Especially with the smaller size widget and CARROT’s terrific flexibility, you can create a set of customized widgets that are easy to flick through as a stack. I’m currently using a small CARROT widget on my first Home screen and the large Forecast and medium Weather Map widget on a dedicated weather page.Īnother approach that I’ve found useful if you don’t want to dedicate an entire screen to weather widgets is to stack multiple CARROT widgets. It’s proven to be a perfect, glanceable way to check the weather. The large Forecast widget gives me all the current and projected information I want plus the ability to quickly check if storms are on their way into the area without having to tap into a separate view. I’ve tried many of them and have settled on a large Forecast widget and medium Weather Map widget for the time being. There are a lot of possible widget combinations. There are light, dark, and satellite styles, the ability to turn a location marker on or off, and seven different radar layers that can be added to the view. You can pick a zoom level that varies from city to continent level, with county being the default. The final type of widget CARROT offers is Weather Maps in all three sizes. The small Hourly widget is limited to just one data point too. The small and medium Daily widgets show the same information by default, but the medium version offers two data points, whereas the small version has room for just one. The medium Hourly widget adds the current conditions and a summary section to the hourly-only format of the small version. The Hourly and Daily widgets both come in small and medium varieties with similar layouts. The large Forecast widget is the only large widget I’m using on my iPhone so far.
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