Um,
May be I'm just not understanding this stuff as well as others,

Isn't it just as easy to stand up from where / if you rsitting,
Go to a window or a door,
Open them to go outside and see what the weather is like outside?

 I can tell by going outside my house what the weather is doing,

If I get wet it's pretty obviously raining,
If it's hot then it must be sunny.

Just a thought, may be others should be more active and move to find these 
things out.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of M. Taylor
Sent: Monday, 28 January 2019 7:32 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: How to make Shortcuts give you an iPad weather forecast, Cult of Mac

How to make Shortcuts give you a weather forecast on iPad By Charlie Sorrel, 
1:00 pm, January 25, 2019

Life's a beach - without this iPad weather shortcut. 

The iPad infamously still lacks a built-in weather app. There are plenty of 
ways around this - you can ask Siri, you can use the Maps app to see the 
weather anywhere, or you can wait for your iPhone to give you a lock-screen 
forecast every morning.
Today we add a new method. We'll make a quick shortcut that gets the weather at 
your current location, and displays it as a notification.

How to build a custom weather shortcut

The weather outside is frightful.

This is a fun shortcut to build, because it lets you add all kinds of info to 
your weather forecast, almost without effort. To begin, launch the Shortcuts 
app and tap the button to create a new shortcut.
Then, in the left-hand column, type "weather" in the search bar. This will show 
you all the actions that work with weather. The one we're interested in is Get 
Current Weather. This is built into the Shortcuts app. Tap to add it to the 
workflow panel (the section on the right). Make sure it's set to get weather at 
the current location. You can also set a fixed location if you prefer.
On-demand custom weather forecast
Then, add the Show Notification action. This is where the fun starts. Tap 
inside this action, and the keyboard pops up. You can type anything in there, 
but you can also add variables. In this case, we want to add the results of the 
weather. To do so, tap the little Weather Conditions widget above the keyboard. 
It gets pasted into the notification's body.
 Choose from a long list of weather data types.

Then, tap on this newly pasted widget, and you'll see a list of available info 
- location, precipitation chance, high and low temperatures, humidity and lots 
more. By adding more of these little widgets, you can build a custom weather 
notification. My version shows the current conditions. You can also choose to 
build a forecast by using the weather forecast action instead of the current 
weather action.
To activate this forecast, you can run it from inside the Shortcuts app (lame), 
or run it by tapping its widget in the Shortcuts section on the Today View 
(cool). And of course, it works just as well on the iPhone as on the iPad.

Follow Cult of Mac's How-To Channel 

Original Article at:
https://www.cultofmac.com/602204/shortcuts-ipad-weather-forecast/

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