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-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- NNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE
- pcal - generate PostScript calendars
-
- SSSSYYYYNNNNOOOOPPPPSSSSIIIISSSS
- ppppccccaaaallll [----eeee|----ffff _c_a_l] [----oooo _f_i_l_e] [----jjjj | ----JJJJ] [----llll | ----pppp] [----mmmm | ----MMMM]
- [----bbbb _d_a_y|all] [----gggg _d_a_y|all] [----OOOO] [----GGGG]
- [----ssss [[[[_d_a_t_e__s_h_a_d_e]]]][[[[////_f_i_l_l__s_h_a_d_e]]]]] [----FFFF _d_a_y] [----AAAA|----EEEE]
- [----tttt _t_i_t_l_e__f_o_n_t] [----dddd _d_a_y__f_o_n_t] [----nnnn _t_e_x_t__f_o_n_t[/_s_i_z_e]]
- [----LLLL _f_o_o_t_e_r__s_t_r] [----CCCC _f_o_o_t_e_r__s_t_r] [----RRRR _f_o_o_t_e_r__s_t_r]
- [----NNNN _n_o_t_e_s__s_t_r] [----DDDD _s_y_m_b_o_l] [----UUUU _s_y_m_b_o_l] [----xxxx _x_s_c_a_l_e]
- [----yyyy _y_s_c_a_l_e] [----XXXX _x_t_r_a_n_s] [----YYYY _y_t_r_a_n_s] [----IIII] [----BBBB]
- [----SSSS | ----kkkk | ----KKKK] [----wwww] [----hhhh | ----uuuu | ----vvvv] [_m_o_n_t_h] [_y_e_a_r]
- [_n_m_o_n_t_h_s]
-
- DDDDEEEESSSSCCCCRRRRIIIIPPPPTTTTIIIIOOOONNNN
- _P_c_a_l generates PostScript to produce landscape or portrait
- calendars for any month and year. The arguments mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh,
- yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr, and nnnnmmmmoooonnnntttthhhhssss, if provided, should be numeric. The
- mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh value should be in the range 1 - 12, and the yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr
- value should be specified as 1 or 2 digits or as the full 4
- digit year. If no numeric arguments are provided, the
- calendar for the current month and year will be generated.
-
- If one numeric argument is provided, it is interpreted as
- the yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr value, and calendars for the entire year will be
- generated. Otherwise, nnnnmmmmoooonnnntttthhhhssss months, starting with mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh
- and yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr, will be generated.
-
- For whole-year calendars (i.e. the ----wwww option is given), the
- command line arguments are interpreted somewhat differently.
- By default, all months in the current year are printed,
- starting with January. If the mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh argument alone is
- given, it is expected to be the desired yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr to print, and
- prints all of the months in the given year. If both mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh
- and yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr are given, then 12 consecutive months are printed
- starting at the given month and year. If the mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh, yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr,
- and nnnnmmmmoooonnnntttthhhhssss arguments are all present, printing begins with
- the given month and year and nnnnmmmmoooonnnntttthhhhssss months are printed,
- rounded up to the nearest multiple of 12.
-
- TTTThhhheeee DDDDaaaatttteeee FFFFiiiilllleeee
-
- By default, _p_c_a_l simply prints an empty calendar. Its real
- power is in its ability to place ``events'' in appropriate
- days on the calendar, thus allowing the user to create
- personalized calendars. This is achieved through the use of
- the ``date file''.
-
- The date file is named ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r (_p_c_a_l._d_a_t under MS-DOS), or
- _c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r for compatibility with older versions. _P_c_a_l will
- look in several places for such a file. First, if the
- environment variable PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL____DDDDIIIIRRRR is defined, _p_c_a_l searches the
-
-
-
- Page 1 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- directory indicated by that variable. Next, _p_c_a_l searches
- the user's home directory (as specified by the HHHHOOOOMMMMEEEE
- environment variable). If neither PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL____DDDDIIIIRRRR nor HHHHOOOOMMMMEEEE is
- defined, _p_c_a_l searches the current directory instead.
- Finally, the directory where the _p_c_a_l executable resides
- will be checked. If no date file is found, an empty
- calendar is printed; no error is generated.
-
- If a date file is found, it will be searched for lines with
- leading dates matching the requested month and year. Any
- text following the dates found will be printed on the
- calendar under the appropriate day of the month. Dates in
- the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file may be expressed in any of several
- formats:
-
- <ordinal> <day_spec> in <month_spec>{*} {<text>}
- <day_spec> <prep> <date_spec>{*} {<text>}
- <date_spec>{*} {<text>}
-
- Where:
-
- <month_name> := first 3+ characters of name of month, or ``all''
- <month_spec> := <month_name>, or ``year''
- <day_spec> := first 3+ characters of name of weekday, ``day'',
- ``weekday'', ``workday'', ``holiday'', ``nonweekday'',
- ``nonworkday'', ``nonholiday'', ``new_moon'',
- ``first_quarter'', ``full_moon'', or ``last_quarter''
- <ordinal> := any ordinal number (``1st'', ``2nd'', etc.), ``first'' ... ``fifth'',
- ``last'', ``odd'', ``even'', or ``all''
- <prep> := ``before'', ``preceding'', ``after'', ``following'',
- ``on_or_before'' (``oob''), or ``on_or_after'' (``ooa'')
- <sep> := one or more non-numeric, non-space, non-`*' characters
- <month> := a numeric month (1-12)
- <day> := day of month (1-31)
- <year> := a numeric year
-
- If the ----AAAA option (American date formats, the default) is
- given:
-
- <date_spec> := <month_name> <day> | <month><sep><day>{<sep><year>}
-
- If the ----EEEE option (European date formats) is given:
-
- <date_spec> := <month_name> <day> | <month><sep><day>{<sep><year>}
-
- _P_c_a_l also allows format specifiers in both the text and foot
- strings (see the ----LLLL, ----CCCC, ----RRRR, and ----NNNN options below); each
- will be replaced by a corresponding string as outlined in
- the table below. Most of these are derived from the ANSI C
- strftime() ffffuuuunnnnccccttttiiiioooonnnn;;;; tttthhhheeee %%%%[[[[lllloooouuuuwwwwMMMMDDDD]]]] and %%%%[[[[oooo0000++++----]]]] format
- specifiers are specific to _p_c_a_l:
-
-
-
-
- Page 2 (printed 6/30/95)
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-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- %a abbreviated weekday
- %A full weekday
- %b abbreviated month name
- %B full month name
- %d day of month (1-31)
- %j day of year (1-366)
- %l days left in year (0-365)
- %m month (1-12)
- %U week number (0-53)
- %W week number (0-53)
- %u week number (1-54)
- %w week number (1-54)
- %y year w/o century (00-99)
- %Y year w/century
- %% `%' character
-
- %o print number as ordinal
- %0 print number with leading zeroes
- %+ use following month or year
- %- use previous month or year
- %{+N}[DWMY] adjust date by +N days/weeks/months/years
- %{-N}[DWMY] adjust date by -N days/weeks/months/years
-
- The %%%%uuuu specifier considers the week containing 1/1 as week 1
- and the following logical Sunday (the first day of the week
- as printed; cf. the ----FFFF option below) as the start of week 2;
- %%%%UUUU considers the first logical Sunday as the first day of
- week 1. %%%%wwww and %%%%WWWW behave like %%%%uuuu and %%%%UUUU respectively, but
- use the first logical Monday instead. Note that %%%%wwww
- strftime().
-
- The %%%%oooo format specifier prints a number as an ordinal, with
- the appropriate suffix (``st'', ``nd'', ``rd'', or ``th'' in
- English) appended. For example, %%%%oooodddd prints the day of the
- month as ``1st'', ``2nd'', ``3rd'', etc.
-
- Unlike strftime(), _p_c_a_l defaults to printing numbers (except
- %%%%yyyy) without leading zeroes. If leading zeroes are desired,
- the `0' prefix may be used. For example, %%%%0000jjjj prints the
- first day of year as ``001''.
-
- The %%%%++++ and %%%%---- format specifiers direct _p_c_a_l to substitute
- the following/previous month/year in the following [[[[bbbbBBBBmmmmyyyyYYYY]]]]
- specifier. For example, %%%%++++BBBB prints the name of the next
- month.
-
- The %%%%{{{{[[[[++++----]]]]NNNN}}}}[[[[DDDDWWWWMMMMYYYY]]]] format specifiers do not print anything,
- but instead adjust the working date by +_ NNNNdays (DDDD), weeks
- (WWWW), months (MMMM), or years (YYYY). Subsequent format specifiers
- use the adjusted date instead of the current date. For
- example, %%%%++++1111MMMM %%%%BBBB %%%%YYYY adjusts the date forward by one month
- and then prints the resulting month and year (``January
-
-
-
- Page 3 (printed 6/30/95)
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-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- 1992'' in December, 1991); %%%%----2222WWWW %%%%bbbb %%%%dddd adjusts the date
- backward by two weeks and prints the resulting month and day
- (``Jul 26'' on August 9).
-
- Such date adjustments are normally cumulative; for example,
- %%%%++++1111YYYY%%%%----1111DDDD adjusts the date forward by one year and then
- backward by one day. If %%%%DDDD or %%%%MMMM is specified alone (or if
- NNNN is zero), _p_c_a_l restores the original date. Note that %%%%MMMM
- has a different meaning to the strftime() ffffuuuunnnnccccttttiiiioooonnnn....
-
- The ``Notes'' box (see below) uses the first of the current
- month as the default date. All foot strings use the first
- of the current month in single-month mode and the first of
- the starting month in whole-year mode.
-
- Examples:
-
- last Monday in May* Memorial Day Holiday
-
- all Fridays in Oct Status Meeting, 11 AM
- first workday in all %-B progress report due
- all Fri in all Time card due, 3 PM
- all Monday in all Fiscal week %0W
- -2nd workday in all Schedule for %+B due %+2D
- 2nd full_moon in all Blue Moon
- Fri on_or_before all 15 Pay Day
- even Fridays in year Pay Day
- 183rd day of year Mid-year (%l days left)
-
- Tue after first Mon in Nov Election Day (USA)
-
- 4th Thu in Nov* Thanksgiving
- Fri after 4th Thu in Nov* Day after Thanksgiving
-
- 12/25/90* Christmas # American
- 25.12.90* Christmas # European
-
- Dec 25* Christmas # American
- 25 Dec* Christmas # European
-
- Any non-numeric character may separate numeric dates.
- Holidays may be flagged by following the date immediately
- with `*' as in the examples above; this will cause the date
- to be printed in gray. ``Each'' and ``every'' are accepted
- as synonyms for ``all'', and any word may be used in place
- of ``in''. The abbreviations ``oob'' and ``ooa'' may be
- used in place of the keywords ``on_or_before'' and
- ``on_or_after'', respectively. ``Nearest'' attempts to
- match the specified date; if that fails, it tries the day
- after, then the day before, then two days after, two days
- before, and so forth until a match occurs.
-
-
-
-
- Page 4 (printed 6/30/95)
-
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-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- Wildcard day names are also provided. The keyword
- ``weekday'' applies to any days which are normally printed
- in black on the calendar. The keyword ``workday'' is the
- same, but does not include any holidays. The keyword
- ``holiday'' includes only those days flagged as holidays.
- The keywords ``nonweekday'', ``nonworkday'', and
- ``nonholiday'' are also recognized as negations of the
- above. See the CCCCAAAAVVVVEEEEAAAATTTTSSSS below for important notes on using
- these keywords. Moon phases may also appear as wildcards;
- ``nm'' is accepted as a synonym for ``new_moon'', ``1q'' and
- ``fq'' for ``first_quarter'', ``fm'' for ``full_moon'',
- ``3q'' for ``third_quarter'', and ``lq'' for
- ``last_quarter''.
-
- Ordinal day numbers may be used to specify dates, either
- relative to the month or to the year. Either words or
- numeric abbreviations may be used for ``first'' through
- ``fifth''; higher numbers must be given using the numeric
- equivalent (e.g. 100th). Negative ordinal numbers may even
- be used. For example, ``-2nd'' means ``next to last''.
-
- ``Odd'' and ``even'' do not refer to the actual date;
- instead, ``odd'' means ``alternate, starting with the
- first'', and ``even'' means ``alternate, starting with the
- second''. Thus, ``odd Fridays in March'' refers to the
- first, third, and (if present) fifth Fridays in March - not
- to those Fridays falling on odd dates.
-
- ``All'' refers to each individual month; ``year'' refers to
- the year as an entity. Thus ``odd Fridays in all'' refers
- to the first, third, and fifth Friday of each month, while
- ``odd Fridays in year'' refers to the first Friday of
- January and every other Friday thereafter.
-
- Text in the date file may use C-like escape sequences (i.e.
- a `\' followed by a character, 1 - 3 octal digits, or `x'
- followed by 1 - 2 hexadecimal digits). Escaped whitespace
- (including nnnneeeewwwwlllliiiinnnneeee ) and the standard ANSI character escapes
- (`\a', `\b', `\f', `\n', `\r', `\t', `\v') are all replaced
- by a single blank.
-
- Lines in the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file consisting of yyyyeeeeaaaarrrr ################ (where
- ################ is a numeric year) can be used to set the year for
- following entries. This assumes that the following entries
- do not contain a year; any date entries containing year
- information will set the remembered year to that year.
-
- Lines in the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file consisting of oooopppptttt <<<<ooooppppttttiiiioooonnnnssss>>>> can
- be used to override the defaults for any command-line
- options except ----cccc, ----eeee, ----ffff, ----hhhh, ----uuuu, ----vvvv, ----DDDD, and ----UUUU. Any
- options specified in this manner are, in turn, overridden by
- those specified explicitly on the command line.
-
-
-
- Page 5 (printed 6/30/95)
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-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- Lines in the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file consisting of nnnnooootttteeee{{{{////<<<<nnnnuuuummmmbbbbeeeerrrr>>>>}}}}
- <<<<mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh>>>> can be used to place notes regarding the entire
- month in one of the unused blocks of the calendar. The
- <<<<mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh>>>> indicator may be either a number 1 through 12 or an
- alphabetic month name as described above; ``note all'' will
- place the associated text in the notes block for each month
- in the current year. <<<<nnnnuuuummmmbbbbeeeerrrr>>>> is an optional positive or
- negative number specifying the empty box where the
- associated text is to be placed. If positive, _p_c_a_l counts
- forward from the first empty box; if negative, _p_c_a_l counts
- backward from the last empty box. Thus, ````````nnnnooootttteeee////1111'''''''' places
- the associated text in the first empty box; nnnnooootttteeee////----3333 in the
- third-to-last. The default is -1 if no <number> is given
- (last empty box, immediately preceding the small calendars
- on the bottom row; cf. ----SSSS, ----kkkk, and ----KKKK, below).
-
- Comments are supported in the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file. Any
- characters following a `#' character through the end of the
- line are ignored.
-
- _P_c_a_l supports rudimentary _c_p_p-like functionality in the date
- file, allowing the following constructs: ddddeeeeffffiiiinnnneeee |||| uuuunnnnddddeeeeffff,
- iiiiffff{{{{{{{{nnnn}}}}ddddeeeeffff}}}} ............ {{{{eeeelllliiiiffff ............}}}}**** {{{{eeeellllsssseeee ............}}}} and iiiinnnncccclllluuuuddddeeee. Note
- that these are not preceded by `#' as they are in C. Symbol
- names defined using these keywords (or via the ----DDDD option)
- are case-insensitive. It is not an error to uuuunnnnddddeeeeffff an
- undefined symbol, nor to ddddeeeeffffiiiinnnneeee a previously-defined one.
- An iiiiffffddddeeeeffff alone is always ffffaaaallllsssseeee; an iiiiffffnnnnddddeeeeffff alone is always
- ttttrrrruuuueeee. iiiiffff is accepted as a synonym for iiiiffffddddeeeeffff.
-
- The name of the file in the iiiinnnncccclllluuuuddddeeee directive may optionally
- be surrounded by either "" or <>, both of which are ignored.
- If the name is not an absolute path, it is taken to be
- relative to the directory where the file containing the
- directive is located. _P_c_a_l is smart enough to translate ~~~~////
- to the user's home directory.
-
- In addition to pre-processing keywords, _p_c_a_l also accepts
- boolean expressions in iiiiffff{{{{{{{{nnnn}}}}ddddeeeeffff}}}} and eeeelllliiiiffff directives.
- These expressions consist of symbol names joined by the
- boolean operators !!!!, &&&&, ^^^^, and ||||, in order of precedence,
- high to low. Parentheses may be used to alter the
- precedence. The synonyms &&&&&&&& and |||||||| are accepted for &&&& and
- ||||. A symbol name evaluates to ttttrrrruuuueeee if currently defined,
- ffffaaaallllsssseeee if not; thus:
-
- ifdef A | B | C
-
- ...is ttttrrrruuuueeee if any of the symbols A, B, and C is defined,
- and:
-
- ifdef A & B & C
-
-
-
- Page 6 (printed 6/30/95)
-
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-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- ...is ttttrrrruuuueeee if they all are. Note that iiiiffffnnnnddddeeeeffff <<<<eeeexxxxpppprrrr>>>> is
- equivalent to iiiiffffddddeeeeffff !!!!(((( <<<<eeeexxxxpppprrrr>>>> ))))....
-
- TTTThhhheeee MMMMoooooooonnnn FFFFiiiilllleeee
-
- If a file of the name ._m_o_o_n## (_m_o_o_n##._d_a_t under MS-DOS),
- where ######## is the last two digits of the calendar year, exists
- in the same directory as the date file (or in the directory
- where _p_c_a_l resides), _p_c_a_l uses the information contained
- within to calculate the phase of the moon. If no such file
- exists, _p_c_a_l uses an approximate algorithm.
-
- Entries in the moon file must conform to the following
- syntax:
-
- If the ----AAAA option (American date formats, the default) is
- given:
-
- <quarter> <month><sep><day> {<hour><sep><min>}
-
- If the ----EEEE option (European date formats) is given:
-
- <quarter> <day><sep><month> {<hour><sep><min>}
-
- Where:
-
- <quarter> := ``nm'', ``fq'' or ``1q'', ``fm'', ``3q'' or ``lq'' (new moon,
- first quarter, full moon, last quarter)
- <hour> := number 0-23 (24-hour clock)
- <min> := number 0-59
-
- This file must contain entries for all quarter moons in the
- year, in chronological order; if any errors are encountered,
- _p_c_a_l will revert to using its default algorithm.
-
- As in the date file, comments start with `#' and run through
- the end of the given line.
-
- OOOOppppttttiiiioooonnnnssss
-
- _P_c_a_l has many options:
-
- ----eeee Prints an empty calendar. Do not print entries
- from a ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file.
-
- ----ffff _c_a_l Directs _p_c_a_l to use the file name _c_a_l as the
- input file in place of the default ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r
- file. Note that the search rules are different
- when ----ffff is used. If _c_a_l is an absolute file
- name (i.e., starting with a `/'), then _p_c_a_l
- attempts to open only that file. Otherwise,
- _p_c_a_l looks for _c_a_l in the current directory,
-
-
-
- Page 7 (printed 6/30/95)
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-
-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- then in the directory indicated by the
- environment variable PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL____DDDDIIIIRRRR (if defined), and
- finally in the directory where the _p_c_a_l
- executable resides. If the given _c_a_l file is
- not found, an error results.
-
- ----oooo _f_i_l_e Directs _p_c_a_l to write the output to _f_i_l_e instead
- of to stdout.
-
- ----llll Causes the output to be in landscape mode
- (default). This also resets the x- and y-axis
- scaling and translation factors to the defaults
- for landscape mode.
-
- ----pppp Causes the output to be in portrait mode. This
- also resets the x- and y-axis scaling and
- translation factors to the defaults for portrait
- mode.
-
- ----jjjj Causes the Julian date (day of year) to be
- printed in each calendar box.
-
- ----JJJJ Causes the Julian date and the number of days
- remaining in the year to be printed in each
- calendar box.
-
- ----mmmm Causes moon icons to be printed on dates
- corresponding to new, half, and full moons (the
- default is that no moons are printed).
-
- ----MMMM Causes moon icons to be printed on all dates
- (the default is that no moons are printed).
-
- ----bbbb _d_a_y |||| aaaallllllll
- Causes all dates falling on weekday _d_a_y to be
- printed in black; ----bbbb aaaallllllll causes all weekdays to
- be printed in black.
-
- ----gggg _d_a_y |||| aaaallllllll
- Causes all dates falling on weekday _d_a_y to be
- printed in gray; ----gggg aaaallllllll causes all weekdays to
- be printed in gray.
-
- The default for the ----bbbb and ----gggg options is to
- print Saturdays and Sundays in gray and other
- days, unless flagged as holidays, in black.
-
- ----OOOO Causes ``gray'' dates to be printed as outlined
- characters.
-
- ----GGGG Causes ``gray'' dates to be printed as outlined
- characters filled with gray.
-
-
-
- Page 8 (printed 6/30/95)
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-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- ----ssss{_d_a_t_e}{/_f_i_l_l}
- Overrides the default values for date and/or
- fill box shading. These values must be in the
- range 0.0 (black) through 1.0 (white); they may
- be set independently of each other. The default
- values are 0.8 for dates and 0.9 for empty
- boxes.
-
- ----FFFF _d_a_y Selects weekday _d_a_y as the first day of the
- week. The given day will appear in the left-
- most column of the calendar.
-
- ----AAAA Directs _p_c_a_l to use American date conventions
- mmmmmmmm////dddddddd{{{{////yyyyyyyy}}}} and mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh dddddddd ) when parsing the date
- file (default).
-
- ----EEEE Directs _p_c_a_l to use European date conventions
- dddddddd////mmmmmmmm{{{{////yyyyyyyy}}}} and dddddddd mmmmoooonnnntttthhhh ) when parsing the date
- file.
-
- ----XXXX _x_t_r_a_n_s Specifies the x-axis translation value for
- positioning the output on the page.
-
- ----YYYY _y_t_r_a_n_s Specifies the y-axis translation value for
- positioning the output on the page.
-
- ----xxxx _x_s_c_a_l_e Specifies the x-axis scaling factor for the
- calendar size.
-
- ----yyyy _y_s_c_a_l_e Specifies the y-axis scaling factor for the
- calendar size.
-
- ----tttt _t_i_t_l_e__f_o_n_t
- Specifies the name of a font to use to print the
- month name and year at the top of the calendar,
- the foot strings, and the notes box heading.
- For example, ppppccccaaaallll ----tttt TTTTiiiimmmmeeeessss----RRRRoooommmmaaaannnn.
-
- ----dddd _d_a_y__f_o_n_t Similar to the ----tttt option, but selects the font
- used to print the day numbers and weekday names.
-
- ----nnnn _t_e_x_t__f_o_n_t[////_s_i_z_e]
- Similar to the ----tttt option, but selects the font
- used to print the text inside each day and in
- the notes block. The user may also select the
- font size; ppppccccaaaallll ----nnnn HHHHeeeellllvvvveeeettttiiiiccccaaaa////8888 sets the font to
- 8-point Helvetica.
-
- ----DDDD _s_y_m_b_o_l Defines the named symbol prior to reading the
- date file.
-
- ----UUUU _s_y_m_b_o_l Un-defines the named symbol prior to reading the
-
-
-
- Page 9 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- date file.
-
- ----LLLL _s_t_r_i_n_g Causes the accompanying string to be printed as
- a left-justified footer. Format specifiers
- denoting the month and/or year may appear in the
- string; the appropriate values will be
- substituted upon printing.
-
- ----CCCC _s_t_r_i_n_g Similar to ----LLLL, but causes the accompanying
- string to be printed as a centered footer.
-
- ----RRRR _s_t_r_i_n_g Similar to ----LLLL, but causes the accompanying
- string to be printed as a right-justified
- footer.
-
- ----NNNN _s_t_r_i_n_g Causes the accompanying string to be printed as
- the heading for the "Notes" box. Note, however,
- that _p_c_a_l makes no attempt to ensure that it
- fits.
-
- ----BBBB Causes _p_c_a_l to leave unused calendar boxes blank
- (default is gray).
-
- ----SSSS Causes _p_c_a_l to suppress printing the small
- calendars. See the CCCCAAAAVVVVEEEEAAAATTTTSSSS section for further
- details.
-
- ----kkkk Causes _p_c_a_l to print the small calendars in the
- upper left corner (the default is to print them
- at the lower right).
-
- ----KKKK Causes _p_c_a_l to print the small calendar for the
- previous month in the upper left corner and the
- next month in the lower right (the default is to
- print both at the lower right).
-
- ----wwww Causes _p_c_a_l to print a calendar for 12
- consecutive months: 3 rows / 4 columns in
- landscape mode, 4 rows / 3 columns in portrait
- mode. See the CCCCAAAAVVVVEEEEAAAATTTTSSSS section for details on
- the use of this option with other options.
-
- ----cccc Causes _p_c_a_l to generate a date file suitable for
- use as input to the Un*x _c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r(_1) utility.
- The normal PostScript output is suppressed.
-
- ----IIII Resets all parameters to the program defaults.
-
- ----hhhh Causes _p_c_a_l to write version information,
- parameter usage message, and full explanation of
- options and file formats (to _s_t_d_o_u_t) and
- terminate.
-
-
-
- Page 10 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- ----uuuu Causes _p_c_a_l to write version information and
- parameter usage message (to _s_t_d_o_u_t) and
- terminate.
-
- ----vvvv Causes _p_c_a_l to write version information only
- (to _s_t_d_o_u_t) and terminate.
-
- Any option which normally takes an argument may be specified
- without the argument in order to reset the value to the
- program default. Note that while the ----DDDD option alone clears
- all the defined symbols, the ----UUUU option alone has no effect.
- The ---- (or -------- as per System V) argument may be used to
- disambiguate command lines such as:
-
- ppppccccaaaallll ----tttt 9999 99990000
-
- This could be written instead as one of the following:
-
- ppppccccaaaallll ----tttt ---- 9999 99990000
- ppppccccaaaallll ----tttt -------- 9999 99990000
-
- If the environment variable PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL____OOOOPPPPTTTTSSSS is defined, its
- contents are parsed as a command line. Flags set via
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL____OOOOPPPPTTTTSSSS override the program defaults, but are overridden
- by options set via oooopppptttt lines in the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file or
- explicitly on the command line.
-
- CCCCAAAAVVVVEEEEAAAATTTTSSSS
- The ``workday'' and ``holiday'' keywords are aware of only
- those holidays which have already been flagged at the point
- where they appear. For example, consider January 1990:
-
- January 1990
- S M Tu W Th F S
- 1 2 3 4 5 6
- 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
- 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
- 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
- 28 29 30 31
-
- If the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file looked like this:
-
- workday on_or_before all 15 payday
- 3rd Mon in Jan* MLK day
-
- ... then _p_c_a_l would mark the 15th as ``payday'' since at
- that point in the ._c_a_l_e_n_d_a_r file it has no way of knowing
- that January 15th will later be flagged as a holiday. If
- the two lines were reversed, such that the holiday preceded
- the ``workday'' wildcard, then _p_c_a_l would work as intended,
- marking instead the 12th as ``payday''. Also, beware of
- year boundaries which affect the handling of all of the day
-
-
-
- Page 11 (printed 6/30/95)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNIIIIXXXX SSSSyyyysssstttteeeemmmm VVVV PPPPCCCCAAAALLLL((((1111))))
-
-
-
- wildcard keywords. In general, it is best to place monthly
- wildcards such as the example above at the end of each year
- to achieve the desired effect.
-
- When the ----wwww and ----pppp options are used together, _p_c_a_l revises
- the y-scale factor in order to use the entire portrait page;
- therefore, the user should avoid using use the ----yyyy option
- when using both the ----wwww and ----pppp options. Use of the ----wwww option
- in any case effectively disables the ----mmmm, ----MMMM, ----jjjj, and ----JJJJ
- options.
-
- The output of the ----cccc option may be used as input to
- subsequent runs of _p_c_a_l. Note, however, that oooopppptttt lines
- (except for an automatic oooopppptttt ----[[[[AAAA||||EEEE]]]]), comments, ``note''
- text, and iiiiffffddddeeeeffff'd-out source will be lost.
-
- The ----SSSS option interacts with nnnnooootttteeee{{{{////<<<<nnnnuuuummmmbbbbeeeerrrr>>>>}}}}; if used, it
- should be specified either on the command line or prior to
- the first nnnnooootttteeee line in the date file.
-
- SSSSEEEEEEEE AAAALLLLSSSSOOOO
- cal(1), calendar(1).
-
- AAAAUUUUTTTTHHHHOOOORRRRSSSS
- The original PostScript code to generate the calendars was
- written by Patrick Wood (Copyright (c) 1987 by Patrick Wood
- of Pipeline Associates, Inc.), and authorized for
- modification and redistribution. The calendar file
- inclusion code was originally written in _b_s(1) by Bill Vogel
- of AT&T. Patrick's original PostScript was modified and
- enhanced several times by others whose names have
- regrettably been lost. Ken Keirnan of Pacific Bell
- assembled the original ``C'' version upon which this is
- based; additional modifications and enhancements are the
- work of Joseph P. Larson, Ed Hand, Andrew W. Rogers, Mark
- Kantrowitz, Joe Brownlee, Jamie Zawinski, Richard L. Dyson,
- Bill Hogsett, Floyd Miller, Andy Fyfe, and Geoff Kuenning.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 12 (printed 6/30/95)
-
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-