Referencing#

The Metobs-toolkit is published under the MIT license, you can use the software freely. The Metobs-toolkit (v0.2.0) was published in JOSS: Publication.

Citing#

When citing Metobs-Toolkit, you can use:

Vergauwen et al., (2024). MetObs - a Python toolkit for using non-traditional meteorological observations. Journal of Open Source Software, 9(95), 5916, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.05916

or using BiBTeX:

@article{Vergauwen2024,
 doi = {10.21105/joss.05916},
 url = {https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.05916},
 year = {2024},
 publisher = {The Open Journal},
 volume = {9},
 number = {95},
 pages = {5916},
 author = {Thomas Vergauwen and Michiel Vieijra and Andrei Covaci and Amber Jacobs and Sara Top and Wout Dewettinck and Kobe Vandelanotte and Ian Hellebosch and Steven Caluwaerts},
 title = {MetObs - a Python toolkit for using non-traditional meteorological observations}, journal = {Journal of Open Source Software}
 }

When referring to the MetObs-Toolkit software, please mention the used version.

import metobs_toolkit

print(metobs_toolkit.__version__)

Publication code as an example#

You can find the notebook for creating the figures used in the JOSS publication as an example here:

About JOSS#

The Journal of Open Source Software is a developer-friendly, open-access journal for research software packages.