From 3371cc97a6f63e105f3745d2c34eb6b4391b2370 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mattias Andrée Date: Sun, 22 Feb 2026 15:02:34 +0100 Subject: m fixes MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Signed-off-by: Mattias Andrée --- blue.1 | 30 +++++++++++++++--------------- 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-) (limited to 'blue.1') diff --git a/blue.1 b/blue.1 index daf062d..830d66b 100644 --- a/blue.1 +++ b/blue.1 @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ .TH BLUE 1 BLUE .SH NAME -blue - Creates table of when the blue hour etc. occurs -.SH SYNPOSIS +blue \- Creates a table of when the blue hour etc. occurs +.SH SYNOPSIS .B blue .RB [ -d \ \fIdelev\fP]\ ... .RB [ -D \ \fIdelev\fP]\ ... @@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ blue - Creates table of when the blue hour etc. occurs .RB [ -bBgGnN ] .SH "DESCRIPTION" .B blue -prints a list of time point when the select event occurs. +prints a list of time points when the selected event occurs. .SH "OPTIONS" .TP .B -b @@ -64,18 +64,18 @@ Print times in human readable format. .TP .RI \fB-l\fP\ latitude : longitude Tell blue where you are. The values are measured in degrees -and in the GPS (you probably do not have too care about that, +and in the GPS (you probably do not have to care about that; the differences between the systems should not be significant -another), and must be in decimal. +in another), and must be in decimal. Reminder for Americans (particularly US Americans), you are -an the western hemisphere, not the eastern, thus your longtiude +in the western hemisphere, not the eastern, thus your longitude is negative. If you experience weird time listings, 100 % of the times it is because you forgot the minus sign. But no need to feel stupid, it is a really common mistake. No complicated stuff please, only latitudes within ±90° and -longitudes within ±180°. No unit thought. +longitudes within ±180°. No units though. .TP .BI -l\ location Use a named location. In particular, the one stored in the @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ Print times in local time. .BI -e\ elev List the time when the Sun's elevation is .I elev -and the firs derivative of the Sun's elevation is +and the first derivative of the Sun's elevation is non-negative (morning). .TP .B -n @@ -103,11 +103,11 @@ List the time of solar noon. List the time of solar midnight. .TP .BI -r\ res -Print the in +Print results in .I res -resultion. +resolution. .I res -must be an integer followed by on the the suffixes: +must be an integer followed by one of the suffixes: .nf h hours @@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ For example: prints the nearest quarters of the times. .TP .BI -s\ date -The last date (local time) to include in the last. +The last date (local time) to include in the list. .I date must be in .B %Y-%m-%d @@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ If the file contains more than one line, only the first line, even if it is empty, is used. .TP .B /etc/geolocation -Fallback file use if ~/.config/geolocation is missing. Other +Fallback file used if ~/.config/geolocation is missing. Other programs are encouraged to use this file too. .TP .B ~/.config/geolocation.d/ @@ -157,11 +157,11 @@ location is not listed in ~/.config/geolocation.d/. The files are formatted in the same way as ~/.config/geolocation. Other programs are encouraged to use this directory too. .SH "RATIONALE" -This is useful if you plan to take nice photographies, for example +This is useful if you plan to take nice photographs, for example during the blue hours, or the golden hour. But mostly, I just made this because I could. .SH "NOTES" -US Americans, remember, you are on the Western Hemisphere. +US Americans, remember, you are on the western hemisphere. Therefore, you should specify a negative longitude. .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR locateme (1) -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2