Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Modifying the Config File
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Hello. I too am a Noob. Here is what I entered into my config.ps file,
which is located in the ~/MagicMirror/config directory:{ module: "weather", units: "imperial", windUnits: "imperial", tempUnits: "imperial", position: "top_right", header: "Weather Forecast", config: { weatherProvider: "openweathermap", type: "forecast", units: "imperial", windUnits: "imperial", tempUnits: "imperial", location: "Your-City", locationID: "Your-Location-ID", //ID from http://bulk.openweathermap.org/sample/city.list.json.gz; unzip the gz file and find your city apiKey: "Your-Newly-Created-apiKey" } },
As sdetweil stated, you have to download the file: http://bulk.openweathermap.org/sample/city.list.json.gz, unzip it and search for the city closest to your location. This will give you the values for location: and locationID: ( “Your-City” and “Your-Location-ID” ).
I found that searching for the 2-letter state value allowed me to find my location quicker.Then, you need to create a free account at https://openweathermap.org/ to obtain the apiKey that will be automatically created with your new account.
BTW, the “imperial” values result in Fahrenheit and MPH values. You can change the values or delete those lines if you want Metric values as that is the module’s default.
Take care.
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@rrslssr said in Modifying the Config File:
BTW, the “imperial” values result in Fahrenheit and MPH values
of course… that is the well known technical name for not Metric
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Sam, thanks for your response. I thought the file may have been part of the installation. I’ll grab it, thanks
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@jimb its not, because it changes all the time, and its not our info
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Another question everything is displaying OK and working except the two weather feeds. Both indicate “Loading” and just sit there…
I researched the City, City ID, and obtained an API key from OpenWeather. Is there a way to run them separately on their own, or do I need to troubleshoot it?
Config:Check does not show any errors. Thanks
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@jimb weather is done all in the browser, so open the browser developers window.
ctrl-shift-i on the browser keyboard, select the console tab and put weath in the filter field
show any errors… I suspect 401, not authorized.
you are using a v3 API key, so have to add the apiVersion:“3.0”
to the weather module config -
Sorry, your reply is higher than my limited knowledge :
Do I have to enter some line(s) in the config file? I had no success with the browser instructions. -
@jimb notjing in config.js. we are trying to look at the errors from the module
so you need to use the browser you are viewing mm with
three keys on the keyboard.
ctrl-shift-ior npm start dev
to start mm with the dev window openthen select the console tab
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@jimb I will always defer to @sdetweil 's greater knowledge and intelligence but another option is (I hope, anyway, since it’s what I’m using) to use the latitude and longitude of your location. I have the weather module set up to show my wife’s school using the coordinates. (We are known for our microclimates here – her school 2 miles away may have completely different weather from what we have at home.)
To get the coordinates, I went to maps.google.com, clicked on a location, then copied the resulting URL. It should look like this:
https://www.google.com/maps/@37.7761918,-122.4222641,16.25z?entry=ttu
The first number after the @ sign is the latitude; the second is the longitude. So you could put in your config file:
lat: 37.7761918, lon: -122.4222641,
and it will show the weather for your location (or the San Francisco War Memorial Opera House in that example). This might be handy if you’re not near a city listed in the file.
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And now, having actually looked at the file in question, I see it includes latitude and longitude for each entry. Very cool.