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Episode: 4266
Title: HPR4266: What's the weather?
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4266/hpr4266.mp3
Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:17:36
---
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4266 from Monday the 9th of December 2024.
Today's show is entitled What's the Weather?
It is hosted by Lee and is about 17 minutes long.
It carries a clean flag.
The summary is Lee writes a script to check what the weather is like.
Hello, I'm Lee.
Today I'll be asking the question, what's the weather?
It's been a fairly mild autumn afternoon in South London, you know it's about 17 degrees
outside.
It's now early evening.
So on the command line I'm typing curl space WTTR.IN and we get a beautiful display of
the weather on the terminal and it says weather report Bristol United Kingdoms that's obviously
geolacated me to Bristol for some reason says it's partly cloudy 13 degrees C.
WTTR.IN includes the built-in private path and query string parameters to get a customised
for the weather so let's try and get it in London curl WTTR.IN forward slash London.
And that's better, yeah it says 17 degrees C and that's the peak for today, just what
I saw earlier on my own home weather station which is only a cheap battery thing, I've
got nailed to it, well screwed to a tree just outside the window, a little sensor that
links to it and that was telling me it was 17.
So today I'm not going to be talking about WTTR.IN, I'm going to be rolling my own little
script, well to tell the truth I've already done so but I'll go through the process of
how we can write a script and the language I'll be using is PHP.
I won't be using WTTR.IN as I said, I'll be using another source of weather information
which is 7TIMA.INFO and URL that I'll be using is HTTPS, curl on forward slash www.7TIMA.INFO
forward slash bin, forward slash civil.php.
So I'll just try and get requests to that URL, I'll type curl and the URL I've just mentioned
and it says binary, so we don't get binary, let's get some JSON.
So I'll put that URL, ending in civil.php, question mark output equal JSON, okay why is
that failed?
It's failed because I need to enclose it in double quotes, I've always ZSH which I'm using
in my shell is interpreting the question mark as a wild card rather than actual question
mark, okay so now I've done it as a question mark, it's output load of JSON but it's filled
up the terminal, so add pipe bless.
So I can see the JSON has come up with product civil, obviously there are different types
of weather forecast and this is obviously the civil one, init and it looks like today's
date to 2410, 1812, guess 12 is an hour, it's actually 6, 13 evening where I am, I'm British
Shumertime at the moment which is 1 hour off of UTC, so the main chunk of the data
is in a key called data series and there's an array and each element has a time point
and the first time point I see is 3, the next one is 6, the next one is 9, so there
obviously 3 hours apart, then it has some more information, it has cloud cover, it's
a number like 9 or 7 or 1 and it has lifted underscore index which is like 2 on all of
these, it has preck underscore type which I imagine is precipitation type which will be
like rain or snow and it has preck underscore amount which is saying zero but I imagine
that's the amount of rain, then it has temp 2m which will be the temperature obviously
and the number it's giving is 25 and then it's got value RH2m and at 70%, I imagine that's
humidity and it's got wind 10m and within that key it's got direction S and speed 3, obviously
the wind direction and how fast the wind is blowing, the most interesting thing it has
the weather and that in quotes is cloudy day and the next one along is mcloudy night, okay
so I'm going to write PHP script that passes this data, so have I got PHP installed on
this laptop, I just type PHP, come on not found and said HHS is telling me, so this is
the max, I just type Brue, install PHP, home Brue is installing like a thousand libraries
and then finally it gets around to PHP after having installed the dependencies, so it's
pouring, pouring the bottle as it terms it and actually I fancy a non-nail call it Guinness
so, okay this is sound, a non-nail call it Guinness opening, right that should be PHP installed
or type PHP, yep and control D to get out of it, right so how should we start this script,
well all PHP scripts start with less than question mark PHP, so no no, weather.php, less than question
mark PHP and as we're going to be using the time, we'll set a default time zone and this
will be different depending on where you are, so I'm going to write day underscore D for underscore
time zone underscore set, open brackets and then in single quotes with capitals at the beginning
you're up forward slash London and end that with semicolon, then I'm going to put in my longitude
and latitude and you can get those from Google Maps, so I've got one variable I'm calling
dollar sign long and that is equal to in double quotes minus 0.1975 and so on, long series of numbers
and then that was semicolon and dollar sign lat equals in double quotes 51.3 something something
something something ending with a semicolon, then I'll specify my URL, this is going to be
dollar URL equals in double quotes htps colon for slash for slash www.7timer.info for slash bin for slash
civil.php question mark long equals dollar sign long and percent lat equals dollar sign lat
ampusand unit equals metric ampusand ac equals zero ampusand output equals json and I can't quite
remember what ac stood for and now I'm going to define some descriptive names for all the different
types of weather, so I'm writing dollar sign weather's equals open square brackets and then my
list of different weather's close square brackets semicolon, so my list of weather's the first one
is in single quotes ts day and then we'll map that with the equals and greater than sign and then
in double quotes a sun emoji and then the words hot day and then I'll do a comma and the next one
will be in single quotes clear day and then equals greater than in double quotes another sun
emoji and clear day and then a comma and I'll go on a clear night partially cloudy day all the way
to humid day, lightly rainy day and so on and you can see these in the show notes then that's
actually access this URL and get the json back so I'm going to write dollar sign json equals far
get contents and that's far unschooled get unschooled contents and then in brackets dollar sign URL
and that ends with a semicolon and just in case something goes wrong we don't want to leave the
rest of the script to execute you know so we don't want garbage out on the terminal so we'll just
say if in brackets exclamation mark dollar sign json exit brackets semicolon and the exclamation
mark means not then let's decode this json into a PHP object so we'll say dollar sign object
calls json underscore decode in brackets dollar sign json and a semicolon then let's get the initial
date which I mentioned before was in the json under the init key and once we've got the date
we'll decode it into a PHP date the format is four digit year two digit month two digit day
and two digit 24 hour so in PHP formatting that's a capital Y little m little d look up to h so my
line of code will be dollar sign init equals date time with dnt capital colon colon create from
with a capital F format with capital F and then in brackets in single quotes capital Y little m little
d capital H then comma then dollar sign obj hyphen greater than sign you know it's like an arrow get
time stamp with a capital T and brackets then we want to get the actual data series into a variable
and that's simple enough we'll just say dollar sign series equals dollar sign obj hyphen greater than
sign data series and semicolon each of these items in the date series has a time point to it
and the time point is just a number like three or six or nine or twelve obviously every three hours
so it's a number of hours and it is after the initial time stamps that it gave so we'll just want
to figure out when a time point actually is we'll just add it to the initial time stamp and
I'm feeling a bit lazy about writing a clever algorithm so I'm just going to write fairly stupid
algorithm which is just to create an array of all the differences between the particular time stamp
and the time now and then we'll just find whatever the minimum is of the array and that way we'll
know which of those time points is closest to the time now so what I'm writing is dollar sign
now equals time then bracket semicolon that gets the time now then for each in brackets dollar sign
series as dollar sign k equals greater than dollar sign point so that's just iterating through the
series where k will be the numeric index and point will be the particular item in the data
series and then in the loop we'll say dollar sign time point equals dollar sign point
write arrow time point semicolon and we'll say dollar sign time stamp equals dollar sign in it
plus in brackets dollar sign time point times three six zero zero so that's just because the
time point is in hours and we want to convert it to seconds and add it onto our time stamp
and then to get the difference we'll just say dollar sign diff equals ABS stands for absolute
in brackets dollar sign time stamp minus dollar sign now semicolon and just the absolute
function will remove the sign so it doesn't matter with the time stamps before or after now
we'll just know what the positive difference is from it and then we'll populate an array
so dollar sign data in square brackets dollar sign diff equals dollar sign point
so the index of our array will be the difference and the element in the array will be the whole
sort of object for that time point and then the clever bit of my stupid algorithm I'll say
dollar sign key equals mean in brackets array underscore keys in brackets dollar sign data
and that just means it will find the item in the array that has the lowest difference between
the time point and the time now because the index of the array is that difference
and then we'll just put the chosen item from the data series into a variable so say dollar
measure equals dollar data in square brackets dollar key semicolon
and finally we'll get some useful information out so dollar temperature equals dollar measure
right arrow in curly brackets single quotes temp 2m semicolon and that gets the temperature
obviously and then we'll get the description from the weather and we'll use it with the array of
different types of weather to get a nice description that we defined previously so dollar sign
weather underscore desk equals dollar sign weather and then in square brackets dollar sign measure
right arrow weather so i'm saying right arrow by actually mean a hyphen and the greater than sign
and that's it the last line of code will just be to output what we've discovered so echo
space and then in double quotes dollar sign weather underscore desk in a space and dollar sign
temperature and then after that will append a Celsius sign and a new line so per period
in double quotes degree symbol capital C backslash n and the backslash n just means a new line
and we end up with semicolon okay and i'll end the php script or those not strictly necessary
but i'll put a question mark and a greater than sign and then we'll save that and then i'll try
php weather dot php and it's thinking and it's output something it's given us a nice emoji of a cloud
and it says partially cloudy night 12 degrees c and i'll just check the weather
my ipad and it mostly concur as it says 13 degrees it says mostly clear so i suppose it's glass
half full glass half empty whether you call it partially cloudy or mostly clear and it's correct
in saying it's night because it it's dark outside you can find the code and modify it yourself
it's gist.github.com for slash max split and it's somewhat cold now so i'll apologise if you can
hear the clicking of my heater let's finish off with listening to some weather here's a autumn
rain shower recorded last week
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