This blog post showcases that Matplotlib was used directly to generate many of the figures in the IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C, as part of a larger effort to increase openness, transparency and reproducibility of the analysis of quantitative scenarios in the report.
Warning: I did not manage to get the style of the blog post right without using CSS markings and captions for the figures, so I followed the advice in the Hugo discussion forum and deactivated the feature to ignore raw html. If you don't want to enable this on the entire page, please let me know how to apply the formatting without using raw html tags.
Thank you @davidevaleriani for the positive response and catching the broken link - I implemented the two requested changes and double-check that all links work now.
This blog post showcases that Matplotlib was used directly to generate many of the figures in the IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C, as part of a larger effort to increase openness, transparency and reproducibility of the analysis of quantitative scenarios in the report.
Warning: I did not manage to get the style of the blog post right without using CSS markings and captions for the figures, so I followed the advice in the Hugo discussion forum and deactivated the feature to ignore raw html. If you don't want to enable this on the entire page, please let me know how to apply the formatting without using raw html tags.