in the US spec are parsed, as well, such as the cumulative precipitation, min/max temperature, peak wind and sea-level pressure groups. No other regional conventions are formally supported, but a large number of variant formats found in international reports are accepted.
Current and historical METAR data can be obtained from various places. The current METAR report for a given airport is available at the URL
http://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/observations/metar/stations/<station>.TXT
where station
is the four-letter ICAO airport station code. The
accompanying script get_report.py will download and decode the
current report for any specified station.
The METAR reports for all stations (worldwide) for any "cycle" (i.e., hour) in the last 24 hours are available in a single file at the URL
http://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/observations/metar/cycles/<cycle>Z.TXT
where cycle
is a 2-digit cycle number (00
thru 23
).
The Federal Meteorological Handbook No.1. (FMH-1 1995) describes the U.S. standards for METAR. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) Manual on Codes, vol I.1, Part A (WMO-306 I.i.A) is another good reference.
The python-metar
library was orignally authored by Tom Pollard in January 2005, and is now maintained by contributers on Github.
Install this package in the usual way,
python setup.py install
The test suite can be run by:
python setup.py test
There are a couple of sample scripts, described briefly below.
There's no real documentation to speak of, yet, but feel free to contact me with any questions you might have about how to use this package.
You can always obtain the most recent version of this package using git, via
git clone https://github.com/python-metar/python-metar.git
File | Description |
---|---|
README | this file |
parse_metar.py | a simple commandline driver for the METAR parser |
get_report.py | a script to download and decode the current reports for one or more stations. |
sample.py | a simple script showing how the decoded data can be accessed. (see metar/.py sources and the test/test_.py scripts for more examples.) |
sample.metar | a sample METAR report (longer than most). Try feeding this to the parse_metar.py script... |
metar/Metar.py | the implementation of the Metar class. This class parses and represents a single METAR report. |
metar/Datatypes.py | a support module that defines classes representing different types of meteorological data, including temperature, pressure, speed, distance, direction and position. |
test/test_*.py | individual test modules |
setup.py | installation script |
See the sample.py script for an annonated demonstration of the use of this code. Just as an appetizer, here's an interactive example...
>>> from metar import Metar
>>> obs = Metar.Metar('METAR KEWR 111851Z VRB03G19KT 2SM R04R/3000VP6000FT TSRA BR FEW015 BKN040CB BKN065 OVC200 22/22 A2987 RMK AO2 PK WND 29028/1817 WSHFT 1812 TSB05RAB22 SLP114 FRQ LTGICCCCG TS OHD AND NW -N-E MOV NE P0013 T02270215')
>>> print obs.string()
station: KEWR
type: routine report, cycle 19 (automatic report)
time: Tue Jan 11 18:51:00 2005
temperature: 22.7 C
dew point: 21.5 C
wind: variable at 3 knots, gusting to 19 knots
peak wind: WNW at 28 knots
visibility: 2 miles
visual range: runway 04R: 3000 meters to greater than 6000 meters feet
pressure: 1011.5 mb
weather: thunderstorm with rain; mist
sky: a few clouds at 1500 feet
broken cumulonimbus at 4000 feet
broken clouds at 6500 feet
overcast at 20000 feet
sea-level pressure: 1011.4 mb
1-hour precipitation: 0.13in
remarks:
- Automated station (type 2)
- peak wind 28kt from 290 degrees at 18:17
- wind shift at 18:12
- frequent lightning (intracloud,cloud-to-cloud,cloud-to-ground)
- thunderstorm overhead and NW
- TSB05RAB22 -N-E MOV NE
METAR: METAR KEWR 111851Z VRB03G19KT 2SM R04R/3000VP6000FT TSRA BR FEW015 BKN040CB BKN065 OVC200 22/22 A2987 RMK AO2 PK WND 29028/1817 WSHFT 1812 TSB05RAB22 SLP114 FRQ LTGICCCCG TS OHD AND NW -N-E MOV NE P0013 T02270215
>>>>
The library is tested against Python 2.6, Python 2.7, Python 3.2, Python 3.3, Python 3.4, Python 3.5, and Python 3.6. A tox configuration file is included to easily run tests against each of these environments. To run tests against all environments, install tox and run:
>>> tox
To run against a specific environment, use the -e
flag:
>>> tox -e py35