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HEBCAL(1)		    General Commands Manual		     HEBCAL(1)

NAME
       hebcal -	a Jewish calendar generator

SYNOPSIS
       hebcal [	-8acdDEeFgHhiMoOrSstTWwXxyZ ]
		 [ -b minutes ]
		 [ --chag-only ]
		 [ -C city ]
		 [ --geo latitude,longitude ]
		 [ -G degrees ]
		 [ --help ]
		 [ -I input_file ]
		 [ --lang language ]
		 [ -l latitude -L longitude ]
		 [ -m minutes ]
		 [ --mevarchim ]
		 [ --mishna-yomi ]
		 [ --nach-yomi ]
		 [ --no-mf ]
		 [ --no-modern ]
		 [ --no-special	]
		 [ --schottenstein ]
		 [ --verbose ]
		 [ --version ]
		 [ -Y yahrtzeit_file ]
		 [ --years N ]
		 [ --yerushalmi	]
		 [ --ykk ]
		 [ -z timezone ]
		 [[ month [ day	] year | YYYY-MM-DD ]
       hebcal help
       hebcal info
       hebcal cities
       hebcal copying
       hebcal warranty

DESCRIPTION
       With  no	arguments, hebcal will print to	stdout the dates of the	Jewish
       holidays	in the current secular year.  Each line	 is  prefixed  with  a
       Gregorian date of the form mm/dd/yyyy.

       By  specifying month, day, or year, output can be limited to a particu-
       lar month or date in a particular year.	Note that year	is  usually  a
       four-digit  integer,  so	 92  is	 during	the Roman period, not the late
       twentieth century.  If the Hebrew dates option (-H) is turned on,  this
       number  represents  the	Jewish	calendar year.	month is a number from
       1..12, or the name of a Jewish calendar month.  day is  a  number  from
       1..31.

       A  single  day  may also	be specified as	YYYY-MM-DD (ISO	8601 date for-
       mat).

       For example, the	command

	    hebcal 10 1992

       will print out the holidays occurring in	October	of  1992  C.E.,	 while
       the command

	    hebcal Tish	5752

       will print dates	of interest in the month of Tishrei in Jewish calendar
       year 5752.

       Note: hebcal 92 is not the same as hebcal 1992.	The year is assumed to
       be  complete,  so  the  former calendar precedes	the latter by nineteen
       centuries.

       A few other bells and whistles include the weekly sedra as well as  the
       day of the week,	the count of the omer, and the Hebrew date.

       Output  from  hebcal  can be used to drive calendar(1).	Day-to-day use
       for hebcal is provided for in the -T and	-t switches, which  print  out
       Jewish calendar entries for the current date.

       To get a	quick-reference	online help, run

	    hebcal help

       at the command prompt.

OPTIONS
       -8     Use UTF-8	Hebrew (alias for --lang=he).

       -a     Use Ashkenazi Hebrew transliterations.

       -b mins
	      Set  candle-lighting  to occur mins minutes before sundown.  De-
	      fault 18 if unspecified (default 40 for Jerusalem, 30 for	Haifa,
	      30 for Zichron Ya'akov).

       -c     Add approximate candle-lighting times.  See below.

       --chag-only
	      Output only Chag and Erev	Chag  events  (when  melakha/labor  is
	      prohibited)

       -C city
	      Set  latitude,  longitude, and timezone according	to city.  This
	      option implies the -c option.

       -d     Print the	Hebrew date for	the entire date	range.

       -D     Print the	Hebrew date for	dates with some	events

       -e     Change the output	format to European-style dates:	dd.mm.yyyy

       -E     Output 24-hour times (e.g., 18:37	instead	of 6:37)

       -F     Output the Daf Yomi for the entire date range

       -g     Emit ISO-8601 dates, i.e.	YYYY-MM-DD

       -G degrees
	      Set Havdalah to occur this many degrees below the	horizon.   Use
	      8.5  for	three  small  stars  or	 7.0833	for three medium-sized
	      stars.

       --geo latitude,longitude
	      Set location for solar calculations to decimal  values  latitude
	      and longitude.  Requires -z timzeone switch. This	switch is pre-
	      ferred over the legacy -l	and -L switches	as it offers more pre-
	      cision  and  follows  the	 standard of negative longitudes being
	      west of the Prime	Meridian.

       -h     Suppress holidays	in output.  User-defined calendar  events  are
	      unaffected by this switch.

       -H     When  the	 -H switch is used, all	dates specified	on the command
	      line are assumed to be Hebrew dates.  So for instance,

		   example% hebcal -H 5754

	      will print data for 5754,	starting in  Tishrei,  and  ending  in
	      Elul.  Hebcal is smart enough to detect a	Hebrew month and infer
	      that you want a Hebrew date range, so you	could type

		   example% hebcal tish	5754

	      The  -H switch would be superfluous in this case.	 Invoking heb-
	      cal with just the	-H switch by itself will print	data  for  the
	      current Hebrew year, starting in Tishrei.

       -i     Use Israeli holiday and sedra schedule.  Defaults	to Diaspora if
	      unspecified.

       -I file
	      Read  extra  events from file.  These events are printed regard-
	      less of the -h suppress holidays switch.

	      There is one holiday per line in file, each with the format

		   MMMM	DD description

	      where MMMM is a string identifying the Jewish month in  question
	      DD is a number from 1 to 30, and description is a	newline-termi-
	      nated string describing the holiday.  An example might be

		   Adar	1 Start	cleaning kitchen for Passover

       -l deg,min
	      Set  the	latitude for solar calculations	to deg degrees and min
	      minutes.	Negative values	are south.

       -L deg,min
	      Set the longitude	for solar calculations to deg degrees and  min
	      minutes.	Note: Negative values are east.

       --lang lang
	      Display  calendar	 in the	lang language, which must be specified
	      as one of	the  ISO  639-1	 codes	of  "en",  "ashkenazi",	 "he",
	      "ashkenazi_litvish",  "ashkenazi_poylish", "ashkenazi_romanian",
	      "ashkenazi_standard", "de", "es",	"fi", "fr", "hu", "pl",	 "ro",
	      "ru", "uk"

       -m mins
	      Set havdalah to occur mins minutes after sundown (default	72).

       --mevarchim
	      Include Shabbat Mevarchim	HaChodesh.

       --mishna-yomi
	      Output the Mishna	Yomi for the entire date range.

       -M     Print the	molad on shabbat mevorchim

       --nach-yomi
	      Output the Nach Yomi for the entire date range.

       --no-mf
	      Suppress minor fast days.

       --no-modern
	      Suppress modern Israeli holidays.

       --no-special
	      Suppress Special Shabbatot.

       -o     Add the count of the omer	to the output.

       -O     Output sunrise and sunset	times every day.

       -r     Use  a  tab-delineated format, and somewhat terser strings.  In-
	      stead of saying "	13th day of the	omer " hebcal will say " Omer:
	      13 "

       -s     Add the weekly sedra to the output on Saturdays.	See -i.

       -S     Add the weekly sedra to the output every day.  When this	option
	      is  invoked,  every time a day is	printed, the torah reading for
	      the Saturday on or immediately following that date  is  printed.
	      If  there	 is  no	reading	for the	next Saturday, then nothing is
	      printed.	See -i.

       --schottenstein
	      Use Schottenstein	edition	of Yerushalmi Yomi (default Vilna page
	      numbers).	 This option implies the --yerushalmi option.

       -t     Print calendar information for today's date only.	 -d and	-o are
	      asserted with this option.

       -T     Same as -t, only without the Gregorian  date.   This  option  is
	      useful  in  login	scripts, just to see what's happening today in
	      the Jewish calendar.

       -w     Add the day of the week to the output.

       -W     Weekly view.  Omer, dafyomi, and non-date-specific  zemanim  are
	      shown once a week, on the	day which corresponds to the first day
	      in the range.

       -x     Suppress Rosh Chodesh

       -X     Exit  silently with non-zero status if today is Shabbat or Chag;
	      exit with	0 status if today is chol.

       -y     Print only the last two digits of	the year.

       --years	n
	      Generate events for n years (default 1)

       --yerushalmi
	      Output the Yerushalmi Yomi for the entire	date range.

       --ykk  Include Yom Kippur Katan,	a minor	 day  of  atonement  occurring
	      monthly on the day preceding each	Rosh Chodesh.

       -Y file
	      Read  a  table  of  yahrtzeit dates from file.  These events are
	      printed regardless of the	-h suppress holidays switch.

	      There is one death-date per line in file,	each with the format

		   MM DD YYYY description

	      where MM,	DD and YYYY form the  Gregorian	date  of  death.   de-
	      scription	 is  a	newline-terminated string to be	printed	on the
	      yahrtzeit.  An example might be

		   12 29 1957 Menachem Mendel's	yahrtzeit.
		   5 15	1930 Benjamin's	yahrtzeit.

       -z timezone
	      Use the specified	timezone, overriding the -C (localize to city)
	      switch.  For correct DST rules, use a full timezone  name	 (such
	      as  "America/New_York") instead of a timezone abbreviation (such
	      as "EST").

       -Z     Add zemanim (Alot	HaShachar; Misheyakir; Kriat Shema, sof	zeman;
	      Tefilah, sof zeman; Chatzot hayom; Mincha	 Gedolah;  Mincha  Ke-
	      tanah; Plag HaMincha; Tzait HaKochavim)

       --help Show help	text

       --version
	      Show version number

CANDLE-LIGHTING	TIMES
       Hebcal's	 candlelighting	 times	are  only approximations.  If you ever
       have any	doubts about its times,	consult	your local halachic authority.
       If you enter geographic coordinates above the arctic  circle  or	 below
       the antarctic circle, the times are guaranteed to be wrong.

       In  addition to candle-lighting on Erev Shabbat and Chag, the -c	switch
       also generates Havdalah and fast	start/end times.

       By default, candle-lighting times are 18	minutes	before sunset (see  -b
       option above for	exceptions).

       Chanukah	candle-lighting	times are at civil dusk	(solar depression of 6
       degrees)	on weekdays. Chanukah candles are lit just before Shabbat can-
       dles on Friday, and immediately after Havdalah on Saturday night.

       Havdalah	 time defaults to 72 minutes after sunset (Rabbeinu Tam).  Ad-
       just with the -m	(minutes) option or with -G  (havdalah	degrees	 below
       horizon).

       Minor  fasts  begin  in the morning at alot haShachar (solar depression
       16.1 degrees) and conclude at tzeit for 3 medium	sized stars (solar de-
       pression	7.083 degrees).	 Major fasts (Yom Kippur and Tish'a B'Av)  be-
       gin  just  before sunset	(at regular candle-lighting time) and conclude
       at Havdalah time.

       Hebcal contains a small database	of cities with their  associated  geo-
       graphic information and time-zone information.  The geographic and time
       information necessary to	calculate sundown times	can come to hebcal any
       of three	ways:

       1)     The  default:  the  system  manager sets a default city when the
	      program is compiled.

       2)     Hebcal looks in the environment  variable	 HEBCAL_CITY  for  the
	      name of a	city in	hebcal's database, and if it finds one,	hebcal
	      will make	that the new default city.

       3)     1	 and  2	may be overridden by command line arguments, including
	      those specified in the HEBCAL_OPTS  environment  variable.   The
	      most natural way to do this is to	use the	-c city	command.  This
	      will localize hebcal to city.  A list of the cities hebcal knows
	      about can	be obtained by typing

		   hebcal cities

	      at the command prompt.  If the city you want isn't on that list,
	      you  can	directly  control hebcal's geographic information with
	      the --geo	and -z switches.

       For a status report on customizations, type type

	    hebcal info

       at the command prompt.

EXAMPLES
       To find the days	of the omer in 1997, printing the days of the week:

	      example% hebcal -how 1997
	      4/23/97 Wed, 1st day of the Omer
	      4/24/97 Thu, 2nd day of the Omer
	      4/25/97 Fri, 3rd day of the Omer
	       .
	       .
	       .
	      6/9/97 Mon, 48th day of the Omer
	      6/10/97 Tue, 49th	day of the Omer

       To print	only the weekly	sedrot of Nisan	5770

	      example% hebcal -hs Nisan	5770
	      3/20/2010	Parashat Vayikra
	      3/27/2010	Parashat Tzav
	      4/10/2010	Parashat Shmini

       To find out what's happening in the Jewish calendar today, use

	      example% hebcal -TS
	      19 of Nisan, 5752
	      Parshat Achrei Mot
	      Pesach V (CH"M)
	      4th day of the Omer

ENVIRONMENT
       Hebcal uses two environment variables:

       HEBCAL_CITY
	      Hebcal uses this value as	the default city for  sunset  calcula-
	      tions.  A	list of	available cities is available with from	hebcal
	      with the command:

		   hebcal cities

       HEBCAL_OPTS
	      The  value  of this variable is automatically processed as if it
	      were typed at the	command	line before any	other actual  command-
	      line arguments.

AUTHORS
       Danny Sadinoff
       Michael J. Radwin

SEE ALSO
       calendar(1), emacs(1), hcal(1), hdate(1), omer(1), remind(1), rise(1)

       The latest version of the code is available on the hebcal project home-
       page <https://github.com/hebcal/hebcal>.

       The  original motivation	for the	algorithms in this program was the Tur
       Shulchan	Aruch.

       A well written treatment	of the Jewish calendar for the layman  can  be
       found in	Understanding the Jewish Calendar by Rabbi Nathan Bushwick.  A
       more  complete bibliography on the topic	can be found there, as well as
       in the Encyclopedia Judaica entry on the	calendar.

DIAGNOSTICS
       hebcal help
	      Prints a shorter version of this manpage,	with comments on  each
	      option.

       hebcal info
	      Prints the version number	and default values of the program.

       hebcal cities
	      Prints  a	 list  of cities which hebcal knows about, suitable as
	      arguments	to the -C city option.	If your	city does  not	appear
	      on this list, put	the necessary defaults in the HEBCAL_OPTS  en-
	      vironment	variable.

       hebcal copying
	      Prints  the GNU license, with information	about copying the pro-
	      gram.  See below.

       hebcal warranty
	      Tells you	how there's NO WARRANTY	for hebcal.

DISCLAIMER
       This is just a program I	wrote during summer school and while  avoiding
       my senior project.  It should not be invested with any sort of halachic
       authority.

HISTORY
       hebcal first appeared in	comp.sources.misc on November 4, 1992.

       For  version 3, much of the program was rewritten using Emacs 19's cal-
       endar routines by Edward	M. Reingold and	Nachum Dershowitz.  Their pro-
       gram is extremely clear and provides many instructive examples of  fine
       calendar	code in	emacs LISP.

       In  version 4.x (released in 2015), the sunrise/sunset engine (used for
       candle-lighting times and zmanim) was rewritten using Derick  Rethans's
       excellent timelib <https://github.com/derickr/timelib>.

       Version 5.x (released 2022) was completely rewritten in Go.

BUGS
       Hebrew  dates  are  only	valid before sundown on	that secular date.  An
       option to control this will be added in a later release.

       When specifying geographic  coordinates	with  the  legacy  -l  and  -L
       switches, negative longitudes are east of Greenwich.

       Some combinations of options produce weird results, e.g.,

	    hebcal -dH nisan 5744
	    hebcal -dH 5744

       This comes into play when you use the HEBCAL_OPTS environment variable.

       The  sunup/sundown  routines aren't accurate enough.  If	you enter geo-
       graphic coordinates above the artic circle or below the antarctic  cir-
       cle, the	times are guaranteed to	be wrong.

       Hebcal  only  translates	 between the Gregorian calendar	and the	Jewish
       calendar. It does not take into account a  correction  of  eleven  days
       that  was introduced by Pope Gregory XIII known as the Gregorian	Refor-
       mation. Wednesday, 2 September 1752 was followed	by Thursday,  14  Sep-
       tember 1752.

       This  means  that the results will be at	least partly useless where and
       when the	Gregorian calendar was not used, e.g., before 1752 in  Britain
       and   before   circa   1918   in	  Russia.    See  the  Wikipedia  page
       <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregorian_calendar#Adoption_by_country>
       for a splendid chart depicting when the changeover from the  Julian  to
       the Gregorian calendars occurred	in various places.

       Hebcal cannot handle date computations before 2 C.E.  Sorry.

BUG REPORTS TO
       <https://github.com/hebcal/hebcal/issues>

COPYING
       Copyright (C) 1994-2006 Danny Sadinoff
       Portions	Copyright (C) 2022 Michael J. Radwin. All Rights Reserved.

       For a full text of the copyright	and lack of warranty information, run

	    hebcal copying

       at the command line.

Sadinoff and Radwin	       Hebcal @VERSION@			     HEBCAL(1)

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