Shows your city's weather and how many 'km' of wind it has per hour
String formatting library inspired from Python
A set of animated svg weather icons.
Filter promises concurrently
A utility that allows retrying a function with an exponential delay between attempts.
Animated weather component for React inspired by Skycons http://darkskyapp.github.io/skycons/
215 weather themed icons inspired by Font Awesome and ready for Bootstrap
Generate Zod schemas from Drizzle ORM schemas
Node Red node to retrieve local weather forecast from DWD (Germany)
Run any OpenAPI spec as an Agent optimized executable
A Node-RED node that gets the weather report from openweathermap
189 weather themed icons inspired by Font Awesome and ready for Bootstrap
Open-Meteo Weather API
Weather layers for MapTiler Cloud and MapTiler SDK
A set of animated svg weather icons. (Forked from https://github.com/basmilius/weather-icons.)
React Weather component
Node-RED contrib for weather.
Weather Icons icon set in Iconify JSON format
Simple package that makes it easy to work with OpenWeather API
A tiny invariant function
No description provided.
A module for obtaining weather information
Signal K plugin: AccuWeather marine weather as 30+ environment deltas, severe-weather notifications, NMEA2000-ready
Module emulating Elgato Eve history for homebridge plugins
Adds #weather method to ruby objects that know where they are in the world. Simple.
ullr is a little gem that consumes NOAA weather xml for a given lat/long, and returns a ruby object with 12 hour forecasts along with some sugar to let you know if any sugar will be falling from the sky.
All you need to know is the zip code you want the weather for. You can then bring up current, next day, 3 day or 7 day forecasts.
FAP is a ruby gem build on top of the excellent Nokogiri, to turn boring XML, or HTML documents into yummy ruby objects. Right now, it only support using Nokogiri's XPath selectors, and simple "relations" between a document nodes, though this will hopefully get better. FAP's ideas are loosely connected to tools built by some adventurous fellas at AF83, who still do PHP things to their brains. Some credits should go to them, and to the horrid weather that kept me locked inside last week-end. And yes, I know it's a stupid name. But I'm sure you can come up with a decent acronym. :)