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oce (version 0.9-20)

read.met: Read a Met File

Description

Reads a comma-separated value file in the format used by the Meteorological Service of Canada (MSC). The agency does not publish a format for these files, so this function was based on a study of a few sample files, and it may fail for other files, if MSC changes the format.

Usage

read.met(file, type = NULL, skip, tz = getOption("oceTz"), debug = getOption("oceDebug"), processingLog, ...)

Arguments

file
a connection or a character string giving the name of the file to load.
type
if NULL, then the first line is studied, in order to determine the file type. If type="msc", then a file as formatted by the Meteorological Service of Canada is assumed.
skip
optional number of lines of header that occur before the actual data. If this is not supplied, read.met scans the file until it finds a line starting with "Date/Time", and considers all lines above that to be header.
tz
timezone assumed for time data
debug
a flag that turns on debugging. Set to 1 to get a moderate amount of debugging information, or to 2 to get more.
processingLog
if provided, the action item to be stored in the log. (Typically only provided for internal calls; the default that it provides is better for normal calls by a user.)
...
additional arguments, passed to called routines.

Value

An object of class "met", of which the data slot contains vectors time, temperature, pressure, u, and v. The velocity components have units m/s and are the components of the vector of wind direction. In other words, the oceanographic convention on velocity is employed, not the meteorological one; the weather forecaster's "North wind" has positive v and zero u. In addition to these things, data also contains items called wind (in km/h) and direction (in tenths of a degree), taken straight from the data file.

Note

There seem to be several similar formats in use, so this function may not work in all cases.

See Also

Other things related to met data: [[,met-method, [[<-,met-method, as.met, met-class, met, plot,met-method, subset,met-method, summary,met-method

Examples

Run this code
## Not run: 
# library(oce)
# met <- read.met("ile-rouge-eng-hourly-06012008-06302008.csv")
# plot(met, which=3:4)
# ## End(Not run)

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