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a weather display for a raspberry pi and a TFT display written in python3 and pygame

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WeatherPi_TFT

Working on @pimoroni HyperPixel4 Display and a Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Hardware

Working on @HWHardsoft AZ-Touch-Pi0-Weather with ili9341 Display and a Raspberry Pi Zero W Hardware

so it all began

Hardware

a weather display for a raspberry pi and a adafruit (featherwing) TFT ili9341 display

UPDATE

WeatherPiTFT now runs on every display size... from the smallest 128x128, 128x160, 240x320, 320x480, 480x640, 480x720, 480x800 (pimoroni hyperpixel4 or official Raspberry Pi 7" Touchscreen Display), 720x720 (pimoroni hyperpixel4 square) and above. WeatherPiTFT will always be shown in portrait mode but it also works on a landscape configured display (but still in 3x4 centred on your display). The images have a size of 1000x1000px so it should work even on HD monitors without lost of weather image quality.

written with love in python3.7

WeatherPi_TFT WeatherPi_TFT

comes with 2 themes (default and darcula styled)

OLD Pics before AA

WeatherPi_TFT

all available weather icons in 2 sizes

thx @erikflowers for his awesome weather-icons

I colored them and put a little glitter on it :)

Weather Icons

icons for moonphases

moon phase rendering: credits to @miyaichi for his awesome fork

Hardware and wiring

i wrote this app on a mac with PyCharm and tested it quite a while. since it uses only standard python3 modules and libraries it should work on nearly everything that can run python3 and pygame.

PyCharm IDE by intelliJ jetbrains

this tutorial is basically for running it on a raspberry pi (zero, 1, 2, 3) and a TFT display which matches up with chips like the ones from adafruit. as long as it uses standard spi it should work with the new dtoverlaymodule in the latest jessie versions of raspbian... i think there is no need for a custom kernel. it's just a little bit configuration.

i tested it with following TFT's:

no configuration needed for:

  • official raspberry pi 7" display
  • any HDMI display
  • skip all the TFT setup parts

wiring

wiring

  • this should explain how to wire up your display
SDO (MISO) TFT Data Out SPI_MISO    = GPIO09
SDI (MOSI) TFT Data In  SPI_MOSI    = GPIO10
SCK TFT Clock           SPI_CLK     = GPIO11

CS TFT Chip Select      SPI_CE0_N   = GPIO08
D/C TFT Data / Command              = GPIO24

RESET Reset                         = GPIO23
 
GND Ground                          = GND
VCC 3V3 supply                      = +3V3 or 5V
  • optional if you like to use the included PiButtons script
BUTTON 1    used for restart app    = GPIO19
BUTTON 2    used for shutdown pi    = GPIO26
  • give you the option to put some function on a hardware button (like restart the WeatherPiTFT service, shutdown/reboot your Pi, change display brightness, etc.)
  • feel free to add your own functions in PiButtons.py

buy complete hardware kit

You can also buy a complete set and build it yourself from my friend Hartmut over at his shop AZ Touch PI0 Kit

BUY HERE

Setup your Pi

install jessie to a sd card and update

  • get the latest NOOBS installer
https://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads/noobs/

i used NOOBS v2.1.0 which was the latest version for now

setup the SD card

follow the instructions from raspberrypi.org to setup your sd card and operating system

the first boot

finish your setup by following this guide

enable SPI

enable SPI in raspi-config - Interfacing Options

connect to your WiFi

to connect to a wifi network follow this guide

update all tools

  • when your connected to your wifi open up a terminal and type:
sudo apt-get update -y && sudo apt-get upgrade -y

set up the TFT

for ili9341 displays from adafruit

for other displays like this you may have to build your own kernel module or find it from your seller.

  • in /boot/config.txt, add in the following at the bottom
# TFT display and touch panel
dtoverlay=rpi-display
dtparam=rotate=0
  • change /boot/cmdline.txt to add the following to the end of the existing line
fbcon=map:10 fbcon=font:VGA8x8 logo.nologo

for Pimoroni Hyperpixel4

just change "FRAMEBUFFER": "/dev/fb1" to "FRAMEBUFFER": "/dev/fb0" later in your config file

you can also change "FPS" to 60 and "AA" to true for mx quality and frames per second. but 30 is more than enough.

it's just needed for the particle simulation for precipitation types like rain and snow.

Everything from 15-30 fps should give you decent animations.

install and configure WeatherPi_TFT

git clone https://github.com/LoveBootCaptain/WeatherPi_TFT.git
cd WeatherPi_TFT

install the dependencies in python3

since the script has to be run by a root user you have to install the dependencies with sudo

sudo pip3 install -r requirements.txt

create a ram disk to protect your sd card

NEW PLEASE UPDATE

WeatherPiTFT will write a json file to your Pi after updating the weather data from the api provider.

this process will reduce writing to your sd card, cause we're writing it only to RAM.

ramdisk will only be used in production mode. means you have set your "ENV" to "Pi" which is default when you followed this guide.

you may also consider using great tooling for writing all logs to ram from @azlux: log2ram

sudo mkdir /mnt/ramdisk
sudo nano /etc/fstab

add the following line right at the end of the opened file

size=5M specifies the size of the reserved ram (5M is more than enough)

tmpfs /mnt/ramdisk tmpfs nodev,nosuid,size=5M 0 0

CTRL-O to save and CTRL-X to quit nano

finally mount the ram disk and reboot your Pi

sudo mount -a
sudo reboot

while your Pi reboots grep your API key ...

get an api key from weatherbit.io

add API key and other options to the config file

when your Pi has rebooted

create a new config-file

cd
cd WeatherPi_TFT
cp example.config.json config.json

edit the config.json file

nano config.json

configure your display options

  "DISPLAY": {
    "WIDTH": 240,
    "HEIGHT": 320,
    "FPS": 30,
    "AA": false,
    "ANIMATION": false,
    "FRAMEBUFFER": "/dev/fb1",
    "PWM": false,
    "SHOW_FPS": true,
    "SHOW_API_STATS": true,
    "MOUSE": true
  },
  • as long as you configure a 3:4 ratio the dashboard will be scaled
  • FPS is used for pygame internal ticks - 30 fps is more than enough to render clock transitions and precipitation animations smoothly
  • AA turns antialiasing on and off (leave it on a Pi Zero off, it is performance heavy on higher FPS)
  • ANIMATION enables the little particle simulation for precipitation, disable will show an image instead
  • set FRAMEBUFFER according to your display, some use fb0 (e.g. @pimoroni HyperPixel4) some fb1 (most ili9341 from @adafruit), for local development or HDMI displays set it to false
  • set PWM to your GPIO pin if your display support pwm brightness (HyperPixel supports GPIO 19 for pwm brightness) - may need some code adjustments on your side depending on your display (some are bright enough with pwm 25, some ore not) otherwise set it to false
  • SHOW_FPS show the current fps on the display
  • SHOW_API_STATS show how many API calls are left over (resets every midnight UTC)
  • MOUSE enable/disable mouse pointer - needed for local development, better leave it disabled

configure weatherbit.io settings

  • replace xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx in "WEATHERBIT_IO_KEY": "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" with your own API key
  • replace en in "WEATHERBIT_LANGUAGE": "en" with your preferred language
  • replace de in "WEATHERBIT_COUNTRY": "de" with your country
  • replace 10178 in "WEATHERBIT_POSTALCODE": 10178 with your zip code / postal code (this example-location zip code is from berlin city, germany)
  • for language-support, units, etc please refer to -> weatherbit API Docs

localise hardcoded strings and ISO settings

  "LOCALE": {
    "ISO": "en_GB",
    "RAIN_STR": "Rain",
    "SNOW_STR": "Snow",
    "PRECIP_STR": "Precipitation",
    "METRIC": true
  },
  • change "ISO" and "METRIC" according to your needs
  • "METRIC": true will get all weather data units as metric system, change to false if you prefer imperial styled units
    • °C will be °F and km/h will be `mph
    • will also change the request parameter untis for the api request (see weatherbit API Docs for more details)

timer options

  "TIMER": {
    "UPDATE": 420,
    "RELOAD": 30
  },
  • the UPDATE timer defines how often the API will be called in seconds - 7min will give you enough API calls over the day
  • RELOAD defines who often the information on the display will be updated

theme file and theme options

set your theme file [darcula.theme, light.theme or example.theme] in config.json

"THEME": "darcula.theme",
  • inside your THEME you can specify with json file with theming information -> an example for the default theme is in the file example.theme.json
  • you must also try the new darcula.theme.json which is an homage to jetBrains great darcula theme for their IDE's -> see screenshots below
    • you can change some basic theme information
    • change colors of status bar icons and the wind direction icon with the theme colors
      "RED" is used for errors in status bar icons and wind direction
      "BLUE" is used for sync and update in status bar icons and rain precip icon
      "GREEN" is used for everything fine in status bar icons
      
    • change every color of an image by adding a color (r, g, b) to the optional fillcolor parameter in the DrawImage class
    • change the time and date format according to your preferences
      • a good reference for strftime options can be found here Python strftime()
      • for 12h clock with am and pm support you can use "%I:%M:%S %p" instead of "%H:%M:%S" for a 24h clock in yourTheme.DATE_FORMAT.TIME
      • for imperial like date format just change "%A - %d. %b %Y" to "%A - %b %d %Y" in yourTheme.DATE_FORMAT.DATE
    • or create your own theme with your fonts and add it to your config/theme`

setup the services

sadly pygame doesn't like to work well with systemd... so it has to run as init.d service. maybe someone can help to solve this one time.

cd
cd WeatherPi_TFT
sudo cp WeatherPiTFT.sh /etc/init.d/WeatherPiTFT
sudo cp PiButtons.sh /etc/init.d/PiButtons

run python with root privileges

  • this is useful if you like to run your python scripts on boot and with sudo support in python
sudo chown -v root:root /usr/bin/python3
sudo chmod -v u+s /usr/bin/python3

setting up python3 as default interpreter

  • this should start your wanted python version just by typing python in the terminal
  • helps if you have projects in python2 and python3 and don't want to hassle with the python version in your service scripts
update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python2.7 1
update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3.4 2

you can always swap back to python2 with:

update-alternatives --config python

and choose your preferred version of python

  • check if python3.x is now default with:
python --version
  • it should say something like:
Python 3.7.x
  • if everything is set up and updated correctly:
sudo reboot

test the services

  • for the WeatherPiTFT Service
sudo service WeatherPiTFT start
sudo service WeatherPiTFT stop
sudo service WeatherPiTFT restart
sudo service WeatherPiTFT status
  • for the PiButtons Service
sudo service PiButtons start
sudo service PiButtons stop
sudo service PiButtons restart
sudo service PiButtons status
  • if this is doing what it should you can run the service every time you boot your pi
sudo update-rc.d WeatherPiTFT defaults
sudo update-rc.d PiButtons defaults

Troubleshooting

  • if you have any issues with setting up your locale please read the issue #1
  • if some special characters of your language is not supported (e.g. like chinese characters) please read the issue #1

WeatherPi_TFT in Chinese

  • a good way to setup for chinese was given from @yifanshu02 here

WeatherPi_TFT in Chinese

credits

screenshots

darcula styled theme with another font

Darcula styled Theme for WeatherPi_TFT

WeatherPi_TFT

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a weather display for a raspberry pi and a TFT display written in python3 and pygame

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