Please note that climate-assessment
is still in early developmental stages, thus
all interfaces are subject to change.
The package climate-assessment
provides the possibility to reproduce the climate
variable data for the working group III (WGIII or WG3) contribution to the IPCC Sixth
Assessment (AR6) report, using climate emulators that were used in the working group I
(WGI or WG1) contribution to AR6. It also allows for assessing new emissions pathways in
a way that is fully consistent with AR6.
Note: the package's requirements are currently extremely strict. This is done to make it
more likely that installation will result in a valid environment. If you want a fully
specified environment, please use the poetry.lock
or requirements.txt
file provided
in this repository. We hope to make the package more libary-like, with looser
requirements, in future.
pip is Python's default package management system.
Caution
Due to the better dependency resolution installing with pip>=22
is
recommended.
If you install Anaconda, then pip
is also usable. pip
can also be used when Python
is installed directly, without using Anaconda.
- Ensure
pip
is installed ---with Anaconda, or according to the pip documentation. - Open a command prompt and run:
pip install climate-assessment
(Optional) If you intend to contribute changes to climate-assessment
, installing
directly from source is the way to go.
Detailed instructions on how to do this can be found in the documentation under https://climate-assessment.readthedocs.io/en/latest/install.html.
All documentation, including installation instructions, can be found at https://climate-assessment.readthedocs.io/.
Licensed under an MIT License. See the LICENSE file for more information.
If you have a suggestion for development, or find a bug, please report this under: https://github.com/iiasa/climate-assessment/issues.
The tests can be run with pytest
. On a Linux system, you should run something like
MAGICC_PROBABILISTIC_FILE=path/to/probabilistic-file pytest tests
. Note that for the
tests to work properly, you must set up your .env
file (see "Environment" section
above). On Windows, the environment variables (like
MAGICC_PROBABILISTIC_FILE=path/to/probabilistic-file
) should be set system-wide, and
the command reads pytest tests
.
Before committing or merging code, the following lines should be run to
ensure that the formatting is consistent with what is expected by the
Continuous Integration setup (for users with make
installed,
make checks
will run these for you):
black src scripts tests setup.py
isort src scripts tests setup.py
flake8 src scripts tests setup.py