Getting started

DHNx is a toolbox for optimization and simulation of district heating and cooling systems.

Using DHNx

Installation

If you have a working Python3 environment, use pypi to install the latest oemof version:

pip install dhnx

For Installing the latest (dev) version, clone DHNx from github:

git clone https://github.com/oemof/DHNx.git

Now you can install it your local version of DHNx using pip:

pip install -e <path/to/DHNx/root/dir>

Note

DHNx uses geopandas and osmnx as extra requirements for some functions related to the processing of spatial data. On Windows machines, you might encounter troubles installing geopandas via pip install geopandas. Try to install geopandas in an EMTPY environment with conda install geopandas, first. And second, install osmnx with pip install osmnx (tested with Python 3.8). Also check geopandas.org.

Examples

Examples are provided here. Also, have a look at the Examples section for some more explanation.

Contributing to DHNx

Contributions are welcome. You can write issues to announce bugs or errors or to propose enhancements. Or you can contribute a new approach that helps to model district heating/cooling systems. If you want to contribute, fork the project at github, develop your features on a new branch and finally open a pull request to merge your contribution to DHNx.

As DHNx is part of the oemof developer group we use the same developer rules, described here.