Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: ncvue
Version: 4.0
Summary: ncvue: A minimal GUI for a quick view of netcdf files, aiming to be a drop-in replacement for ncview and panoply
Home-page: https://github.com/mcuntz/ncvue
Author: Matthias Cuntz
Author-email: mc@macu.de
Maintainer: Matthias Cuntz
Maintainer-email: mc@macu.de
License: MIT
Project-URL: Documentation, https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/
Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/mcuntz/ncvue
Project-URL: Tracker, https://github.com/mcuntz/ncvue/issues
Project-URL: Changelog, https://github.com/mcuntz/ncvue/blob/main/CHANGELOG.rst
Platform: any
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Intended Audience :: End Users/Desktop
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Natural Language :: English
Classifier: Operating System :: MacOS
Classifier: Operating System :: MacOS :: MacOS X
Classifier: Operating System :: Microsoft
Classifier: Operating System :: Microsoft :: Windows
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX
Classifier: Operating System :: Unix
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Atmospheric Science
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Hydrology
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Mathematics
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
Requires-Python: >=3.6
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
Provides-Extra: doc
Provides-Extra: test
License-File: LICENSE

ncvue - A GUI to view netCDF files
==================================
..
  pandoc -f rst -o README.html -t html README.rst
  As docs/src/readme.rst:
    replace _small.png with .png
    replace
      higher resolution images can be found in the documentation_
    with
      click on figures to open larger pictures
    remove section "Installation"

A minimal GUI for a quick view of netCDF files. Aiming to be a drop-in
replacement for ncview_ and panoply_.

.. image:: https://zenodo.org/badge/DOI/10.5281/zenodo.4459598.svg
   :target: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4459598
   :alt: Zenodo DOI

.. image:: https://badge.fury.io/py/ncvue.svg
   :target: https://badge.fury.io/py/ncvue
   :alt: PyPI version

.. image:: http://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT-blue.svg?style=flat
   :target: https://github.com/mcuntz/ncvue/blob/master/LICENSE
   :alt: License

.. image:: https://travis-ci.org/mcuntz/ncvue.svg?branch=main
   :target: https://travis-ci.org/mcuntz/ncvue
   :alt: Build status

About ncvue
-----------

``ncvue`` is a minimal GUI for a quick view of netCDF files. It is aiming to be
a drop-in replacement for ncview_ and panoply_, being slightly more general than
ncview targeting maps but providing animations, zooming and panning capabilities
unlike panoply. If ``ncvue`` is used with maps, it supports mostly structured
grids, more precisely the grids supported by cartopy_.

``ncvue`` is a Python script that can be called from within Python or as a
command line tool. It is not supposed to produce publication-ready plots but
rather provide a quick overview of the netCDF file.

The complete documentation for ``ncvue`` is available from:

   https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/

Quick usage guide
-----------------

``ncvue`` can be run from the command line:

.. code-block:: bash

   ncvue netcdf_file.nc

or from within Python:

.. code-block:: python

   from ncvue import ncvue
   ncvue('netcdf_file.nc')

where the netCDF file is optional. The latter can also be left out and a netCDF
file can be opened with the "Open File" button from within ``ncvue``.

Note, ``ncvue`` uses the `TkAgg` backend of `matplotlib`. It must be called
before any other call to `matplotlib`. This also means that you cannot launch it
from within `iPython` if it was launched with `--pylab`. It can be called from
within a standard `iPython`, though, or using `ipython --gui tk`.

When using ``ncvue`` with `jupyter` notebooks, one has to set `%matplotlib
inline` before the import and call of ``ncvue``. You have set `%matplotlib
inline` again if you want to continue having inline plots in `jupyter`
afterwards.

.. code-block:: python

   %matplotlib inline
   from ncvue import ncvue
   ncvue('netcdf_file.nc')
   %matplotlib inline

One can also install standalone macOS or Windows applications that come with
everything needed to run ``ncvue`` including Python:

- `macOS app`_ (macOS > 10.13 [High Sierra] on Intel)
- `Windows executable`_ (Windows 10)

The macOS app should work from macOS 10.13 (High Sierra) onward on Intel
processors. There is no standalone application for macOS on Apple Silicon (M1)
chips because I do not have a paid Apple Developer ID. Other installation
options work, though.

A dialog box might pop up on macOS saying that the ``ncvue.app`` is from an
unidentified developer. This is because ``ncvue`` is an open-source software.
Depending on the macOS version, it offers to open it anyway. In later versions
of macOS, this option is only given if you right-click (or control-click) on the
``ncvue.app`` and choose `Open`. You only have to do this once. It will open like
any other application the next times.

General layout
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

On opening, ``ncvue`` presents three panels for different plotting types:
Scatter or Line plots, Contour plots, and Maps. This is the look in macOS light
mode (higher resolution images can be found in the documentation_):

.. image:: https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/images/scatter_panel_light_small.png
   :width: 860 px
   :align: left
   :alt: Graphical documentation of ncvue layout

..
   :height: 462 px

All three panes are organised in this fashion: the plotting canvas, the
Matplotlib navigation toolbar and the pane, where one can choose the plotting
variables and dimensions, as well as plotting options. You can always choose
another panel on top, and open another, identical window for the same netCDF
file with the button "New Window" on the top right.

Map panel
^^^^^^^^^

If ``ncvue`` detects latitude and longitude variables with a size greater than
1, it opens the Map panel by default. This is the Map panel in macOS dark mode,
describing all buttons, sliders, entry boxes, spinboxes, and menus:

.. image:: https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/images/map_panel_dark_small.png
   :width: 860 px
   :align: left
   :alt: Graphical documentation of Map panel

If it happens that the detection of latitudes and longitudes did not work
automatically, you can choose the correct variables manually. Or you might use
the empty entries on top of the dropdown menus of the latitudes and longitudes,
which uses the index and one can hence display the matrix within the netCDF
file. You might want to switch of the coastlines in this case.

You might want to switch off the automatically detected "global" option
sometimes if your data is on a rotated grid or excludes some regions such as
below minus -60 °S.

All dimensions can be set from 0 to the size of the dimension-1, to "all", or to
any of the arithmetic operators "mean", "std" (standard deviation), "min",
"max", "ptp" (point-to-point amplitude, i.e. max-min), "sum", "median", "var"
(variance).

Be aware that the underlying cartopy/matplotlib may (or may not) need a long
time to plot the data (with the pseudocolor 'mesh' option) if you change the
central longitude of the projection from the central longitude of your data,
which is automatically detected if "central lon" is set to None. Setting
"central lon" to the central longitude of the input data normally eliminates the
problem.

Scatter/Line panel
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

If ``ncvue`` does not detect latitude and longitude variables with a size
greater than 1, it opens the Scatter/Line panel by default. This is the
Scatter/Line panel in macOS dark mode, describing all buttons, sliders, entry
boxes, spinboxes, and menus:

.. image:: https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/images/scatter_panel_dark_small.png
   :width: 860 px
   :align: left
   :alt: Graphical documentation of Scatter/Line panel

The default plot is a line plot with solid lines (line style 'ls' is '-'). One
can set line style 'ls' to None and set a marker symbol, e.g. 'o' for circles, to
get a scatter plot. A large variety of line styles, marker symbols and color
notations are supported.

``ncvue`` builds automatically a `datetime` variable from the time axis. This is
correctly interpreted by the underlying Matplotlib also when zooming into or
panning the axes. But it is also much slower than using the index. Selecting the
empty entry on top of the dropdown menu for `x` uses the index for the x-axis
and is very fast. Plotting a line plot with 52608 time points takes about 2.2 s
on my Macbook Pro using the `datetime` variable and about 0.3 s using the index
(i.e. empty x-variable). This is especially true if one plots multiple lines
with 'all' entries from a specific dimension. Plotting all 10 depths of soil
water content for the 52608 time points, as in the example below, takes also
about 0.3 s if using the index as x-variable but more than 11.1 s when using the
`datetime` variable.

.. image:: https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/images/scatter_panel_dark_multiline.png
   :width: 407 px
   :align: center
   :alt: Example of multiple lines in the Scatter/Line panel

Contour panel
^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The last panel provide by ``ncvue`` draws contour plots. This is the
Contour panel in macOS dark mode, describing all buttons, sliders, entry
boxes, spinboxes, and menus:

.. image:: https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/images/contour_panel_dark_small.png
   :width: 860 px
   :align: left
   :alt: Graphical documentation of Contour panel

This produces also either pseudocolor plots ('mesh' ticked) or filled
contour plots ('mesh' unticked) just as the Map panel but without any map
projection.

Installation
------------

``ncvue`` is an application written in Python. If you have Python installed,
 then the best is to install ``ncvue`` within the Python universe. The easiest
 way to install ``ncvue`` is thence via `pip` if you have cartopy_ installed
 already:

.. code-block:: bash

   pip install ncvue

`Cartopy` can, however, be more elaborate to install_. The easiest way to
install `Cartopy` is by using Conda_ and then installing ``ncvue`` by `pip`.
After installing, for example, Miniconda_:

.. code-block:: bash

   conda install -c conda-forge cartopy
   pip install ncvue

We also provide a standalone `macOS app`_ and a `Windows executable`_ that come with
everything needed to run ``ncvue`` including Python. The macOS app should work
from macOS 10.13 (High Sierra) onward. It is, however, only tested on macOS
10.15 (Catalina). Drop me a message if it does not work on newer operating
systems.

See the installation instructions_ in the documentation_ for more information.

License
-------

``ncvue`` is distributed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE_ file for
details.

Copyright (c) 2020-2021 Matthias Cuntz

``ncvue`` uses the Azure_ theme by rdbende_ on Linux and the `Sun Valley`_ theme
also by rdbende_ on Windows.

Standalone applications are produced with `cx_Freeze`_, currently maintained by
`Marcelo Duarte`_.

The project structure of ``ncvue`` was very originally based on a template_
provided by `Sebastian Müller`_ but has evolved considerably.

Different netCDF test files were provided by `Juliane Mai`_.

.. _Anaconda: https://www.anaconda.com/products/individual
.. _macOS app: http://www.macu.de/extra/ncvue-3.8.dmg
.. _Azure: https://github.com/rdbende/Azure-ttk-theme
.. _cartopy: https://scitools.org.uk/cartopy/docs/latest/
.. _Conda: https://docs.conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/
.. _cx_Freeze: https://cx-freeze.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
.. _documentation: https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/
.. _Marcelo Duarte: https://github.com/marcelotduarte
.. _Windows executable: http://www.macu.de/extra/ncvue-3.7-amd64.msi
.. _install: https://scitools.org.uk/cartopy/docs/latest/installing.html
.. _instructions: https://mcuntz.github.io/ncvue/html/install.html
.. _LICENSE: https://github.com/mcuntz/ncvue/blob/main/LICENSE
.. _matplotlib: https://matplotlib.org/
.. _Juliane Mai: https://github.com/julemai
.. _Miniconda: https://docs.conda.io/en/latest/miniconda.html
.. _Sebastian Müller: https://github.com/MuellerSeb
.. _Sun Valley: https://github.com/rdbende/Sun-Valley-ttk-theme
.. _ncview: http://meteora.ucsd.edu/~pierce/ncview_home_page.html
.. _netcdf4: https://unidata.github.io/netcdf4-python/netCDF4/index.html
.. _numpy: https://numpy.org/
.. _panoply: https://www.giss.nasa.gov/tools/panoply/
.. _rdbende: https://github.com/rdbende
.. _template: https://github.com/MuellerSeb/template


