1.\" $FreeBSD$ 2.Dd July 4, 2014 3.Dt UNITS 1 4.Os 5.Sh NAME 6.Nm units 7.Nd conversion program 8.Sh SYNOPSIS 9.Nm 10.Op Fl f Ar filename 11.Op Fl H Ar filename 12.Op Fl qvUV 13.Op Ar from-unit to-unit 14.Sh OPTIONS 15The following options are available: 16.Bl -tag -width indent 17.It Fl h No , Fl -help 18Show an overview of options 19.It Fl f Ar filename No , Fl -file Ar filename 20Specify the name of the units data file to load. 21.It Fl H Ar filename No , Fl -historyfile Ar filename 22Ignored, for compatibility with GNU units. 23.It Fl e , Fl -exponential 24Behave as if -o '%6e' was typed. 25.It Fl q No , Fl -quiet 26Suppress prompting of the user for units and the display of statistics 27about the number of units loaded. 28.It Fl U No , Fl -unitsfile 29If the default unit file exists prints its location. 30If not, print 31.Qo 32Units data file not found 33.Qc 34.It Fl t No , Fl -terse 35Only print the result. This is used when calling 36.Nm 37from other programs for easy to parse results. 38.It Fl v No , Fl -verbose 39Print the units in the conversion output. 40Be more verbose in general. 41.It Fl o Ar format No , Fl -output-format Ar format 42Select the output format string by which numbers are printed. 43.It Fl V No , Fl -version 44Print the version number, usage, and then exit. 45.It Ar from-unit to-unit 46Allow a single unit conversion to be done directly from the command 47line. 48The program will not print prompts. 49It will print out the 50result of the single specified conversion. 51.El 52.Sh DESCRIPTION 53The 54.Nm 55program converts quantities expressed in various scales to 56their equivalents in other scales. 57The 58.Nm 59program can only 60handle multiplicative or affine scale changes. 61It works interactively by prompting 62the user for input: 63.Bd -literal 64 You have: meters 65 You want: feet 66 * 3.2808399 67 / 0.3048 68 69 You have: cm^3 70 You want: gallons 71 * 0.00026417205 72 / 3785.4118 73 74 You have: meters/s 75 You want: furlongs/fortnight 76 * 6012.8848 77 / 0.00016630952 78 79 You have: 1|2 inch 80 You want: cm 81 * 1.27 82 / 0.78740157 83 84 You have: 85 degF 85 You want: degC 86 29.444444 87.Ed 88.Pp 89Powers of units can be specified using the '^' character as shown in 90the example, or by simple concatenation: 'cm3' is equivalent to 'cm^3'. 91Multiplication of units can be specified by using spaces, a dash or 92an asterisk. 93Division of units is indicated by the slash ('/'). 94Note that multiplication has a higher precedence than division, 95so 'm/s/s' is the same as 'm/s^2' or 'm/s s'. 96Division of numbers 97must be indicated using the vertical bar ('|'). 98To convert half a 99meter, you would write '1|2 meter'. 100If you write '1/2 meter' then the 101units program would interpret that as equivalent to '0.5/meter'. 102If you enter incompatible unit types, the units program will 103print a message indicating that the units are not conformable and 104it will display the reduced form for each unit: 105.Bd -literal 106 You have: ergs/hour 107 You want: fathoms kg^2 / day 108 conformability error 109 2.7777778e-11 kg m^2 / sec^3 110 2.1166667e-05 kg^2 m / sec 111.Ed 112.Pp 113The conversion information is read from a units data file. 114The default 115file includes definitions for most familiar units, abbreviations and 116metric prefixes. 117Some constants of nature included are: 118.Pp 119.Bl -column -offset indent -compact "mercury" 120.It "pi ratio of circumference to diameter" 121.It "c speed of light" 122.It "e charge on an electron" 123.It "g acceleration of gravity" 124.It "force same as g" 125.It "mole Avogadro's number" 126.It "water pressure per unit height of water" 127.It "mercury pressure per unit height of mercury" 128.It "au astronomical unit" 129.El 130.Pp 131The unit 'pound' is a unit of mass. 132Compound names are run together 133so 'pound force' is a unit of force. 134The unit 'ounce' is also a unit 135of mass. 136The fluid ounce is 'floz'. 137British units that differ from 138their US counterparts are prefixed with 'br', and currency is prefixed 139with its country name: 'belgiumfranc', 'britainpound'. 140When searching 141for a unit, if the specified string does not appear exactly as a unit 142name, then 143.Nm 144will try to remove a trailing 's' or a 145trailing 'es' and check again for a match. 146.Pp 147To find out what units are available read the standard units file. 148If you want to add your own units you can supply your own file. 149A unit is specified on a single line by 150giving its name and an equivalence. 151Be careful to define 152new units in terms of old ones so that a reduction leads to the 153primitive units which are marked with '!' characters. 154The 155.Nm 156program will not detect infinite loops that could be caused 157by careless unit definitions. 158Comments in the unit definition file 159begin with a '#' or '/' character at the beginning of a line. 160.Pp 161Prefixes are defined in the same was as standard units, but with 162a trailing dash at the end of the prefix name. 163If a unit is not found 164even after removing trailing 's' or 'es', then it will be checked 165against the list of prefixes. 166Prefixes will be removed until a legal 167base unit is identified. 168.Pp 169Here is an example of a short units file that defines some basic 170units. 171.Pp 172.Bl -column -offset indent -compact "minute" 173.It "m !a!" 174.It "sec !b!" 175.It "micro- 1e-6" 176.It "minute 60 sec" 177.It "hour 60 min" 178.It "inch 0.0254 m" 179.It "ft 12 inches" 180.It "mile 5280 ft" 181.El 182.Sh FILES 183.Bl -tag -width /usr/share/misc/definitions.units -compact 184.It Pa /usr/share/misc/definitions.units 185the standard units library 186.El 187.Sh AUTHORS 188.An Adrian Mariano Aq Mt adrian@cam.cornell.edu 189.Sh BUGS 190The effect of including a '/' in a prefix is surprising. 191.Pp 192Exponents entered by the user can be only one digit. 193You can work around this by multiplying several terms. 194.Pp 195The user must use | to indicate division of numbers and / to 196indicate division of symbols. 197This distinction should not 198be necessary. 199.Pp 200The program contains various arbitrary limits on the length 201of the units converted and on the length of the data file. 202.Pp 203The program should use a hash table to store units so that 204it does not take so long to load the units list and check 205for duplication. 206