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Course materials for Introduction to Introduction to Physical Oceanography (EESC4925)

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Intro to Physical Oceanography

Course materials for EESC4925

Also see my python tutorials.

How To Use This Site

The best way to get the materials (including homework) is the use git to clone this repository. If you don't have git already on you computer, it is easy to install on all platforms following these instructions.

From the command line, run the command

git clone https://github.com/rabernat/intro_to_physical_oceanography

If you are not a fan of the command line, there are plent of graphical interfaces to git available.

Once you have the repository cloned, you can update it as new lectures come out by running

git pull

If for some reason you can't get git working, the alternative is to use the link to the right to "Download Zip". The disadvantage here is that you will have to re-download every time the repo is updated.

I welcome your feedback on these instructions.

Why Python

A great deal has been written on this subject. My reasons are summarized as follows.

  1. Python is open source. Open source means that the source code is available freely to the public and can be examined, modified, and improved. The alternative to open source is closed, proprietary. Proprietary tools, such as MATLAB, are ultimately controlled by corporations, and those corporations decide what features they will include. I consider software tools as a central part of scientific research---if we want to have transparent, reproducible, scientific results, we should be using open source tools. Nature agrees with me.

  2. Python is free. It does not cost money to use python. If your scientific code is written in MATLAB, it can only be run by others with access to MATLAB. That means people outside the university world (e.g. high school students), in economically disadvantaged communities, or in developing countries will be unable to reproduce and build on your results.

  3. Python is easy to read. This may seem like a superficial point, but it is crucial for effective sharing of code. Even if you are the only one reading your code, python is easy on the eyes.

  4. Python has a great library. The scipy ecosystem provides the tools to do almost anything you can imagine.

  5. Python is constantly evolving. If you find something you can't do with python, chances are someone is working on it. The world is changing: data is exploding, computers architecture is evolving, and new forms of analysis and visualization are being invented. Python is evolving too, and it evolves based on what the community needs. The new tool I am most excited about is xray.

  6. Python is at home on the web. The Jupyter project grew out of the python community and is revolutionizing the way we do science and communicate it with others. With Jupyter, I never have to leave my browser. Nature agrees that this is the future of scientific communication.

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