Python 2.7 application to get local weather forecast and display results
via icons on LED 8x8 matrices!
This program should work with any Raspberry Pi although I have only tested it with an original Model A (yes, an A). Also, any 4 Adafruit 8x8 LED Matrices with I2C Backpacks should work. Be sure to solder the address jumpers to set unique addresses for each. Expected range is 0x70-0x73.
A brief description of the various software components.
weather.py
- gets and displays forecast from NOAA (US ONLY)weather_forecastio.py
- gets and displays forecast from forecast.ioweather_openweather.py
- gets and displays forecast from openweathermap.orgrpi_weather.py
- defines a class for interfacing with the hardwareled8x8icons.py
- contains a dictionary of iconsclock.py
- displays the time, for use as a clock
- Adafruit Python Library for LED Backpacks
Simply clone this repo and run:
$ git clone https://github.com/caternuson/rpi-weather.git
$ cd rpi-weather
$ sudo python weather.py
The forecast location is specified with a zipcode. A default zipcode can be set in the code:
ZIPCODE = 98109
A zipcode can also be passed in from the command line, which will override the default:
$ sudo python weather.py 98109
You will need an API key to use these services. Each website has instructions
for how to do this. You will also need the latitude and longitude for your
location. Once you have this info, create a file called weather.cfg
with the following contents:
[config]
APIKEY: your_api_key
LAT: your_latitude
LON: your_longitude
replacing the your_*
info as needed. NOTE: west longitudes are negative,
use decimal values for both.
The easiest way to have the program run on a daily basis is to use cron
.
Use crontab -e
to add the following entry, which will run the program
every morning at 4AM:
0 4 * * * sudo -E PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH python /home/pi/rpi-weather/weather.py
NOTE: If you installed the program in a different location, change the path accordingly.
The forecast is determined using the NOAA REST web service. Specifically, the Summarized Data for One or More Zipcodes. A typical request looks like:
http://graphical.weather.gov/xml/sample_products/browser_interface/ndfdBrowserClientByDay.php?zipCodeList=98109&format=12+hourly&numDays=4
The key bits being:
zipCodeList
- zipcode(s) for forecastformat
- choose either 12 or 24 hour periodnumDays
- number of days in forecast
The request returns XML data. The icons are set by a simple text search in the
weather-summary
attribute of the weather-conditions
tag.
An ICON_MAP
is defined to map forecast results to a specific LED 8x8 icon.
Icon | Weather |
---|---|
SUNNY | |
RAIN | |
CLOUD | |
SHOWERS | |
STORM | |
SNOW | |
none of the above |