Unveiling Datacula, the Dracula of Python packages, fearlessly devouring complexities in the analysis and data collection from aerosol-gas instruments. Developed by the creators of Particula, Datacula offers seamless integration with their cutting-edge modeling tools.
Datacula furnishes you with a comprehensive suite of tools to import, process, and visualize data from a diverse range of instruments in air quality monitoring. If your instrument data format isn't supported yet, you can contribute by adding it, thereby paving the way for future scientists.
For those with instrumental data, discover Particula—your go-to aerosol particle simulator. Designed for simplicity and adaptability, Particula delivers a robust aerosol simulation system for both gas and particle phases. Harness its power to tackle scientific questions arising from your Datacula data.
The main goal is to develop an aerosol data management and processing tool that is usable, efficient, and productive. In this process, we all will learn developing models in Python and associated packages. Let us all be friendly, respectful, and nice to each other. Any code added to this repository is automatically owned by all. Please speak up if something (even if trivial) bothers you. Talking through things always helps. This is an open-source project, so feel free to contribute, however small or big your contribution may be.
We follow the Google Python style guide here. We have contribution guidelines here and a code of conduct here as well.
The development of this package will be illustrated through Jupyter notebooks (here) that will be put together in the form of a Jupyter book on our (to be added).
For development, you can fork this repository and then install particula
in an editable (-e
) mode --- this is achieved by pip install -e ".[dev]"
in the root of this repository. Invoking pip install -e ".[dev]"
will install particula
, its runtime requirements, and the development and test requirements. The editable mode is useful because it allows seeing the manifestation of code edits globally through the particula
package in your environment (in a way, with the -e
mode, particula
self-updates to account for the latest local code edits).
We support python 3.9 and above. To check your python version, run python --version
in your terminal. To upgrade your python version, run pip install --upgrade python
or with conda conda install python=3.11
.
TBD