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XMOONTOOL(1)		    General Commands Manual		  XMOONTOOL(1)

NAME
       xmoontool - Moon	For The	Sun / Werewolf Early Warning System

SYNOPSIS
       xmoontool [-mctU]

DESCRIPTION
       Xmoontool  is  a	 Xwindows application which displays information about
       the moon	in real	time.  When closed (iconic) it	displays  a  graphical
       representation  of  what	the moon would look like right now if you were
       to go outside and look at it. (Go on, try it, the fresh air may do  you
       some  good).   When  the	 window	is open, the same image	of the moon is
       displayed in the	upper right of the window, along with more verbose in-
       formation about both the	moon and the sun (the bright yellow  thing  in
       the  sky,  not  the thing you're	staring	at right now.  It's not	a good
       idea to stare at	the bright yellow thing).  The open window display  is
       updated	approximately  once  per second, the icon is updated every two
       minutes.

       Xmoontool will run on both monochrome and color displays.   Unless  ex-
       plicity	told  to  run  in either the monochrome	(-m) or	the color (-c)
       mode, xmoontool will automatically select  the  appropriate  mode.   On
       color displays, the moon's face is rendered in eight colors in both the
       icon  and the open window.  The darkened	portion	of the moon is visible
       on color	displays as dark shades	of blue.  On monochrome	displays, only
       the illuminated portion of the face is drawn in.

       As an extra added bonus for users of color displays, the	Apollo 11 Com-
       memorative Red Dot has been added to the	face of	the moon  at  the  ap-
       proximate location of Tranquility Base, to mark the 20th	anniversary of
       An Historic Event.

       The  image  of  the moon's face used by xmoontool, especially the color
       version,	is quite accurate.   It	 was  rendered	on  an	Amiga  by  Joe
       Hitchens,  an artist of no small	talent,	from an	illustration in	an as-
       tronomy textbook.

       If invoked with the -t option, xmoontool	will start up  in  test	 mode.
       In test mode, the tool warps through time, updating the display as fast
       as  possible,  skipping	approximately  one  hour per cycle.  A menu is
       available on the	tool, for both the icon	and  the  open	window,	 which
       will  let  you  switch in and out of test mode at will.	This is	what's
       known as	a cheap	thrill,	and can	provide	endless	hours of entertainment
       (if you're easily entertained).

       The option -U effects the moon's	and the	 sun's	distances  to  be  ex-
       pressed in (statute) miles instead of the default kilometers.

       For  those who are lycanthropically inclined, the open window tells you
       when the	next full moon will occur.  This may or	may not	 be  something
       you'll want to know.

TEDIOUS	TECHNICAL CREDITS
       Believe	it or not, xmoontool uses some actual science and even authen-
       tic mathematics.	 If you're into	that sort of thing, you	might like  to
       know  that the following	books were used	by the original	author to cre-
       ate xmoontool:

       "Practical Astronomy With Your Calculator" by Peter Duffett-Smith, Sec-
       ond Edition, Cambridge University Press,	1981.

       "Astronomical Formulae for Calculators" by Jean Meeus,  Third  Edition,
       Willmann-Bell, 1985.

       "Planetary Programs and Tables from -4000 to +2800" by Pierre Bretagnon
       and Jean-Louis Simon, Willmann-Bell, 1986.

       "Celestial BASIC" by Eric Burgess, Revised Edition, Sybex, 1985.

       This  one  was used by Joe to render the	moon image and by me to	locate
       the Apollo 11 landing site:

       "Astronomy: From	the Earth to the Universe" by Jay M. Pasachoff,	Second
       Edition,	Saunders College Publishing, 1983

SEE ALSO
       The real	moon.

AUTHORS
	    John Walker
	    Autodesk SA
	    Avenue des Champs-Montants 14b
	    CH-2074 MARIN
	    Switzerland
	    Usenet: kelvin@Autodesk.com
	    Fax:    038/33 88 15
	    Voice:  038/33 76 33

       Original	author of moontool (the	one who	did the	hard part).

       Ron Hitchens, Independent Hacker.  Adder-on of various  "features"  and
       "improvements".	Culprit	responsible for	this stoopid man page.
	ronbo@vixen.uucp
	...!uunet!cs.utah.edu!caeco!vixen!ronbo
	hitchens@cs.utexas.edu

4th Berkeley Distribution      15 SEPTEMBER 1993		  XMOONTOOL(1)

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