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SUNCLOCK(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
SUNCLOCK(1) |
sunclock - a fancy clock for the X Window system, providing local time (legal
time and solar time), sunrise, sunset and various geographical data through a
point and click interface.
sunclock [ options ]
where the list of licit options is the following long list
(starting from (**) the options are configurable at runtime):
[-help] [-listmenu] [-version] [-citycheck] [-display name]
[-sharedir directory] [-citycategories value] [-clock] [-map] [-dock]
[-undock] [-menu] [-nomenu] [-selector] [-noselector] [-zoom] [-nozoom]
[-option] [-nooption] [-urban] [-nourban]
(**) [-language name] [-rcfile file] [-command string]
[-editorcommand string] [-mapmode * <L,C,S,D,E>] [-dateformat
string1|string2|...] [-image file] [-clockimage file] [-mapimage file]
[-zoomimage file] [-clockgeom <geom>] [-mapgeom <geom>]
[-auxilgeom <geom>] [-menugeom <geom>] [-selgeom <geom>]
[-zoomgeom <geom>] [-optiongeom <geom>] [-urbangeom
<geom>] [-title name] [-clockclassname name] [-mapclassname name]
[-auxilclassname name] [-classname name] [-setfont
<field>|<fontsetting>{|<languages>}] [-verbose] [-silent]
[-synchro] [-nosynchro] [-zoomsync] [-nozoomsync] [-placement (random,
fixed, center, NW, NE, SW, SE)] [-placementshift x y] [-extrawidth value]
[-decimal] [-dms] [-city name] [-position latitude|longitude] [-addcity
size|name|lat|lon|tz] [-removecity name (name|lat|lon)] [-rootdx value]
[-rootdy value] [-fixedrootpos] [-randomrootpos] [-screensaver]
[-noscreensaver] [-rootperiod value (in seconds)] [-animation]
[-noanimation] [-animateperiod value (in seconds)] [-progress
number[s,m,h,d,M,Y]] [-jump number[s,m,h,d,M,Y]] [-aspect mode] [-colorlevel
level=0,1,2,3] [-fillmode number=0,1,2] [-coastlines] [-contour] [-landfill]
[-shading mode=0,1,2,3,4,5] [-diffusion value] [-refraction value] [-night]
[-terminator] [-twilight] [-luminosity] [-lightgradient] [-nonight]
[-darkness value<=1.0] [-colorscale number>=1] [-mag value] [-magx
value] [-magy value] [-dx value ] [-dy value] [-spotsizes s1|s2|s3|...
(0<=si<=4, 1<=i<=citycategories)] [-sizelimits w1|w2|w3|... (wi
= zoom width values, 1<=i<=citycategories)] [-citymode mode=0,1,2,3]
[-objectmode mode=0,1,2] [-sun] [-nosun] [-moon] [-nomoon] [-tropics]
[-notropics] [-meridianmode mode=0,1,2,3] [-parallelmode mode=0,1,2,3]
[-meridianspacing value] [-parallelspacing value] [-dottedlines]
[-plainlines] [-bottomline] [-nobottomline] [-reformat] [-vmfcolors
color1|color2|color3...] [-vmfrange a|b|c|d] [-vmfcoordformat format]
[-vmfflags integer] [-setcolor field|color]
sunclock is an X11 application that displays a map of the Earth and shows
the illuminated portion of the globe. In addition to providing local time for
the default timezone, it also displays GMT time, legal and solar time of major
cities, their latitude and longitude, the mutual distances of arbitrary
locations on Earth, the position at zenith of Sun and Moon. Sunclock can
display meridians, parallels, tropics and arctic circles. It has builtin
functions that accelerate the speed of time and show the evolution of seasons.
Sunclock can be internationalized for various western languages. It is
possible to customize the app-default file and enter additional city entries.
Sunclock can commute between two states, the "clock
window" and the "map window". The clock window displays a
small map of the Earth and therefore occupies little space on the screen,
while the "map window" displays a large map and offers more
advanced functions. The Sunclock package includes a resizable and zoomable
vector map . External Earth maps can also be loaded (starting with version
3.51, formats .jpg, .gif, .png, .xpm or .xpm.gz, .vmf can be read [.vmf is
the specific vector map format of sunclock]). Some additional formats could
be added in the future.
The map window can work in five different modes:
- "Legal time" mode: legal time of default time zone and
GMT time are displayed.
- "Coordinate" mode: by clicking on a city, users get
coordinates (latitude, longitude) of that city, legal time and
sunrise/sunset.
- "Solar" mode: by clicking on a point of the map
(either a city or another point), solar time and day length are shown.
- "Hour Extension" mode: displays solar times from 00:00
to 23:00 in bottom strip, according to the Sun position.
- "Distance" mode: shows distances in km and miles
between two arbitrary locations.
Depending on the mode chosen, the bottom line shows a short text
displaying the requested information. The bottom line can be scrolled to the
right or to the left by pressing the PageUp/PageDown and Home/End key
arrows.
A further functionality is the "Progress" feature, which
allows to accelerate the evolution of time, so as to observe the evolution
of day/night periods and seasons. By default, the Sun and Moon are also
shown on the map (rather, the positions of Earth where Sun and Moon are at
zenith are shown). Coordinates of meridians, parallels, cities, the names of
cities can be displayed on the map.
All functionalities can be accessed though GUI actions on the main
window or the auxiliary windows. The main window is resizable by pulling the
window edges - as the current window manager permits it. There are 5
auxiliary windows:
- Menu Window. This is the main menu, which offers a wide list of
actions. The menu window is launched by typing 'H' or clicking on the bottom
strip with the left mouse button once. Each action can be obtained by using
the indicated keyboard shortcut or by clicking with the mouse on the
corresponding entry. Upper/lower case is irrelevant, except for options or
actions which have more than 2 switches. Lower case then rotates the
switches in one direction, upper case in the other direction. For those
switches, the left mouse button will have the same effect as lower case, and
the right mouse button the same effect as upper case.
- File Selector window. It can be accessed by clicking on the
upper part of the main window with the middle mouse button. It allows to
select the Earth image file (in formats *.vmf *.xpm, *.xpm.gz, *.jpg, *.gif,
*.png) to be loaded.
- Zoom window. It can be accessed by clicking on the upper part of
the main window with the right mouse button. The zoom window allows to
select a specific area on the Earth, to translate or zoom it up to 100
times. High resolutions (larger than 10) are only recommended with the
"huge" Earthmap of 11 Mbytes, which offers clean images up to 20
times magnification at least.
- Urban selector window. Allows to modify interactively the list
of shown cities and locations.
- Option window. Allows to reconfigure pretty much everything on
the fly (colors, fonts, etc), exactly as with the command line options.
The program does not use the Xt nor any other more advanced toolkit, and hence
only (!) those options explicitly enumerated below may be used. The only
needed resource is the list of coordinates and timezones of cities to be
displayed. The system administrator can possibly customize the system-wide
prepackaged config file Sunclockrc before installing the package, while users
can tweak their individual configuration file ~/.sunclockrc at any time. The
individual config file ~/.sunclockrc is read *after* the system wide config
file Sunclockrc, and therefore its settings override those of the system wide
config. The command line options can be used to override ~/.sunclockrc itself.
- -help
- Show brief help and exit.
- -listmenu
- Explanations on the actions available from the builtin menu.
- -version
- Show program version and exit.
- -verbose
- Make Sunclock verbose. The program then sends to stderr some information
on the internal operations performed. This is disabled by default.
- -silent
- Make Sunclock silent about internal operations performed. This is the
default.
- -citycheck
- At start-up, check that there are no repetitions in the list of cities (a
city is considered to be repeated if it appears twice under the same name,
with coordinates differing by at most 0.5 degree). By default no check is
performed on Sunclockrc - which is supposedly correctly set up...
- -display dispname
- Give the name of the X server to contact.
- -language name
- Select language to be used in the sunclock menu and help.
- -title name
- Change the specification of the string which should appear in the title
bar of the main and auxiliary windows. Default is the application name,
i.e., sunclock.
- -classname name
- Change the specification of class application name. Default is Sunclock.
Other specifications can be passed so that aware window managers might use
it for configuration purposes. You might e.g. pass -classname
NoTitle-Sticky, and configure properly your WM so that it removes the
title bar, and make the window sticky with respect to the Desktop Pager.
With fvwm, you could use for instance
Style "*NoTitle*" NoTitle, WindowListHit, Sticky
Style "*ShowTitle*" Title, WindowListHit, Slippery
Style "*Sticky*" Sticky
to specify such a behaviour.
- -setfont <field>|<fontsetting>{|<languages>}
- Select the font for the given text field (clockstrip, menustrip, city,
coord, menu). Optionally, one can specify a list of languages for which
this font setting should apply. If the <languages> option is not
specified, the font setting applies to all languages.
- -rcfile filename
- Read a configuration file that is different from the user default
~/.sunclockrc (if this option is not set, the user config file defaults to
~/.sunclockrc). Notice that the app-default config file Sunclockrc is read
first, and the file set by the -rcfile option is read afterwards;
therefore its settings override those set by the system wide config file.
Reading further config files is possible at runtime, using the option
window. Set -rcfile with a void string "" if you wish to bypass
the user config file step.
- -sharedir directory
- Set the directory where system wide shared Earthmaps are located. Default
is /usr/share/sunclock/earthmaps.
- -image *.jpg (or *.gif, *.png, *.vmf, *.xpm, *.xpm.gz)
- Start sunclock with an Earth map image loaded in the clock and map
windows. The same map is then used for both windows, but the clock image
is usually scaled down.
- -mapimage *.jpg (or *.gif, *.png, *.vmf, *.xpm, *.xpm.gz)
- Start sunclock with an Earth map image loaded in the map window.
- -clockimage *.jpg (or *.gif, *.png, *.vmf, *.xpm, *.xpm.gz)
- Start sunclock with an Earth map image loaded in the clock window.
- -zoomimage *.jpg (or *.gif, *.png, *.vmf, *.xpm, *.xpm.gz)
- Use specified file as image in the zoom widget
- -colorlevel level=0,1,2,3
- Sets the color level (0=monochrome, 1=few colors, 2=many colors, 3=full
colors). With the "monochrome" setting, day and night appear
respectively as mapbgcolor (white by default) and mapfgcolor (black by
default), and no shading is available; all other features (city names,
coordinates) appear also as monochrome. With the "few colors"
setting, the menus and city spots can be represented with dedicated
colors, but the meridians/parallels/tropics are still monochrome. With the
"many colors" oprions, meridians/parallels/tropics can also be
drawn in color. In these first 3 modes, only .vmf vector maps can be
loaded. These modes save a lot of CPU power - since a simple algorithm of
inversion of colors is used to set colors of all points in the map.
Monochrome mode can be useful for very slow CPUs, such as those in use in
PDAs with black and white screen. The full color mode (level=3) allows to
load jpeg or other colorful images; day and night can be drawn with
various shading parameters. This is the default and recommended mode if
you have a reasonably recent machine with enough video RAM.
- -dock
- This option is meant to give sunclock the ability to be docked in the
window manager buttons or menu bar, providing that the WM offers this
possibility without requiring special hints (fvwm2 or windowmaker or
afterstep will work perfectly well for that purpose, KDE or Gnome
won't...) Under the -dock option, sunclock locks the size of the first
launched window, which is necessarily a small clock. Also, that initial
window can no longer be closed by typing 'K' or 'Q'. (The only way to exit
the application, then, is to kill it with xkill, or to undock it first
with the -undock option from the Option window). The user might want to
customize the size and suitable options so that sunclock fits with the
size of the dockable applets. As an example, sunclock could be invoked as
follows:
-
- sunclock -language fr -nobottomline -dock -clockgeom 63x42+2+190
-dateformat "%H:%M:%S|%a%_%d%_%b|%b%_%Y|%j%_%U/52" -command
"xdiary"
- -undock
- Undocks sunclock. This option has no other effect than reallowing the use
of options that were "frozen" under -dock. It can be used e.g.
to exit the application when sunclock has been started in dock mode.
- -synchro
- With this option, sunclock updates all windows simultaneously. This, of
course, requires more CPU time and may slow down sunclock's operation if
too many windows have been opened. The default is to update only the
active window.
- -nosynchro
- With this option, sunclock only updates the active window. This is the
default.
- -clock
- Start in the clock state. This is the default and thus need not be
specified.
- -dateformat string1|string2|...
- Set the format(s) used in the text output in the bottom strip of the
clock. The default date format consists of 3 strings:
%H:%M%_%a%_%d%_%b%_%y|%H:%M:%S%_%Z|%a%_%j/%t%_%U/52
Here %H,%M,%S stand for hour, minutes, seconds, %a for dayname, %b
for monthname, %d for monthday number, %j for yearday number, %m for month
number, %y for year last two digits, %Y for year number, %t for number of
days in year (365 or 366), %Z for timezone, %U for week number (week #1 is
the week with the first thursday of the year); all other characters are
reproduced as such, except %_ which stands for a blank space, %% which
stands for % and %| which stands for |. The vertical bar | is used as a
delimiter to indicate successive time formats. There can be as many formats
as desired, and the actual selection cycles through all these formats by
clicking on the bottom strip with the mouse. The first string (i.e. the one
preceding the first bar) is taken as the default format. There are a few
other switches, such as %h for hour in 12-hour mode, %P fo AM/PM indicator,
%G for hour in GMT time, %N for minutes in GMT time.
- -map
- Start in the map state. Useful to start right away with advanced
functionalities.
- -decimal
- Initializes coordinate values of geographical data in decimal degrees.
However, this can still be switched at runtime.
- -dms
- Initializes coordinate values of geographical data in degrees, minutes and
seconds. However, this can still be switched at runtime.
- -menu
- Raise the menu window along with the main (map, clock) window.
- -nomenu
- Don't raise the menu window along with the main (map, clock) window. This
is the default.
- -selector
- Raise the selector window along with the main (map, clock) window.
- -noselector
- Don't raise the selector window along with the main (map, clock) window.
This is the default.
- -zoom
- Raise the zoom window along with the main (map, clock) window.
- -nozoom
- Don't raise the zoom window along with the main (map, clock) window. This
is the default.
- -option
- Raise the option window along with the main (map, clock) window.
- -nooption
- Don't raise the option window along with the main (map, clock) window.
This is the default.
- -urban
- Raise the urban window along with the main (map, clock) window.
- -nourban
- Don't raise the urban window along with the main (map, clock) window. This
is the default.
- -aspect mode
- Sets the aspect mode, i.e. the way by which zooming behaves with respect
to horizontal and vertical directions. Mode = 0 means that no
synchronizations are made, mode = 1 means that the zoom factors are always
made to be equal, mode = 2 (the more subtle one) means that the horizontal
and vertical zoom factors are adjusted so that the region located near the
central point of the zoomed area will be conformal to its actual geometry
on Earth, i.e. will not appear to be distorted horizontally or vertically.
This won't be true elsewhere, though, especially if the zoomed area is
large.
- -zoomsync
- When the option is set, the zoom window will open in synchronization mode:
any zooming action made from the main map or from the zoom window will
take place as the mouse button is released (or as a key is pressed). This
is the default when the zoom window has not been opened (synchronization
is automatically set).
- -nozoomsync
- When set, the zoom window will open in non-synchro mode. Synchronizing the
zoom will still be possible, though, by clicking on the
"Synchro" button. By default, synchronization does not occur
when the zoom window is opened, unless option -zoomsync has been set.
- -mapmode * (single character = C, D, E, L or S)
- Start the map functions in mode (C)oordinates, (D)istances, hour
(E)xtension, (L)egal time or (S)olar time respectively. Any other
specification is ignored. Default is legal time mode.
- -placement
<choice> (random,fixed,center,NW,NE,SW,SE)
- Specify whether commuting between clock and map windows should proceed
with letting the the window centers, respectively, the NW, NE, SW, SE
corners fixed, or rather whether it should operate randomly, or through
user defined placement. Default is NW placement.
- -placementshift x y
- Relative displacement <clock window> --> <map window>, to
apply with respect to the -placement specification. If placement is NW,
then the NW window corner will move by (x,y) pixels. Defaut is (0,0), i.e.
no modification to apply to the -placement specification.
- -extrawidth value
- When using the 'enlarge window' command specified by key '>', the width
of the full X display is used, minus some default width equal to 10
pixels. This is enough the accomodate the width of window borders of most
window managers. In case it is not, -extrawidth <value> can be used
to change this setting.
- -clockgeom
(width)x(height)+(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the geometry of the clock window, i.e. its size and position
(absolute position with respect to the left upper corner of the
screen).
- -mapgeom
(width)x(height)+(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the geometry of the map window, i.e. its size and position
(absolute position with respect to the left upper corner of the
screen).
- -menugeom +(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the relative position (x = horizontal shift, y = vertical shift)
of the menu window with respect to the main window, starting from the
bottom edge of the main window (from its top edge in case of SW or SE
placements, see above). The y value may need an adjustment, according to
the height of the title bar allocated by the window manager, if any. In
the case of the menu window, width and height solely depend on the
menufont, and therefore any given specification of width and height is
ignored. The default relative position is x = 0, y = 30.
- -selgeom
(width)x(height)+(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the geometry of the selector window. The position specification is
relative to the main window (or to the menu, when the menu is raised). See
above option -menugeom for further explanations. The default geometry of
the selector window is 600x180+0+30.
- -zoomgeom
(width)x(height)+(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the geometry of the zoom window. The position specification is
relative to the main window (or to the menu, when the menu is raised). See
above option -menugeom for further explanations. The default geometry of
the zoom window is 500x320+0+30.
- -optiongeom
(width)x(height)+(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the geometry of the option window. The position specification is
relative to the main window (or to the menu, when the menu is raised). See
above option -menugeom for further explanations. The height specification
depends solely on the selected menufont and is therefore ignored. The
default geometry of the option window is 630x80+0+30.
- -urbangeom +(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the relative position (x = horizontal shift, y = vertical shift)
of the urban window with respect to the main window (or to the menu, when
the menu is raised). See above option -menugeom for further
explanations.
- -auxilgeom +(xcoord)+(ycoord)
- Specify the relative position (x = horizontal shift, y = vertical shift)
of the auxiliary windows (menu, zoom, selector, option). All relative
displacements are set to (x,y).
- -mag value
- Rescale the image by a magnification factor equal to <value>, which
must be at least equal to 1.0. This means that the window only shows a
fraction of the entire map namely, 1/<value> x 1/<value>.
Default value is 1.0.
- -magx value
- Same as for the -mag option, but only the x direction (width) is rescaled.
Default value for magx is 1.0.
- -magy value
- Same as for the -mag option, but only the y direction (height) is
rescaled. Default value for magy is 1.0.
- -dx value (degrees)
- Options -dx and -dy allow to set the longitude, respectively the latitude,
of the city or location at which the zoom area should be centered. The
values should be given in degrees. Default (dx,dy) is (0.0,0.0).
- -dy value (degrees)
- See -dx above.
- -coastlines
- In the builtin vector map, generate coast lines without filling the land
areas.
- -contour
- As before, but use a smart algorithm which eliminates lines, especially at
lower resolutions (in case the coasts are very irregular, some parts may
disappear but the overall picture looks sharper).
- -landfill
- In the builtin vector map, fill the land areas without generating coast
lines.
- -fillmode 0,1,2
- Fillmode=0 is equivalent to -coastlines, fillmode=1 is equivalent to
-contour, and fillmode=2 is equivalent to -landfill.
- -dottedlines
- Use dotted lines to represent meridians and parallels.
- -plainlines
- Use plain lines to represent meridians and parallels.
- -bottomline
- Draw a line at the bottom of the map, to separate the map from the text
strip showing time and coordinates.
- -nobottomline
- Don't draw the bottom line. This is the default.
- -command string
- Specify an external action or program that will be called through keyboard
shortcut 'x'. Default is empty command.
- -editorcommand string
- Specify an external file editor program that will be called through
keyboard shortcut double 'h' (call help). Default is
"/usr/lib/sunclock/emx -edit 0 -fn 9x15" (included emx editor,
in no-edit mode...)
- -jump number[unit] (where unit=s,m,h,d,M,Y)
- Number of seconds (respectively minutes, hour, days, Months, Years) by
which the current date and time should be shifted. No blank space should
separate the number and its unit. If the unit is absent, the number is
understood to be expressed by default in seconds. Useful to get sunclock
display information on earlier or later epochs.
- -progress number[unit] (where unit=s,m,h,d,M,Y)
- Number of seconds (respectively minutes, hour, days, Months, Years) by
which the time progression should operate. No blank space should separate
the number and its unit. If the unit is absent, the number is understood
to be expressed by default in seconds. Useful to get sunclock progress by
other steps than the predefined ones (by default the steps cycle between
the values 1 mn, 1 hour, 1 day, 7 days, 30 days).
- -rootdx value (between 0.0 and 1.0)
- Options -rootdx and -rootdy allow to set the position where the sunclock
map is copied on the root window in rootwindow or screensaver modes.
'-rootdx 0.0' means on the left side, '-rootdx 1.0' on the right side,
'-rootdy 0.0' means at the top, '-rootdy 1.0' at the bottom of the root
window. Default is 0.5 for both values, i.e. a centered map.
- -rootdy value (degrees)
- See -rootdx above.
- -fixedrootpos
- Use the above rootdx and rootdy values to fix the position of the map on
the root window. This is the default unless -screensaver has been
specified.
- -randomrootpos
- Instead of using the above rootdx and rootdy values to fix the position of
the map on the root window, just use a random position instead. This is
the default in case the -screensaver option has been set.
- -screensaver
- Start sunclock in screensaver mode (no window nor any GUI controls are
available in that case, and the only way to terminate the program is to
kill it explicitly).
- -noscreensaver
- Do not start sunclock in screensaver mode. This is the default.
- -rootperiod value (in seconds, between 1 and 120 sec)
- Set the period for refreshing the root window. Default is 30 seconds. This
takes effect only when writing the map onto the root window is active
(strike twice on '[' or hit the relevant box in the Option window).
Writing onto the root window is disabled by using the ']' key.
- -animation
- Start the animation mode right away when sunclock is launched.
- -noanimation
- Don't start the animation mode when sunclock is launched - this is the
default. Sunclock can anyway switch between the animation/noanimation
modes by typing key ' (apostrophe) at runtime.
- -animateperiod value (in seconds, between 0 and 5 sec)
- Set the period for animating the map. Default is 0 seconds, which means
that images are switched as fast as sunclock can compute them. Otherwise
time is shifted by the current progress value (as set by the -progess
option) after waiting the number of seconds prescribed by the
animateperiod value. This takes effect only when the animation is active
(strike on the ' key or hit the relevant box in the Option window).
- -addcity size|name|latitude|longitude|timezone
where name is the ascii name of the place to be shown on the map.
The first argument "size" is an nonnegative integer meant to
indicate the size of the city (1: major city, 2: important city, 3: less
important city, ...). The argument "size" can also be set to 0,
with the effect of hiding the corresponding city, while keeping in memory
all of its other parameters. The city can then be shown again with Latitude
and longitude are floating point numbers representing the geographical
location of the place. Western longitudes and southern latitudes should be
entered as negative numbers. timezone is the name of the timezone that the
place is in. This should be the name of a file under /usr/share/zoneinfo (or
whatever directory is used on your system), incorrect timezones cause the
clock to display GMT. It is also possible to reference a file in a directory
relative to /usr/share/zoneinfo for example Canada/Eastern instead of
EST5EDT.
- -city name (name|lat|lon)
- Initialize program so as to display data of city 'name', respectively
(name, with latitude and longitude specified). This becomes effective only
if the above mentioned city is listed in the systemwide RC file Sunclockrc
or in the user's private ~/.sunclockrc. The operating mode is set to
Coordinates mode.
- -position latitude|longitude
- Initialize program so as to display data of the position specified by two
coordinates (in degrees). The operating mode is set to Solar time mode.
Notice that with a vertical bar | (a blank space is also admitted instead
of a |).
- -addcity size|name|lat|lon|tz
- Adds a city in the list of cities to be displayed on the map. They must be
defined by exactly 5 parameters: size, name, latitude, longitude,
timezone, in this order, with parameters being separated by a vertical bar
|. Blank characters may appear in the name if double quotes are used to
mark the group of parameters (but there shouldn't be any blank characters
in the other parameters). In the RC config file, blank characters should
be replaced by the octal character 037 (i.e. Ctrl-Q Ctrl-_ within
emacs).
- -removecity name (name|lat|lon)
- Removes name (respectively name|lat|lon) from the list of cities to be
displayed. Same remarks as above for blank characters.
- -citycategories value
- Specifies the maximal number of city categories: categories range from 1
(highest catgory, i.e. major city) to some maximum number. The option
-citycategories specifies that maximum number. It can only be used at
start-up, not at runtime. The default value is 5.
- -spotsizes s1|s2|s3|... (0<=si<=5,
1<=i<=citycategories)
- With this setting, major cities (category 1) will be represented by the
symbol of size s1, category 2 cities by the symbol off size s2, etc. The
default setting is -spotsize 1|2|3|4|5. Assigning size si=0 means that the
corresponding category of cities (rank i) will not be displayed. If there
are less data than the number of city categories (5 by default), the last
given data is repeated as many times as needed, e.g. -spotsizes 2 is
equivalent to -spotsizes 2|2|2|2|2. Example: specifying -spotsizes
0|2|0|3|0 will let appear only city categories 2 and 4, but those of
category 4 will appear with the symbol normally allocated to cities of
category 3. This is useful in combination with the option -sizelimits (see
below).
- -sizelimits w1|w2|w3|...
- (wi = zoom width values, 1<=i<=citycategories) With this setting,
cities of rank i=1,2,3,... will appear if (and only if) the width of the
zoomed map is at least equal to wi (as it would appear if the Earth would
be entirely displayed...) . The default is 0|580|2500|6000|12000 (no
constraint for major cities, rank 4 cities appear only if the width is at
least 6000 pixels, e.g. if an original window of width 800, say, has been
applied a zoom at least equal to 7.5). Thus -sizelimits 0 is equivalent to
-sizelimits 0|0|0|0|0, -sizelimits 0|400 is equivalent to -sizelimits
0|400|400|400|400.
- -shading mode=0,1,2,3,4,5
- Start sunclock with the specified shading mode. Mode 0 means that the
night area is not displayed. In higher modes, the night area is displayed,
with increasingly sophisticated shading algorithms. Mode 1 stands for no
shading (i.e. just bright and dark colors are shown). Mode 2 shades the
terminator area -- the area in which the sun is partially hidden by the
horizon. Mode 3 shades the region in which there is still substantial
luminosity left after sunset (depending on the diffusion parameter below).
Default is 3˚ below horizon. Mode 4 additionally represents the
luminosity values in all parts of the illuminated area. Mode 5 represents
the gradient of luminosity from the brightest area (facing the sun) to the
darkest area (opposite to the sun); this has nothing to do, though, with
the actual luminosity values.
- -nonight
- Start sunclock with the night region not drawn. This is equivalent to
-shading 0.
- -night
- Start sunclock with the night region in plain shading mode. This is
equivalent to -shading 1.
- -terminator
- Equivalent to -shading 2
- -twilight
- Equivalent to -shading 3
- -luminosity
- Equivalent to -shading 4
- -lightgradient
- Equivalent to -shading 5
- -diffusion value (degrees)
- Sets the amplitude of the area in which diffusion of light in the
atmosphere is still sufficient to keep some luminosity after sunset.
Default is 3 degrees.
- -refraction value (degrees)
- Sets the value of the refraction angle for tangential sun rays at sunset.
This is related to the fact that the sun sometimes looks bigger at sunset.
Changing the refraction degree slightly affects the computation of sunrise
and sunset times. Default is 0.1 degree.
- -darkness value (in the range 0.0 ... 1.0)
- Sets the constrast between day and night areas. A 0.0 value means that the
night area will not be distinguishable from day, while 1.0 means that it
will be completely black. Default is 0.5.
- -colorscale value (integer in the range 1 ...
256)
- Sets the number of color subdvisions which will be in use for producing
shading, that is, the number of colors ranging from bright colors (day) to
dark colors (night). Default is 16.
- -meridianmode mode=0,1,2,3
- Start sunclock with meridians displayed or not, according to the mode,
mode=0 : no meridians, mode=1 : meridians drawn, mode=2 : meridians drawn
with labels at the bottom, mode=3 : meridians drawn with labels at the
top. The default mode is 0 (no meridians).
- -parallelmode mode=0,1,2,3
- Start sunclock with parallels displayed or not, according to the mode,
mode=0 : no parallels, mode=1 : parallels drawn, mode=2 : parallels drawn
with labels at the left hand side, mode=3 : parallels drawn with labels at
the right hand side. The default mode is 0 (no parallels).
- -meridianspacing value (degree)
- Specify how many degrees (or fractions of degree) should separate
meridians drawn on the map.
- -parallelspacing value (degree)
- Specify how many degrees (or fractions of degree) should separate
parallels drawn on the map.
- -citymode mode=0,1,2,3
- Start sunclock with cities displayed or not, according to the mode, mode=0
: no cities, mode=1 : cities drawn, mode=2 : cities drawn with their
names, mode=3 : cities drawn with their coordinates. The default mode is 1
(cities shown without names or coordinates).
- -tropics
- Start sunclock with tropics and arctic circles displayed (by default, they
aren't).
- -sun
- Start sunclock with the Sun position displayed (by default, it is).
- -moon
- Start sunclock with the Moon position displayed (by default, it is).
- -notropics -nosun -nomoon
- These options just negate the above ones.
- -objectmode mode=0,1,2
- Mode=0 stands for no objects (Sun, Moon) at all, mode=1 for objects just
drawn by their symbol, mode=2 for objects drawn with their symbol and
coordinates in decimal degrees (or degrees, minutes, seconds, using the
˚ key switch).
- -reformat
- This option only produces an effect when a *.vmf file is loaded. The file
is then reformatted according to the allowed syntax and normal line
length, and printed to stdout. To capture the aoutput, one should redirect
the standard output to a file (with a '> file' as usual).
- -vmfcolors color1|color2|color3...
- Redefine the list of colors to be used in the .vmf file. This option has
no effect when loading files with other formats. Default is NULL string
(so that the default colors are loaded). The string "|" is also
considered to be a void string and can be used in the option widget to
enforce default colors back.
- -vmfrange a|b|c|d
- Define the range in which point coordinates (latitude, longitude) should
vary in the *.vmf files, default is -90|90|-180|180. This option can be
useful in combination with -reformat to make a linear change of
coordinates in a *.vmf file.
- -vmcoordformat format
- Set the format for the output of double values produced via the -reformat
option. The default format is "%7.3f %8.3f" (format for latitude
and longitude, respectively), unless the -vmfrange has been modified, in
which case the default becomes "%g %g" (from the POSIX rules,
this stands for 6 significant digits in any position).
- -vmfflags number
- Sets the flags (integer value) for a *.vmf file. Each bit is a distinct
flag. The zeroth order bit (i.e. &1) determines whether features which
have their own zeroth bit set are to be drawn in clock window mode (if the
zeroth bit is not set, the feature will always be drawn). Other bits are
used to control whether given features are to be drawn or not. For
instance setting -vmfflags 2 with timezones.vmf will let the timezone
regions appear, while -vmfflags 6 will also show the timezone boundary
lines. (Only bits 0, 1, 2 are currently used in timezones.vmf).
- -setcolor field|color
- Sets the color of a specified field in the sunclock widgets. The color can
be specified as any litteral value (red, yellow, etc..., as defined in the
resource file rgb.txt), or as a 6 digit hexadecimal value #ijklmn, or even
12 digits (for 48 bits displays!) The field can take any of the following
values (between parentheses, the meaning and default value):
clockbg (clock background color; White)
clockfg (clock foreground color; Black)
mapbg (map background color; White)
mapfg (map foreground color; Black)
menubg (menu text background color; Grey92)
menufg (menu text foreground color; Black)
buttonbg (button background color; Grey84)
buttonfg1 (button very dark border color ; Black)
buttonfg2 (button dark border color ; Grey50)
buttonfg3 (button light border color ; Grey95)
buttonfg4 (button very light border color ; White)
weak (color for disabled menu commands; Red)
clockstripbg (background color of bottom strip in clock window;
Grey92)
clockstripfg (foreground color of bottom strip in clock window;
Black)
mapstripbg (background color of bottom strip in map window;
Grey92)
mapstripfg (foreground color of bottom strip in map window;
Black)
zoombg (background color of the small monochrome map used in the
zoom widget; White)
zoomfg (foreground color of the small monochrome map used in the
zoom widget; Black)
optionbg (background color of option text entry; White)
optionfg (foreground color of option text entry; Black)
caret (color of text caret; SkyBlue2)
change (color for temporary changes; Brown)
choice (color for selected changes and choices; SkyBlue2)
directory (color of text indicating directory entries; Blue)
image (color of text indicating image files; Magenta)
cityname (color of text indicating city names; Red)
city0 (color of unmarked cities; Orange)
city1 (color of marked cities, main selection; Red)
city2 (color of marked cities, secondary selection; Red3)
mark1 (color of first mark; Pink1)
mark2 (color of secondary mark; Pink2)
line (color of geodesic lines; White).
meridian (color of meridians; White).
parallel (color of parallels; White).
tropic (color of Equator/Tropics/Arctic circles; White)
sun (color of Sun; Yellow)
moon (color of Moon; Khaki)
star (color of Stars; White)
root (color of Root window on which stars will be drawn;
Black)
Users may keep a file in their home directory called ~/.sunclockrc. This file
can contain specify any number of options which are also available as command
line options:
mapmode: L
language: en
city: Washington
map
mapimage: /usr/share/sunclock/earthmaps/jpeg/caida.jpg
tropics
twilight
sunclock calculates the position of the Sun using the algorithm in
chapter 18 of:
Astronomical Formulae for Calculators by Jean Meeus, Third
Edition, Richmond: Willmann-Bell, 1985.
and projects the illuminated area onto the map image by an
equidistributed (latitude, longitude) cylindrical projection. The Sun's
position is calculated to better than one arc-second in accuracy.
Sunclock makes intensive use of pointers and memory allocation/deallocation, so
memory leaks might still be possible under some circumstances. However, the
program has been thoroughly debugged, and crashes seem to be rather rare. As
new features are introduced, older ones may become broken during the phase of
development :-(
The illuminated area shown is the area which would be sunlit if
the Earth atmosphere would be absolutely uniform. The actual illuminated
area may depend on weather, temperature, atmospheric refraction and
diffusion, etc.
John Walker, Autodesk, Inc., <kelvin@acad.uu.NET>, wrote the original
Suntools program from which sunclock is derived.
John Mackin, Basser Department of Computer Science, University of
Sydney, Sydney, Australia, <john@cs.su.oz.AU>, wrote the X11 version
out of Suntools.
Stephen Martin, Fujitsu Systems Business of Canada,
smartin@fujitsu.ca, added support for interactive map.
Jean-Pierre Demailly, Université de Grenoble I,
demailly@fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr worked out versions 3.xx, which add many
new major features (loading maps, shading, zoom functionalities,
configuration of options on the fly at runtime, through a point and click
GUI interface).
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