This content is obsolete and will be deactivated or archived as of April 1, 2024.
Tobac tutorials show different application cases for the cloud and precipitation tracking software tobac using jupyter notebooks. The rendered versions of our tutorials are provided at https://tobac-tutorials.readthedocs.io. Please have a look there, first!
Tutorial notebooks for tobac 2.x (currently in active development). Please use them together with the v2.0-dev development branch.
A step-by-step description to run the tutorials with jupyter is located here.
If you are using tobac 1.x, the notebooks here won#t work because of changes in the code structure. The equivalent notebooks can be found in the examples folder in the tobac master branch.
You contribution is welcome!
Each additional tutorial notbeook helps new tobac
users to understand the capability of the tracking software and supports creative use of feature identification and tracking in the atmospheric science context.
Please provide a separate pull request:
-
with your example notebook included
- please extensively use markdown elements to structure and explain your notebook
- check already existing notebooks to get an idea about our tutorial style
- please upload your example data to zenodo (see next paragraph)
- please check if your notebook is running in the recommended standard conda enviroment [see here]((docs/RunningTutorials.md) and update the list of required python packages if needed
-
with your suggestions to change the documentation elements, e.g.
index.rst
- please care that sphinx-based rendering is still working correctly, see here for an intro to sphinx-based rendering of our tutorial content
Our tutorials live from realistic examples and example data.
We recommend:
- to upload your example data (preferably as netcdf file) to zenodo
- to label the data such that "tobac" is included in the zenodo title
Already existing tobac
data can be found here: