Provided by: units_2.16-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       units — unit conversion and calculation program

SYNOPSIS

       'units' [options] [from-unit [to-unit]]

DESCRIPTION

       The  'units'  program  converts  quantities expressed in various systems of measurement to
       their equivalents in other systems of measurement.  Like many  similar  programs,  it  can
       handle  multiplicative  scale  changes.  It  can also handle nonlinear conversions such as
       Fahrenheit to  Celsius;  see  Temperature  Conversions.   The  program  can  also  perform
       conversions  from  and  to  sums of units, such as converting between meters and feet plus
       inches.

       Basic operation is simple: you enter the units that you want to convert from and the units
       that  you  want to convert to.  You can use the program interactively with prompts, or you
       can use it from the command line.

       Beyond simple unit conversions, 'units'  can  be  used  as  a  general-purpose  scientific
       calculator  that keeps track of units in its calculations.  You can form arbitrary complex
       mathematical expressions of dimensions including sums, products,  quotients,  powers,  and
       even  roots  of dimensions.  Thus you can ensure accuracy and dimensional consistency when
       working with long expressions that involve  many  different  units  that  may  combine  in
       complex ways; for an illustration, see Complicated Unit Expressions.

       The  units are defined in an external data file.  You can use the extensive data file that
       comes with this program, or you can provide your own data file to suit  your  needs.   You
       can also use your own data file to supplement the standard data file.

       You  can  change the default behavior of 'units' with various options given on the command
       line. See Invoking Units for a description of the available options.

INTERACTING WITH UNITS
       To invoke units for interactive use, type 'units' at your shell prompt.  The program  will
       print something like this:

          Currency exchange rates from www.timegenie.com on 2014-03-05
          2860 units, 109 prefixes, 85 nonlinear units

          You have:

       At  the 'You have:' prompt, type the quantity and units that you are converting from.  For
       example, if you want to convert ten meters to feet, type '10 meters'.  Next, 'units'  will
       print 'You want:'.  You should type the units you want to convert to.  To convert to feet,
       you would type 'feet'.  If the 'readline' library was compiled in then tab  will  complete
       unit  names.  See  Readline  Support  for  more information about 'readline'.  To quit the
       program under Unix, press Ctrl-C or Ctrl-D. Under Windows, press Ctrl-C  or  Ctrl-Z;  with
       the latter, you may also need to press Enter.

       The  result will be displayed in two ways.  The first line of output, which is marked with
       a '*' to indicate multiplication, gives the result of the conversion you have  asked  for.
       The  second  line  of  output,  which is marked with a '/' to indicate division, gives the
       inverse of the conversion factor.  If you convert 10 meters to feet, 'units' will print

              * 32.808399
              / 0.03048

       which tells you that 10 meters equals about  32.8  feet.   The  second  number  gives  the
       conversion  in the opposite direction.  In this case, it tells you that 1 foot is equal to
       about 0.03 dekameters since the dekameter is 10 meters.  It also tells you that 1/32.8  is
       about 0.03.

       The  'units'  program prints the inverse because sometimes it is a more convenient number.
       In the example above, for example, the inverse value is an exact  conversion:  a  foot  is
       exactly 0.03048 dekameters.  But the number given the other direction is inexact.

       If you convert grains to pounds, you will see the following:

          You have: grains
          You want: pounds
                  * 0.00014285714
                  / 7000

          From  the  second line of the output you can immediately see that a grain is equal to a
       seven thousandth of a pound.  This is not so obvious from the first line  of  the  output.
       If you find  the output format  confusing, try using the '--verbose' option:

          You have: grain
          You want: aeginamina
                  grain = 0.00010416667 aeginamina
                  grain = (1 / 9600) aeginamina

       If you request a conversion between units that measure reciprocal dimensions, then 'units'
       will display the  conversion  results  with  an  extra  note  indicating  that  reciprocal
       conversion has been done:

          You have: 6 ohms
          You want: siemens
                  reciprocal conversion
                  * 0.16666667
                  / 6

       Reciprocal conversion can be suppressed by using the '--strict' option.  As usual, use the
       '--verbose' option to get more comprehensible output:

          You have: tex
          You want: typp
                  reciprocal conversion
                  1 / tex = 496.05465 typp
                  1 / tex = (1 / 0.0020159069) typp

          You have: 20 mph
          You want: sec/mile
                  reciprocal conversion
                  1 / 20 mph = 180 sec/mile
                  1 / 20 mph = (1 / 0.0055555556) sec/mile

       If you enter incompatible unit types, the 'units' program will print a message  indicating
       that the units are not conformable and it will display the reduced form for each unit:

          You have: ergs/hour
          You want: fathoms kg^2 / day
          conformability error
                  2.7777778e-11 kg m^2 / sec^3
                  2.1166667e-05 kg^2 m / sec

       If  you  only want to find the reduced form or definition of a unit, simply press Enter at
       the 'You want:' prompt.  Here is an example:

          You have: jansky
          You want:
                  Definition: fluxunit = 1e-26 W/m^2 Hz = 1e-26 kg / s^2

       The output from 'units' indicates that the jansky is defined to be  equal  to  a  fluxunit
       which  in  turn  is  defined to be a certain combination of watts, meters, and hertz.  The
       fully reduced (and in this case somewhat more cryptic) form appears on the far right.

       Some named units are treated as dimensionless in some situations.  These units include the
       radian  and  steradian.   These  units will be treated as equal to 1 in units conversions.
       Power is equal to torque times angular velocity.  This conversion can only be performed if
       the radian is dimensionless.

          You have: (14 ft lbf) (12 radians/sec)
          You want: watts
                  * 227.77742
                  / 0.0043902509

       It  is also possible to compute roots and other non-integer powers of dimensionless units;
       this allows computations such as the altitude of geosynchronous orbit:

          You have: cuberoot(G earthmass / (circle/siderealday)^2) - earthradius
          You want: miles
                  * 22243.267
                  / 4.4957425e-05

       Named dimensionless units are not treated as dimensionless in other contexts.  They cannot
       be used as exponents so for example, 'meter^radian' is forbidden.

       If  you  want  a list of options you can type '?'  at the 'You want:' prompt.  The program
       will display a list of named units that are conformable with the unit that you entered  at
       the 'You have:' prompt above.  Conformable unit combinations will not appear on this list.

       Typing  'help'  at  either prompt displays a short help message.  You can also type 'help'
       followed by a unit name.  This will invoke a pager on the units data  base  at  the  point
       where  that  unit is defined.  You can read the definition and comments that may give more
       details or historical information about the unit.  (You can generally quit out of the page
       by pressing 'q'.)

       Typing 'search' text will display a list of all of the units whose names contain text as a
       substring along with their definitions.  This may help in the case where you  aren't  sure
       of the right unit name.

USING UNITS NON-INTERACTIVELY

       The 'units' program can perform units conversions non-interactively from the command line.
       To do this, type the command, type the original unit expression, and type  the  new  units
       you  want.   If  a  units expression contains non-alphanumeric characters, you may need to
       protect it from interpretation by the shell using single or double quote characters.

       If you type

          units "2 liters" quarts

       then 'units' will print

              * 2.1133764
              / 0.47317647

       and then exit.  The output tells you that 2 liters is about 2.1 quarts,  or  alternatively
       that a quart is about 0.47 times 2 liters.

       If  the  conversion  is successful, then 'units' will return success (zero) to the calling
       environment.  If you enter  non-conformable units then 'units' will print a message giving
       the  reduced  form  of  each  unit  and  it  will  return failure (nonzero) to the calling
       environment.

       When you invoke 'units' with only one argument, it will print out the  definition  of  the
       specified unit.  It will return failure if the unit is not defined and success if the unit
       is defined.

UNIT DEFINITIONS

       The  conversion  information  is  read  from  a   units   data   file   that   is   called
       'definitions.units'  and  is  usually located in the '/usr/share/units' directory.  If you
       invoke 'units' with the '-V' option, it will print the location of this file.  The default
       file  includes  definitions for all familiar units, abbreviations and metric prefixes.  It
       also includes many obscure or archaic  units.   Many  common  spelled-out  numbers  (e.g.,
       'seventeen') are recognized.

       Many constants of nature are defined, including these:

          pi          ratio of circumference to diameter
          c           speed of light
          e           charge on an electron
          force       acceleration of gravity
          mole        Avogadro's number
          water       pressure per unit height of water
          Hg          pressure per unit height of mercury
          au          astronomical unit
          k           Boltzman's constant
          mu0         permeability of vacuum
          epsilon0    permittivity of vacuum
          G           Gravitational constant
          mach        speed of sound

       The  standard  data file includes atomic masses for all of the elements and numerous other
       constants.  Also included are the densities of various ingredients used in baking so  that
       '2 cups  flour_sifted'  can  be  converted  to  'grams'.   This is not an exhaustive list.
       Consult the units data file to see the complete list, or to see the definitions  that  are
       used.

       The  'pound'  is  a  unit  of  mass.   To get force, multiply by the force conversion unit
       'force' or use the shorthand 'lbf'.  (Note that 'g'  is  already  taken  as  the  standard
       abbreviation  for the gram.)  The unit 'ounce' is also a unit of mass.  The fluid ounce is
       'fluidounce' or 'floz'.  When British capacity units differ from  their  US  counterparts,
       such  as  the  British  Imperial  gallon, the unit is defined both ways with 'br' and 'us'
       prefixes.  Your locale settings will determine the value of the unprefixed unit.  Currency
       is prefixed with its country name: 'belgiumfranc', 'britainpound'.

       When searching for a unit, if the specified string does not appear exactly as a unit name,
       then the 'units' program will try to remove a trailing 's', 'es'.  Next units will replace
       a  trailing 'ies' with 'y'.  If that fails, 'units' will check for a prefix.  The database
       includes all of the standard metric prefixes.  Only one prefix is permitted per  unit,  so
       'micromicrofarad'  will  fail.   However, prefixes can appear alone with no unit following
       them, so 'micro*microfarad' will work, as will 'micro microfarad'.

       To find out which units and prefixes are available, read the  standard  units  data  file,
       which is extensively annotated.

   English Customary Units
       English customary units differ in various ways in different regions.  In Britain a complex
       system of volume measurements featured different gallons for different materials such as a
       wine  gallon  and  ale gallon that different by twenty percent.  This complexity was swept
       away in 1824 by a reform that created an entirely new gallon, the British Imperial  gallon
       defined as the volume occupied by ten pounds of water.  Meanwhile in the USA the gallon is
       derived from the 1707 Winchester wine gallon, which is 231 cubic  inches.   These  gallons
       differ by about twenty percent.  By default if 'units' runs in the 'en_GB' locale you will
       get the British volume measures.  If it runs in the 'en_US' locale you  will  get  the  US
       volume measures.  In other locales the default values are the US definitions.  If you wish
       to force different definitions then set the environment variable 'UNITS_ENGLISH' to either
       'US' or 'GB' to set the desired definitions independent of the locale.

       Before  1959,  the  value  of  a  yard (and other units of measure defined in terms of it)
       differed slightly among English-speaking  countries.   In  1959,  Australia,  Canada,  New
       Zealand,  the  United  Kingdom,  the  United States, and South Africa adopted the Canadian
       value of 1 yard = 0.9144 m (exactly), which was approximately halfway between  the  values
       used  by  the  UK  and  the US; it had the additional advantage of making 1 inch = 2.54 cm
       (exactly).  This new standard was termed the International Yard.  Australia,  Canada,  and
       the  UK  then  defined all customary lengths in terms of the International Yard (Australia
       did not define the furlong or rod); because many US land surveys  were  in  terms  of  the
       pre-1959  units,  the  US  continued to define customary surveyors' units (furlong, chain,
       rod, and link) in terms of the previous value for the foot, which was termed the US survey
       foot.   The US defined a US survey mile as 5280 US survey feet, and defined a statute mile
       as a US survey mile.  The US values for these units differ from the  international  values
       by about 2 ppm.

       The  'units'  program  uses the international values for these units; the US values can be
       obtained by using either the 'US' or the 'survey' prefix.   In  either  case,  the  simple
       familiar relationships among the units are maintained, e.g., 1 'furlong' = 660 'ft', and 1
       'USfurlong' = 660 'USft', though the metric equivalents differ slightly  between  the  two
       cases.   The  'US'  prefix or the 'survey' prefix can also be used to obtain the US survey
       mile and the value of the US yard prior to 1959, e.g., 'USmile' or 'surveymile'  (but  not
       'USsurveymile').   To  get the US value of the statute mile, use either 'USstatutemile' or
       'USmile'.

       Except for distances that extend over hundreds of miles (such as in  the  US  State  Plane
       Coordinate System), the differences in the miles are usually insignificant:

          You have: 100 surveymile - 100 mile
          You want: inch
                  * 12.672025
                  / 0.078913984

       The pre-1959 UK values for these units can be obtained with the prefix 'UK'.

       In the US, the acre is officially defined in terms of the US survey foot, but 'units' uses
       a definition based on the international foot.  If  you  want  the  official  US  acre  use
       'USacre'  and  similarly  use  'USacrefoot' for the official US version of that unit.  The
       difference between these units is about 4 parts per million.

UNIT EXPRESSIONS

   Operators
       You can  enter  more  complicated  units  by  combining  units  with  operations  such  as
       multiplication,  division,  powers,  addition,  subtraction, and parentheses for grouping.
       You can use the customary symbols for these operators when 'units'  is  invoked  with  its
       default  options.  Additionally, 'units' supports some extensions, including high priority
       multiplication using a space, and a high priority numerical division operator  ('|')  that
       can simplify some expressions.

       You multiply units using a space or an asterisk ('*').  The next example shows both forms:

          You have: arabicfoot * arabictradepound * force
          You want: ft lbf
                  * 0.7296
                  / 1.370614

       You can divide units using the slash ('/') or with 'per':

          You have: furlongs per fortnight
          You want: m/s
                  * 0.00016630986
                  / 6012.8727

       You can use parentheses for grouping:

          You have: (1/2) kg / (kg/meter)
          You want: league
                  * 0.00010356166
                  / 9656.0833

       White  space  surrounding  operators  is optional, so the previous example could have used
       '(1/2)kg/(kg/meter)'.  As a consequence, however, hyphenated  spelled-out  numbers  (e.g.,
       'forty-two') cannot be used; 'forty-two' is interpreted as '40 - 2'.

       Multiplication  using  a  space has a higher precedence than division using a slash and is
       evaluated left to right; in effect, the first '/' character marks  the  beginning  of  the
       denominator  of  a unit expression.  This makes it simple to enter a quotient with several
       terms in  the  denominator:  'J / mol K'.   The  '*'  and  '/'  operators  have  the  same
       precedence,  and are evaluated left to right; if you multiply with '*', you must group the
       terms in the denominator with parentheses: 'J / (mol * K)'.

       The higher precedence of the space operator may not always be advantageous.  For  example,
       'm/s s/day'  is  equivalent  to 'm / s s day' and has dimensions of length per time cubed.
       Similarly, '1/2 meter' refers to a unit of  reciprocal  length  equivalent  to  0.5/meter,
       perhaps  not  what  you would intend if you entered that expression.  The get a half meter
       you would need to use parentheses: '(1/2) meter'.  The  '*'  operator  is  convenient  for
       multiplying a sequence of quotients.  For example, 'm/s * s/day' is equivalent to 'm/day'.
       Similarly, you could write '1/2 * meter' to get half a meter.

       The 'units' program supports another option for  numerical  fractions:  you  can  indicate
       division  of  numbers with the vertical bar ('|'), so if you wanted half a meter you could
       write '1|2 meter'.  You cannot use the vertical bar to indicate division of  non-numerical
       units (e.g., 'm|s' results in an error message).

       Powers  of  units  can  be  specified  using  the '^' character, as shown in the following
       example, or by simple concatenation of a unit and its exponent:  'cm3'  is  equivalent  to
       'cm^3';  if  the  exponent  is more than one digit, the '^' is required.  You can also use
       '**' as an exponent operator.

          You have: cm^3
          You want: gallons
                  * 0.00026417205
                  / 3785.4118

       Concatenation only works with a single unit name: if  you  write  '(m/s)2',  'units'  will
       treat  it as multiplication by 2.  When a unit includes a prefix, exponent operators apply
       to the combination, so 'centimeter3' gives cubic centimeters.  If you separate the  prefix
       from  the  unit  with  any  multiplication operator (e.g., 'centi meter^3'), the prefix is
       treated as a separate unit, so the exponent applies only to the unit without  the  prefix.
       The  second example is equivalent to 'centi * (meter^3)', and gives a hundredth of a cubic
       meter, not a cubic centimeter.  The 'units' program is limited internally to  products  of
       99  units; accordingly, expressions like 'meter^100' or 'joule^34' (represented internally
       as 'kg^34 m^68 / s^68') will fail.

       The '|' operator has the highest precedence, so you can  write  the  square  root  of  two
       thirds as '2|3^1|2'.  The '^' operator has the second highest precedence, and is evaluated
       right to left, as usual:

          You have: 5 * 2^3^2
          You want:
                  Definition: 2560

       With  a  dimensionless  base  unit,  any  dimensionless  exponent  is  meaningful   (e.g.,
       'pi^exp(2.371)').   Even  though  angle  is  sometimes treated as dimensionless, exponents
       cannot have dimensions of angle:

          You have: 2^radian
                           ^
          Exponent not dimensionless

       If the base unit is not dimensionless, the exponent must be a rational number p/q, and the
       dimension  of  the  unit must be a power of q, so 'gallon^2|3' works but 'acre^2|3' fails.
       An exponent using the slash ('/') operator (e.g., 'gallon^(2/3)') is also acceptable;  the
       parentheses  are  needed  because the precedence of '^' is higher than that of '/'.  Since
       'units' cannot represent dimensions with  exponents  greater  than  99,  a  fully  reduced
       exponent  must  have  q < 100.   When raising a non-dimensionless unit to a power, 'units'
       attempts to convert a decimal exponent to a rational number with q < 100.  If this is  not
       possible 'units' displays an error message:

          You have: ft^1.234
          Base unit not dimensionless; rational exponent required

       A  decimal  exponent  must  match  its  rational  representation  to machine precision, so
       'acre^1.5' works but 'gallon^0.666' does not.

   Sums and Differences of Units
       You may sometimes want to add values of different units that are outside the SI.  You  may
       also  wish  to use 'units' as a calculator that keeps track of units.  Sums of conformable
       units are written with the '+' character, and differences with the '-' character.

          You have: 2 hours + 23 minutes + 32 seconds
          You want: seconds
                  * 8612
                  / 0.00011611705

          You have: 12 ft + 3 in
          You want: cm
                  * 373.38
                  / 0.0026782366

          You have: 2 btu + 450 ft lbf
          You want: btu
                  * 2.5782804
                  / 0.38785542

       The expressions that are added or subtracted  must  reduce  to  identical  expressions  in
       primitive units, or an error message will be displayed:

          You have: 12 printerspoint - 4 heredium
                                                ^
          Illegal sum of non-conformable units

       As  usual,  the  precedence  for '+' and '-' is lower than that of the other operators.  A
       fractional quantity such as 2 1/2 cups can be given as '(2+1|2) cups'; the parentheses are
       necessary  because  multiplication  has  higher precedence than addition.  If you omit the
       parentheses, 'units' attempts to add '2' and '1|2 cups', and you get an error message:

          You have: 2+1|2 cups
                             ^
          Illegal sum or difference of non-conformable units

       The expression could also be correctly written as '(2+1/2) cups'.   If  you  write  '2 1|2
       cups' the space is interpreted as multiplication so the result is the same as '1 cup'.

       The  '+'  and '-' characters sometimes appears in exponents like '3.43e+8'.  This leads to
       an ambiguity in an expression like '3e+2 yC'.  The unit 'e' is a small unit of charge,  so
       this  can  be  regarded as equivalent to '(3e+2) yC' or '(3 e)+(2 yC)'.  This ambiguity is
       resolved by always interpreting '+' and '-' as part of an exponent if possible.

   Numbers as Units
       For 'units', numbers are just another kind of unit.  They can appear as many times as  you
       like and in any order in a unit expression.  For example, to find the volume of a box that
       is 2 ft by 3 ft by 12 ft in steres, you could do the following:

          You have: 2 ft 3 ft 12 ft
          You want: stere
                  * 2.038813
                  / 0.49048148

          You have: $ 5 / yard
          You want: cents / inch
                  * 13.888889
                  / 0.072

       And the second example shows how the dollar sign in the units conversion can  precede  the
       five.  Be careful: 'units' will interpret '$5' with no space as equivalent to 'dollar^5'.

   Built-in Functions
       Several  built-in functions are provided: 'sin', 'cos', 'tan', 'ln', 'log', 'log2', 'exp',
       'acos', 'atan' and 'asin'.  The  'sin',  'cos',  and  'tan'  functions  require  either  a
       dimensionless argument or an argument with dimensions of angle.

          You have: sin(30 degrees)
          You want:
                  Definition: 0.5

          You have: sin(pi/2)
          You want:
                  Definition: 1

          You have: sin(3 kg)
                            ^
          Unit not dimensionless

       The   other   functions   on  the  list  require  dimensionless  arguments.   The  inverse
       trigonometric functions return arguments with dimensions of angle.

       If you wish to take roots of units, you may use the 'sqrt' or 'cuberoot' functions.  These
       functions  require  that  the  argument  have the appropriate root.  You can obtain higher
       roots by using fractional exponents:

          You have: sqrt(acre)
          You want: feet
                  * 208.71074
                  / 0.0047913202

          You have: (400 W/m^2 / stefanboltzmann)^(1/4)
          You have:
                  Definition: 289.80882 K

          You have: cuberoot(hectare)
                                    ^
          Unit not a root

   Previous Result
       You can insert the result of the previous conversion using the underscore  ('_').   It  is
       useful when you want to convert the same input to several different units, for example

          You have: 2.3 tonrefrigeration
          You want: btu/hr
                  * 27600
                  / 3.6231884e-005
          You have: _
          You want: kW
                  * 8.0887615
                  / 0.12362832

       Suppose  you want to do some deep frying that requires an oil depth of 2 inches.  You have
       1/2 gallon of oil, and want to know  the  largest-diameter  pan  that  will  maintain  the
       required depth.  The nonlinear unit 'circlearea' gives the radius of the circle (see Other
       Nonlinear Units, for a more detailed description) in SI units; you want  the  diameter  in
       inches:

          You have: 1|2 gallon / 2 in
          You want: circlearea
                  0.10890173 m
          You have: 2 _
          You want: in
                  * 8.5749393
                  / 0.1166189

       In  most  cases,  surrounding  white space is optional, so the previous example could have
       used '2_'.  If '_' follows a non-numerical unit symbol, however, the space is required:

          You have: m_
                     ^
          Parse error

       When  '_'  is  followed  by  a  digit,  the  operation  is  multiplication   rather   than
       exponentiation, so that '_2', is equivalent to '_ * 2' rather than '_^2'.

       You can use the '_' symbol any number of times; for example,

          You have: m
          You want:
                  Definition: 1 m
          You have: _ _
          You want:
                  Definition: 1 m^2

       Using  '_'  before  a  conversion  has been performed (e.g., immediately after invocation)
       generates an error:

          You have: _
                    ^
          No previous result; '_' not set

       Accordingly, '_' serves no purpose when 'units' is invoked non-interactively.

       If 'units' is invoked with the '--verbose' option (see Invoking Units), the value  of  '_'
       is not expanded:

          You have: mile
          You want: ft
                  mile = 5280 ft
                  mile = (1 / 0.00018939394) ft
          You have: _
          You want: m
                  _ = 1609.344 m
                  _ = (1 / 0.00062137119) m

       You can give '_' at the 'You want:' prompt, but it usually is not very useful.

   Complicated Unit Expressions
       The 'units' program is especially helpful in ensuring accuracy and dimensional consistency
       when converting lengthy unit expressions.  For example, one  form  of  the  Darcy-Weisbach
       fluid-flow equation is

            Delta P = (8 / pi)^2 (rho fLQ^2) / d^5,

       where  Delta  P  is  the  pressure drop, rho is the mass density, f is the (dimensionless)
       friction factor, L is the length of the pipe, Q is the volumetric flow rate, and d is  the
       pipe diameter.  It might be desired to have the equation in the form

            Delta P = A1 rho fLQ^2 / d^5

       that  accepted  the  user's  normal  units; for typical units used in the US, the required
       conversion could be something like

          You have: (8/pi^2)(lbm/ft^3)ft(ft^3/s)^2(1/in^5)
          You want: psi
                  * 43.533969
                  / 0.022970568

       The parentheses allow individual terms in the expression to be entered naturally, as  they
       might  be read from the formula.  Alternatively, the multiplication could be done with the
       '*' rather than a space; then parentheses are needed only around 'ft^3/s' because  of  its
       exponent:

          You have: 8/pi^2 * lbm/ft^3 * ft * (ft^3/s)^2 /in^5
          You want: psi
                  * 43.533969
                  / 0.022970568

       Without  parentheses,  and  using spaces for multiplication, the previous conversion would
       need to be entered as

          You have: 8 lb ft ft^3 ft^3 / pi^2 ft^3 s^2 in^5
          You want: psi
                  * 43.533969
                  / 0.022970568

   Backwards Compatibility:
       '*' and '-' The original 'units' assigned multiplication a higher precedence than division
       using  the slash.  This differs from the usual precedence rules, which give multiplication
       and division equal precedence, and can be confusing for people who think  of  units  as  a
       calculator.

       The  star  operator  ('*')  included  in  this  'units'  program has, by default, the same
       precedence as division, and hence follows  the  usual  precedence  rules.   For  backwards
       compatibility  you  can invoke 'units' with the '--oldstar' option.  Then '*' has a higher
       precedence than division, and the same precedence as multiplication using the space.

       Historically, the hyphen ('-')  has  been  used  in  technical  publications  to  indicate
       products  of  units,  and  the  original  'units'  program  treated it as a multiplication
       operator.  Because 'units' provides several  other  ways  to  obtain  unit  products,  and
       because '-' is a subtraction operator in general algebraic expressions, 'units' treats the
       binary '-' as a subtraction operator by default.   For  backwards  compatibility  use  the
       '--product'  option,  which  causes  'units' to treat the binary '-' operator as a product
       operator.   When  '-'  is  a  multiplication  operator  it  has  the  same  precedence  as
       multiplication with a space, giving it a higher precedence than division.

       When  '-'  is  used as a unary operator it negates its operand.  Regardless of the 'units'
       options, if '-' appears after '(' or after '+' then it will act as  a  negation  operator.
       So  you  can  always  compute  20  degrees  minus  12  minutes  by  entering '20 degrees +
       -12 arcmin'.  You must use this construction when you define new units because you  cannot
       know what options will be in force when your definition is processed.

NONLINEAR UNIT CONVERSIONS

       Nonlinear  units  are represented using functional notation.  They make possible nonlinear
       unit conversions such as temperature.

   Temperature Conversions
       Conversions between temperatures are different from linear conversions between temperature
       increments—see  the  example  below.   The absolute temperature conversions are handled by
       units starting with 'temp', and  you  must  use  functional  notation.   The  temperature-
       increment  conversions  are  done  using units starting with 'deg' and they do not require
       functional notation.

          You have: tempF(45)
          You want: tempC
                  7.2222222

          You have: 45 degF
          You want: degC
                  * 25
                  / 0.04

       Think of 'tempF(x)' not as a function but as a notation that indicates that x should  have
       units  of  'tempF'  attached  to  it.  See Defining Nonlinear Units.  The first conversion
       shows that if it's 45 degrees Fahrenheit outside, it's 7.2 degrees  Celsius.   The  second
       conversion  indicates that a change of 45 degrees Fahrenheit corresponds to a change of 25
       degrees Celsius.  The conversion from 'tempF(x)' is to absolute temperature, so that

          You have: tempF(45)
          You want: degR
                  * 504.67
                  / 0.0019814929

       gives the same result as

          You have: tempF(45)
          You want: tempR
                  * 504.67
                  / 0.0019814929

       But if you convert 'tempF(x)' to 'degC', the output is probably not what you expect:

          You have: tempF(45)
          You want: degC
                  * 280.37222
                  / 0.0035666871

       The result is the temperature in K, because 'degC' is defined  as  'K',  the  Kelvin.  For
       consistent  results,  use  the  'tempX' units when converting to a temperature rather than
       converting a temperature increment.

       The 'tempC()' and 'tempF()' definitions are limited to positive absolute temperatures, and
       giving  a  value  that  would result in a negative absolute temperature generates an error
       message:

          You have: tempC(-275)
                              ^
          Argument of function outside domain
                              ^

   Other Nonlinear Units
       Some other examples of nonlinear units are numerous different ring sizes and wire  gauges,
       the grit sizes used for abrasives, the decibel scale, shoe size, scales for the density of
       sugar (e.g., baume).  The standard data file also supplies units for computing the area of
       a  circle  and the volume of a sphere.  See the standard units data file for more details.
       Wire gauges with multiple zeroes are signified using negative numbers where two zeroes  is
       '-1'.   Alternatively,  you can use the synonyms 'g00', 'g000', and so on that are defined
       in the standard units data file.

          You have: wiregauge(11)
          You want: inches
                  * 0.090742002
                  / 11.020255

          You have: brwiregauge(g00)
          You want: inches
                  * 0.348
                  / 2.8735632

          You have: 1 mm
          You want: wiregauge
                  18.201919

          You have: grit_P(600)
          You want: grit_ansicoated
                  342.76923

       The last example shows the conversion from P graded sand  paper,  which  is  the  European
       standard and may be marked ``P600'' on the back, to the USA standard.

       You can compute the area of a circle using the nonlinear unit, 'circlearea'.  You can also
       do this using the circularinch or circleinch.  The next example shows two ways to  compute
       the area of a circle with a five inch radius and one way to compute the volume of a sphere
       with a radius of one meter.

          You have: circlearea(5 in)
          You want: in2
                  * 78.539816
                  / 0.012732395

          You have: 10^2 circleinch
          You want: in2
                  * 78.539816
                  / 0.012732395

          You have: spherevol(meter)
          You want: ft3
                  * 147.92573
                  / 0.0067601492

       The inverse of a nonlinear conversion is indicated by  prefixing  a  tilde  ('~')  to  the
       nonlinear unit name:

          You have: ~wiregauge(0.090742002 inches)
          You want:
                  Definition: 11

       You  can  give  a  nonlinear unit definition without an argument or parentheses, and press
       Enter at the 'You want:' prompt to  get  the  definition  of  a  nonlinear  unit;  if  the
       definition is not valid for all real numbers, the range of validity is also given.  If the
       definition requires specific units this information is also displayed:

          You have: tempC
                  Definition: tempC(x) = x K + stdtemp
                              defined for x >= -273.15
          You have: ~tempC
                  Definition: ~tempC(tempC) = (tempC +(-stdtemp))/K
                              defined for tempC >= 0 K
          You have: circlearea
                  Definition: circlearea(r) = pi r^2
                              r has units m

       To see the definition of the inverse use the '~' notation.  In this case the parameter  in
       the functional definition will usually be the name of the unit.  Note that the inverse for
       'tempC' shows that it requires units of 'K' in the specification of the allowed  range  of
       values.   Nonlinear  unit  conversions  are described in more detail in Defining Nonlinear
       Units.

UNIT LISTS: CONVERSION TO SUMS OF UNITS

       Outside of the SI, it is sometimes desirable to convert a single unit to a sum  of  units—
       for example, feet to feet plus inches.  The conversion from sums of units was described in
       Sums and Differences of Units, and is a simple matter of adding the  units  with  the  '+'
       sign:

          You have: 12 ft + 3 in + 3|8 in
          You want: ft
                  * 12.28125
                  / 0.081424936

       Although  you can similarly write a sum of units to convert to, the result will not be the
       conversion to the units in the sum, but rather the conversion to the particular  sum  that
       you have entered:

          You have: 12.28125 ft
          You want: ft + in + 1|8 in
                  * 11.228571
                  / 0.089058524

       The unit expression given at the 'You want:' prompt is equivalent to asking for conversion
       to multiples of '1 ft + 1 in + 1|8 in', which is 1.09375 ft,  so  the  conversion  in  the
       previous example is equivalent to

          You have: 12.28125 ft
          You want: 1.09375 ft
                  * 11.228571
                  / 0.089058524

       In  converting  to  a  sum  of  units  like miles, feet and inches, you typically want the
       largest integral value for the first unit, followed by the largest integral value for  the
       next,  and  the  remainder  converted to the last unit.  You can do this conversion easily
       with 'units' using a special syntax for lists of units.  You must list the  desired  units
       in order from largest to smallest, separated by the semicolon (';') character:

          You have: 12.28125 ft
          You want: ft;in;1|8 in
                  12 ft + 3 in + 3|8 in

       The conversion always gives integer coefficients on the units in the list, except possibly
       the last unit when the conversion is not exact:

          You have: 12.28126 ft
          You want: ft;in;1|8 in
                  12 ft + 3 in + 3.00096 * 1|8 in

       The order in which you list the units is important:

          You have: 3 kg
          You want: oz;lb
                  105 oz + 0.051367866 lb

          You have: 3 kg
          You want: lb;oz
                  6 lb + 9.8218858 oz

       Listing ounces before pounds produces a technically correct result, but not a very  useful
       one.   You must list the units in descending order of size in order to get the most useful
       result.

       Ending a unit list with the separator ';' has the same effect as repeating the  last  unit
       on  the list, so 'ft;in;1|8 in;' is equivalent to 'ft;in;1|8 in;1|8 in'.  With the example
       above, this gives

          You have: 12.28126 ft
          You want: ft;in;1|8 in;
                  12 ft + 3 in + 3|8 in + 0.00096 * 1|8 in

       in effect separating the integer and fractional parts of  the  coefficient  for  the  last
       unit.   If  you instead prefer to round the last coefficient to an integer you can do this
       with the '--round' ('-r') option.  With the previous example, the result is

          You have: 12.28126 ft
          You want: ft;in;1|8 in
                  12 ft + 3 in + 3|8 in (rounded down to nearest 1|8 in)

       When you use the '-r' option, repeating the last unit on the list  has  no  effect  (e.g.,
       'ft;in;1|8  in;1|8  in'  is equivalent to 'ft;in;1|8 in'), and hence neither does ending a
       list with a ';'.  With a single unit and the '-r' option, a  terminal  ';'  does  have  an
       effect:  it  causes 'units' to treat the single unit as a list and produce a rounded value
       for the single unit.  Without the extra ';', the '-r' option has no effect on single  unit
       conversions.  This example shows the output using the '-r' option:

          You have: 12.28126 ft
          You want: in
                  * 147.37512
                  / 0.0067854058

          You have: 12.28126 ft
          You want: in;
                  147 in (rounded down to nearest in)

       Each  unit  that  appears in the list must be conformable with the first unit on the list,
       and of course the listed units must also be conformable with the unit that  you  enter  at
       the 'You have:' prompt.

          You have: meter
          You want: ft;kg
                       ^
          conformability error
                  ft = 0.3048 m
                  kg = 1 kg

          You have: meter
          You want: lb;oz
          conformability error
                  1 m
                  0.45359237 kg

       In  the  first case, 'units' reports the disagreement between units appearing on the list.
       In the second case, 'units' reports disagreement between the  unit  you  entered  and  the
       desired  conversion.   This  conformability  error  is based on the first unit on the unit
       list.

       Other common candidates for conversion to sums of units are angles and time:

          You have: 23.437754 deg
          You want; deg;arcmin;arcsec
              23 deg + 26 arcmin + 15.9144 arcsec

          You have: 7.2319 hr
          You want: hr;min;sec
              7 hr + 13 min + 54.84 sec

       In North America, recipes for cooking typically measure ingredients  by  volume,  and  use
       units  that  are  not  always convenient multiples of each other.  Suppose that you have a
       recipe for 6 and you wish to make a portion for 1.  If the recipe calls for 2 1/2 cups  of
       an  ingredient,  you might wish to know the measurements in terms of measuring devices you
       have available, you could use 'units' and enter

          You have: (2+1|2) cup / 6
          You want: cup;1|2 cup;1|3 cup;1|4 cup;tbsp;tsp;1|2 tsp;1|4 tsp
                  1|3 cup + 1 tbsp + 1 tsp

       By default, if a unit in a list begins with fraction of the form 1|x and its multiplier is
       an  integer, the fraction is given as the product of the multiplier and the numerator; for
       example,

          You have: 12.28125 ft
          You want: ft;in;1|8 in;
                  12 ft + 3 in + 3|8 in

       In many cases, such as the example above, this is what is wanted, but sometimes it is not.
       For  example,  a  cooking  recipe for 6 might call for 5 1/4 cup of an ingredient, but you
       want a portion for 2, and your 1-cup measure is not available; you might try

          You have: (5+1|4) cup / 3
          You want: 1|2 cup;1|3 cup;1|4 cup
                  3|2 cup + 1|4 cup

       This result might be fine for a baker who has a  1 1/2-cup  measure  (and  recognizes  the
       equivalence),  but  it  may not be as useful to someone with more limited set of measures,
       who does want to do additional calculations, and only wants to  know  ``How  many  1/2-cup
       measures  to  I  need  to  add?''   After  all,  that's what was actually asked.  With the
       '--show-factor' option, the factor will not be combined with a unity  numerator,  so  that
       you get

          You have: (5+1|4) cup / 3
          You want: 1|2 cup;1|3 cup;1|4 cup
                  3 * 1|2 cup + 1|4 cup

       A  user-specified  fractional  unit  with  a  numerator  other than 1 is never overridden,
       however—if a unit list specifies '3|4 cup;1|2 cup', a result equivalent to 1 1/2 cups will
       always be shown as '2 * 3|4 cup' whether or not the '--show-factor' option is given.

       Some  applications  for  unit  lists  may be less obvious.  Suppose that you have a postal
       scale and wish to ensure that it's accurate at 1 oz,  but  have  only  metric  calibration
       weights.  You might try

          You have: 1 oz
          You want: 100 g;50 g; 20 g;10 g;5 g;2 g;1 g;
                  20 g + 5 g + 2 g + 1 g + 0.34952312 * 1 g

       You might then place one each of the 20 g, 5 g, 2 g, and 1 g weights on the scale and hope
       that it indicates close to

          You have: 20 g + 5 g + 2 g + 1 g
          You want: oz;
                  0.98767093 oz

       Appending ';' to 'oz' forces a one-line display that includes the unit; here  the  integer
       part of the result is zero, so it is not displayed.

       A unit list such as

          cup;1|2 cup;1|3 cup;1|4 cup;tbsp;tsp;1|2 tsp;1|4 tsp

       can  be  tedious  to  enter.  The 'units' program provides shorthand names for some common
       combinations:

          hms         hours, minutes, seconds
          dms         angle: degrees, minutes, seconds
          time        years, days, hours, minutes and seconds
          usvol       US cooking volume: cups and smaller

       Using these shorthands, or unit list aliases, you can do the following conversions:

          You have: anomalisticyear
          You want: time
                  1 year + 25 min + 3.4653216 sec
          You have: 1|6 cup
          You want: usvol
                  2 tbsp + 2 tsp

       You cannot combine a unit list alias with  other  units:  it  must  appear  alone  at  the
       'You want:' prompt.

       You  can  display  the  definition  of a unit list alias by entering it at the 'You have:'
       prompt:

          You have: dms
                  Definition: unit list, deg;arcmin;arcsec

       When you specify compact output with '--compact', '--terse' or '-t' and perform conversion
       to  a unit list, 'units' lists the conversion factors for each unit in the list, separated
       by semicolons.

          You have: year
          You want: day;min;sec
          365;348;45.974678

       Unlike the case of regular output, zeros are included in this output list:

          You have: liter
          You want: cup;1|2 cup;1|4 cup;tbsp
          4;0;0;3.6280454

LOGGING CALCULATIONS

       The '--log' option allows you to save the results of calculations in a file; this  can  be
       useful  if  you  need  a  permanent  record  of  your  work.   For example, the fluid-flow
       conversion in Complicated Unit Expressions, is lengthy, and if  you  were  to  use  it  in
       designing  a  piping  system,  you might want a record of it for the project file.  If the
       interactive session

          # Conversion factor A1 for pressure drop
          # dP = A1 rho f L Q^2/d^5
          You have: (8/pi^2) (lbm/ft^3)ft(ft^3/s)^2(1/in^5) # Input units
          You want: psi
                  * 43.533969
                  / 0.022970568

       were logged, the log file would contain

          ### Log started Fri Oct 02 15:55:35 2015

          # Conversion factor A1 for pressure drop
          # dP = A1 rho f L Q^2/d^5
          From: (8/pi^2) (lbm/ft^3)ft(ft^3/s)^2(1/in^5)   # Input units
          To:   psi
                  * 43.533969
                  / 0.022970568

       The time is written to the log file when the file is opened.

       The use of comments can help clarify the meaning of calculations for  the  log.   The  log
       includes  conformability  errors  between  the  units  at  the 'You have:' and 'You want:'
       prompts, but not other errors, including lack  of  conformability  of  items  in  sums  or
       differences or among items in a unit list.  For example, a conversion between zenith angle
       and elevation angle could involve

          You have: 90 deg - (5 deg + 22 min + 9 sec)
                                             ^
          Illegal sum or difference of non-conformable units
          You have: 90 deg - (5 deg + 22 arcmin + 9 arcsec)
          You want: dms
                  84 deg + 37 arcmin + 51 arcsec
          You have: _
          You want: deg
                  * 84.630833
                  / 0.011816024
          You have:

       The log file would contain

          From: 90 deg - (5 deg + 22 arcmin + 9 arcsec)
          To:   deg;arcmin;arcsec
                  84 deg + 37 arcmin + 51 arcsec
          From: _
          To:   deg
                  * 84.630833
                  / 0.011816024

       The initial entry error  (forgetting  that  minutes  have  dimension  of  time,  and  that
       arcminutes  must  be  used  for  dimensions of angle) does not appear in the output.  When
       converting to a unit list alias, 'units' expands the alias in the log file.

       The 'From:' and 'To:' tags are written to the log file even if  the  '--quiet'  option  is
       given.   If  the  log file exists when 'units' is invoked, the new results are appended to
       the log file.  The time is written to the log file each time  the  file  is  opened.   The
       '--log' option is ignored when 'units' is used non-interactively.

INVOKING UNITS
       You invoke 'units' like this:

          units [options] [from-unit [to-unit]]

       If  the  from-unit  and  to-unit  are omitted, the program will use interactive prompts to
       determine which conversions to perform.  See Interactive Use.  If both from-unit  and  to-
       unit are given, 'units' will print the result of that single conversion and then exit.  If
       only from-unit appears on the command line, 'units' will display the  definition  of  that
       unit  and exit.  Units specified on the command line may need to be quoted to protect them
       from shell interpretation and to group them into two arguments.  See Command Line Use.

       The default behavior of 'units' can be changed by various options  given  on  the  command
       line.  In most cases, the options may be given in either short form (a single '-' followed
       by a single character) or long form ('--' followed by a word or  hyphen-separated  words).
       Short-form  options  are  cryptic  but require less typing; long-form options require more
       typing but are more explanatory and may be more mnemonic.  With long-form options you need
       only  enter  sufficient  characters  to  uniquely identify the option to the program.  For
       example, '--out %f' works, but '--o %f' fails  because  'units'  has  other  long  options
       beginning  with  'o'.   However,  '--q'  works  because  '--quiet' is the only long option
       beginning with 'q'.

       Some options require arguments to  specify  a  value  (e.g.,  '-d 12'  or  '--digits 12').
       Short-form  options  that  do  not  take  arguments  may  be concatenated (e.g., '-erS' is
       equivalent to '-e -r -S'); the last option in such  a  list  may  be  one  that  takes  an
       argument  (e.g.,  '-ed 12').  With short-form options, the space between an option and its
       argument is optional (e.g., '-d12' is equivalent to '-d 12').  Long-form options  may  not
       be  concatenated,  and  the space between a long-form option and its argument is required.
       Short-form and long-form options may be intermixed on the command line.   Options  may  be
       given   in   any  order,  but  when  incompatible  options  (e.g.,  '--output-format'  and
       '--exponential') are given in combination, behavior  is  controlled  by  the  last  option
       given.   For  example,  '-o%.12f -e'  gives  exponential  format  with  the  default eight
       significant digits).

       The following options are available:

       -c, --check
              Check that all units and  prefixes  defined  in  the  units  data  file  reduce  to
              primitive  units.   Print a list of all units that cannot be reduced.  Also display
              some other diagnostics about suspicious definitions in the units data  file.   Only
              definitions  active  in  the  current  locale  are  checked.  You should always run
              'units' with this option after modifying a units data file.

       --check-verbose, --verbose-check
              Like the '--check' option, this option prints  a  list  of  units  that  cannot  be
              reduced.  But to help find unit  definitions that cause endless loops, it lists the
              units as they are checked.  If 'units' hangs, then the last unit to be printed  has
              a bad definition.  Only definitions active in the current locale are checked.

       -d ndigits, --digits ndigits
              Set  the  number  of significant digits in the output to the value specified (which
              must be greater than zero).  For example, '-d 12' sets the  number  of  significant
              digits  to  12.   With exponential output 'units' displays one digit to the left of
              the decimal point and eleven digits to the right of the  decimal  point.   On  most
              systems, the maximum number of internally meaningful digits is 15; if you specify a
              greater number than your system's maximum, 'units' will print a warning and set the
              number to the largest meaningful value.  To directly set the maximum value, give an
              argument of 'max' (e.g., '-d max').  Be aware, of course, that ``significant'' here
              refers  only to the display of numbers; if results depend on physical constants not
              known to this precision, the physically meaningful precision may be less than  that
              shown.  The '--digits' option conflicts with the '--output-format' option.

       -e, --exponential
              Set the numeric output format to exponential (i.e., scientific notation), like that
              used in the Unix 'units' program.   The  default  precision  is  eight  significant
              digits  (seven  digits to the right of the decimal point); this can be changed with
              the '--digits' option.  The '--exponential' option conflicts  with  the  '--output-
              format' option.

       -o format, --output-format format
              This  option  affords  complete  control  over  the numeric output format using the
              specified format. The format is a single floating  point  numeric  format  for  the
              'printf()'  function  in  the  C  programming  language.  All compilers support the
              format types 'g' and 'G' to specify significant digits, 'e' and 'E' for  scientific
              notation, and 'f' for fixed-point decimal.  The ISO C99 standard introduced the 'F'
              type for fixed-point decimal and the 'a' and 'A'  types  for  hexadecimal  floating
              point;  these  types  are  allowed  with  compilers that support them.  The default
              format is '%.8g'; for greater precision, you could specify '-o %.15g'.  See Numeric
              Output  Format  and the documentation for 'printf()' for more detailed descriptions
              of the format specification.  The '--output-format'  option  affords  the  greatest
              control  of  the  output appearance, but requires at least rudimentary knowledge of
              the 'printf()' format syntax.  If you don't want  to  bother  with  the  'printf()'
              syntax, you can specify greater precision more simply with the '--digits' option or
              select exponential format with '--exponential'.  The  '--output-format'  option  is
              incompatible with the '--exponential' and '--digits' options.

       -f filename, --file filename
              Instruct  'units'  to load the units file filename.  You can specify up to 25 units
              files on the command line.  When you use this option, 'units' will  load  only  the
              files  you  list  on  the  command line; it will not load the standard file or your
              personal units file unless you explicitly list them.   If  filename  is  the  empty
              string ('-f ""'), the default units file (or that specified by 'UNITSFILE') will be
              loaded in addition to any others specified with '-f'.

       -L logfile, --log logfile
              Save the results of calculations in the file logfile; this can be useful if  it  is
              important to have a record of unit conversions or other calculations that are to be
              used extensively or in a critical activity such as a program or design project.  If
              logfile  exits,  the  new results are appended to the file.  This option is ignored
              when 'units' is used  non-interactively.   See  Logging  Calculations  for  a  more
              detailed description and some examples.

       -H filename, --history filename
              Instruct  'units' to save history to filename, so that a record of your commands is
              available for retrieval across  different  'units'  invocations.   To  prevent  the
              history  from  being saved set filename to the empty string ('-H ""').  This option
              has no effect if readline is not available.

       -h, --help
              Print out a summary of the options for 'units'.

       -m, --minus
              Causes '-' to be interpreted as  a  subtraction  operator.   This  is  the  default
              behavior.

       -p, --product
              Causes '-' to be interpreted as a multiplication operator when it has two operands.
              It will act as a negation operator when  it  has  only  one  operand:  '(-3)'.   By
              default '-' is treated as a subtraction operator.

       --oldstar
              Causes '*' to have the old-style precedence, higher than the precedence of division
              so that '1/2*3' will equal '1/6'.

       --newstar
              Forces '*' to have the new (default) precedence that follows  the  usual  rules  of
              algebra:  the  precedence  of  '*'  is  the  same as the precedence of '/', so that
              '1/2*3' will equal '3/2'.

       --compact
              Give compact output featuring only the  conversion  factor.   This  turns  off  the
              '--verbose' option.

       -q, --quiet, --silent
              Suppress  prompting  of  the user for units and the display of statistics about the
              number of units loaded.

       -n, --nolists
              Disable conversion to unit lists.

       -r, --round
              When converting to a combination of units given by a unit list, round the value  of
              the last unit in the list to the nearest integer.

       -S, --show-factor
              When  converting  to a combination of units specified in a list, always show a non-
              unity factor before a unit that begins with a fraction with  a  unity  denominator.
              By  default,  if  the  unit  in a list begins with fraction of the form 1|x and its
              multiplier is an integer other than 1, the fraction is given as the product of  the
              multiplier  and  the  numerator (e.g., '3|8 in' rather than '3 * 1|8 in').  In some
              cases, this is not what is wanted; for example, the results for  a  cooking  recipe
              might  show  '3 * 1|2 cup' as '3|2 cup'.  With the '--show-factor' option, a result
              equivalent to 1.5 cups will display as '3 *  1|2 cup'  rather  than  '3|2 cup'.   A
              user-specified  fractional  unit with a numerator other than 1 is never overridden,
              however—if a unit list specifies '3|4 cup;1|2 cup', a result  equivalent  to  1 1/2
              cups  will  always  be  shown  as  '2 * 3|4 cup' whether or not the '--show-factor'
              option is given.

       -s, --strict
              Suppress conversion of units to their reciprocal units.  For example, 'units'  will
              normally  convert  hertz  to  seconds  because  these units are reciprocals of each
              other.  The strict option requires that units be strictly conformable to perform  a
              conversion, and will give an error if you attempt to convert hertz to seconds.

       -1, --one-line
              Give  only  one  line of output (the forward conversion).  Do not print the reverse
              conversion.  If a reciprocal conversion is performed then 'units' will still  print
              the ``reciprocal conversion'' line.

       -t, --terse
              Give  terse  output  when  converting  units.  This option can be used when calling
              'units' from another program so that the output is easy to parse.  This option  has
              the   combined   effect   of   these  options:  '--strict'  '--quiet'  '--one-line'
              '--compact'.  When combined with '--version' it produces a display showing only the
              program name and version number.

       -v, --verbose
              Give  slightly  more  verbose output when converting units.  When combined with the
              '-c' option this gives the same effect as '--check-verbose'.   When  combined  with
              '--version' produces a more detailed output, equivalent to the '--info' option.

       -V, --version
              Print  the  program  version  number,  tell whether the 'readline' library has been
              included, tell whether UTF-8 support  has  been  included;  give  the  locale,  the
              location  of  the  default  units data file, and the location of the personal units
              data file; indicate if the personal units data file does not exist.

       When given in combination with the '--terse' option, the program prints only  the  version
       number and exits.

       When given in combination with the '--verbose' option, the program, the '--version' option
       has the same effect as the '--info' option below.

       -I, --info
              Print the information given with the '--version' option, show the pathname  of  the
              units  program,  show  the  status of the 'UNITSFILE' and 'MYUNITSFILE' environment
              variables, and additional information about how 'units' locates the related  files.
              On  systems  running Microsoft Windows, the status of the 'UNITSLOCALE' environment
              variable and information about the related locale map are also given.  This  option
              is  usually of interest only to developers and administrators, but it can sometimes
              be useful for troubleshooting.

       Combining the '--version' and '--verbose' options has the same effect as giving '--info'.

       -U, --unitsfile
              Print the location of the default units data file and exit; if the file  cannot  be
              found, print ``Units data file not found''.

       -l locale, --locale locale
              Print the information given with the '--version' option, show the Force a specified
              locale such as 'en_GB' to get British definitions by default.  This  overrides  the
              locale  determined from system settings or environment variables.  See Locale for a
              description of locale format.

ADDING YOUR OWN DEFINITIONS

   Units Data Files
       The units and prefixes that 'units' can convert  are  defined  in  the  units  data  file,
       typically   '/usr/share/units/definitions.units'.   If  you  can't  find  this  file,  run
       'units --version' to  get  information  on  the  file  locations  for  your  installation.
       Although  you can extend or modify this data file if you have appropriate user privileges,
       it's usually better to put extensions in separate files so that the  definitions  will  be
       preserved if you update 'units'.

       You  can  include additional data files in the units database using the '!include' command
       in the standard units data file. For example

          !include    /usr/local/share/units/local.units

       might be appropriate for  a  site-wide  supplemental  data  file.   The  location  of  the
       '!include'  statement  in  the  standard  units  data file is important; later definitions
       replace earlier ones, so any definitions in an included  file  will  override  definitions
       before  the '!include' statement in the standard units data file.  With normal invocation,
       no warning is given about redefinitions; to ensure  that  you  don't  have  an  unintended
       redefinition, run 'units -c' after making changes to any units data file.

       If  you  want  to  add  your own units in addition to or in place of standard or site-wide
       supplemental units data files, you can include them in the  '.units'  file  in  your  home
       directory.  If this file exists it is read after the standard units data file, so that any
       definitions in this file will replace definitions of the same units in the  standard  data
       file  or in files included from the standard data file.  This file will not be read if any
       units files are specified on the command line.  (Under Windows the personal units file  is
       named  'unitdef.units'.)   Running  'units -V'  will display the location and name of your
       personal units file.

       The 'units' program  first  tries  to  determine  your  home  directory  from  the  'HOME'
       environment  variable.   On  systems  running Microsoft Windows, if 'HOME' does not exist,
       'units'  attempts  to  find  your  home  directory  from   'HOMEDRIVE',   'HOMEPATH'   and
       'USERPROFILE'.   You  can  specify an arbitrary file as your personal units data file with
       the 'MYUNITSFILE' environment variable; if this variable exists, its value is used without
       searching  your home directory.  The default units data files are described in more detail
       in Data Files.

   Defining New Units and Prefixes
       A unit is specified on a single line by giving its  name  and  an  equivalence.   Comments
       start  with a '#' character, which can appear anywhere in a line.  The backslash character
       ('\') acts as a continuation character if it appears as the  last  character  on  a  line,
       making it possible to spread definitions out over several lines if desired.  A file can be
       included by giving the command '!include' followed by the file's name.  The '!'   must  be
       the  first  character  on  the line.  The file will be sought in the same directory as the
       parent file unless you give a full path.  The name of  the  file  to  be  included  cannot
       contain the comment character '#'.

       Unit  names  must not contain any of the operator characters '+', '-', '*', '/', '|', '^',
       ';', '~', the comment character '#', or parentheses.  They cannot begin  or  end  with  an
       underscore  ('_'),  a  comma  (',')  or  a decimal point ('.').  The figure dash (U+2012),
       typographical minus (`-'; U+2212), and en dash (`-'; U+2013) are converted to the operator
       '-',  so  none  of  these  characters can appear in unit names.  Names cannot begin with a
       digit, and if a name ends in a digit other than zero, the digit  must  be  preceded  by  a
       string  beginning  with  an  underscore, and afterwards consisting only of digits, decimal
       points, or commas.  For example, 'foo_2', 'foo_2,1', or 'foo_3.14'  are  valid  names  but
       'foo2' or 'foo_a2' are invalid.  You could define nitrous oxide as

          N2O     nitrogen 2  + oxygen

       but would need to define nitrogen dioxide as

          NO_2    nitrogen + oxygen 2

       Be  careful  to  define  new  units  in terms of old ones so that a reduction leads to the
       primitive units, which are marked with '!'  characters.  Dimensionless units are indicated
       by using the string '!dimensionless' for the unit definition.

       When  adding  new units, be sure to use the '-c' option to check that the new units reduce
       properly.  If you create a loop in the units definitions,  then  'units'  will  hang  when
       invoked  with  the  '-c' option.  You will need to use the '--check-verbose' option, which
       prints out each unit as it is checked.  The program will still hang,  but  the  last  unit
       printed will be the unit that caused the infinite loop.

       If you define any units that contain '+' characters, carefully check them because the '-c'
       option will not catch non-conformable sums.  Be careful with the  '-'  operator  as  well.
       When  used  as a binary operator, the '-' character can perform addition or multiplication
       depending on the options used to invoke 'units'.  To ensure consistent  behavior  use  '-'
       only  as  a unary negation operator when writing units definitions.  To multiply two units
       leave a space or use the '*' operator with  care,  recalling  that  it  has  two  possible
       precedence  values  and may require parentheses to ensure consistent behavior.  To compute
       the difference of 'foo' and 'bar' write 'foo+(-bar)' or even 'foo+-bar'.

       Here is an example of a short data file that defines some basic units:

          m       !               # The meter is a primitive unit
          sec     !               # The second is a primitive unit
          rad     !dimensionless  # A dimensionless primitive unit
          micro-  1e-6            # Define a prefix
          minute  60 sec          # A minute is 60 seconds
          hour    60 min          # An hour is 60 minutes
          inch    0.0254 m        # Inch defined in terms of meters
          ft      12 inches       # The foot defined in terms of inches
          mile    5280 ft         # And the mile

       A unit that ends with a '-' character is a prefix.  If a prefix  definition  contains  any
       '/' characters, be sure they are protected by parentheses.  If you define 'half- 1/2' then
       'halfmeter' would be equivalent to '1 / (2 meter)'.

   Defining Nonlinear Units
       Some unit conversions of interest are  nonlinear;  for  example,  temperature  conversions
       between  the  Fahrenheit  and  Celsius  scales  cannot  be  done  by simply multiplying by
       conversion factors.

       When you give  a  linear  unit  definition  such  as  'inch  2.54 cm'  you  are  providing
       information  that 'units' uses to convert values in inches into primitive units of meters.
       For nonlinear units, you give a functional definition that provides the same information.

       Nonlinear units are represented using a functional notation.  It is best  to  regard  this
       notation  not  as  a function call but as a way of adding units to a number, much the same
       way that writing a linear unit name after a number adds units to that number.  Internally,
       nonlinear  units  are defined by a pair of functions that convert to and from linear units
       in the database, so that an eventual conversion to primitive units is possible.

       Here is an example nonlinear unit definition:

          tempF(x) units=[1;K] domain=[-459.67,) range=[0,) \
                      (x+(-32)) degF + stdtemp ; (tempF+(-stdtemp))/degF + 32

       A nonlinear unit definition comprises a unit name, a formal parameter name, two functions,
       and  optional  specifications  for  units,  the  domain,  and the range (the domain of the
       inverse function).  The functions tell 'units' how to convert to and from  the  new  unit.
       To  produce  valid  results,  the  arguments  of  these functions need to have the correct
       dimensions and be within the domains for which the functions are defined.

       The definition begins with the unit name followed immediately (with no spaces)  by  a  '('
       character.   In  the parentheses is the name of the formal parameter.  Next is an optional
       specification of the units required by the functions in the definition.   In  the  example
       above,  the  'units=[1;K]'  specification  indicates that the 'tempF' function requires an
       input argument conformable with '1' (i.e., the argument is dimensionless),  and  that  the
       inverse  function  requires  an input argument conformable with 'K'.  For normal nonlinear
       units definition, the forward function will  always  take  a  dimensionless  argument;  in
       general,  the  inverse  function  will need units that match the quantity measured by your
       nonlinear unit.  Specifying the  units  enables  'units'  to  perform  error  checking  on
       function arguments, and also to assign units to domain and range specifications, which are
       described later.

       Next the function definitions appear.  In the  example  above,  the  'tempF'  function  is
       defined by

          tempF(x) = (x+(-32)) degF + stdtemp

       This  gives  a  rule  for  converting 'x' in the units 'tempF' to linear units of absolute
       temperature, which makes it possible to convert from tempF to other units.

       To enable conversions to Fahrenheit, you must give a rule  for  the  inverse  conversions.
       The  inverse  will be 'x(tempF)' and its definition appears after a ';' character.  In our
       example, the inverse is

          x(tempF) = (tempF+(-stdtemp))/degF + 32

       This inverse definition takes an absolute temperature as its argument and converts  it  to
       the  Fahrenheit  temperature.  The inverse can be omitted by leaving out the ';' character
       and the inverse definition, but then conversions to the unit will not be possible.  If the
       inverse  definition  is omitted, the '--check' option will display a warning.  It is up to
       you to calculate and enter the correct inverse function to obtain proper conversions;  the
       '--check'  option  tests  the  inverse at one point and prints an error if it is not valid
       there, but this is not a guarantee that your inverse is correct.

       With some definitions, the units may vary.  For example, the definition

          square(x)       x^2

       can have any arbitrary units, and can also take dimensionless arguments.  In such a  case,
       you  should  not  specify  units.   If  a  definition  takes  a root of its arguments, the
       definition is valid only for units that yield such a root.  For example,

          squirt(x)       sqrt(x)

       is valid for a dimensionless argument, and for arguments with even powers of units.

       Some definitions may not be valid for all real numbers.  In such cases, 'units' can handle
       errors  better if you specify an appropriate domain and range.  You specify the domain and
       range as shown below:

          baume(d) units=[1;g/cm^3] domain=[0,130.5] range=[1,10] \
                   (145/(145-d)) g/cm^3 ; (baume+-g/cm^3) 145 / baume

       In this example the domain is specified  after  'domain='  with  the  endpoints  given  in
       brackets.   In  accord  with  mathematical  convention,  square brackets indicate a closed
       interval (one that includes its endpoints), and parentheses indicate an open interval (one
       that  does  not  include its endpoints).  An interval can be open or closed on one or both
       ends; an interval that is unbounded on either end is indicated by omitting  the  limit  on
       that  end.   For  example,  a quantity to which decibel (dB) is applied may have any value
       greater than zero, so the range is indicated by '(0,)':

          decibel(x) units=[1;1] range=(0,) 10^(x/10); 10 log(decibel)

       If the domain or range is given, the second endpoint must be greater than the first.

       The domain and range specifications can appear independently and in any order  along  with
       the  units  specification.   The values for the domain and range endpoints are attached to
       the units given in the units specification, and  if  necessary,  the  parameter  value  is
       adjusted  for  comparison  with  the  endpoints.   For  example,  if a definition includes
       'units=[1;ft]' and 'range=[3,)', the range will be taken as  3 ft  to  infinity.   If  the
       function  is  passed a parameter of '900 mm', that value will be adjusted to 2.9527559 ft,
       which is outside the specified range.  If  you  omit  the  units  specification  from  the
       previous example, 'units' can not tell whether you intend the lower endpoint to be 3 ft or
       3 microfurlongs, and can not adjust the parameter value of 900 mm for comparison.  Without
       units,  numerical  values  other  than  zero or plus or minus infinity for domain or range
       endpoints are meaningless, and accordingly they are not allowed.  If you give other values
       without units then the definition will be ignored and you will get an error message.

       Although  the units, domain, and range specifications are optional, it's best to give them
       when they are applicable; doing so allows 'units' to perform  better  error  checking  and
       give  more helpful error messages.  Giving the domain and range also enables the '--check'
       option to find a point in  the  domain  to  use  for  its  point  check  of  your  inverse
       definition.

       You  can  make  synonyms  for  nonlinear  units  by providing both the forward and inverse
       functions; inverse functions can be obtained using the  '~'  operator.   So  to  create  a
       synonym for 'tempF' you could write

          fahrenheit(x) units=[1;K] tempF(x); ~tempF(fahrenheit)

       This  is  useful  for  creating  a nonlinear unit definition that differs slightly from an
       existing definition without having to repeat the original functions.  For example,

          dBW(x)     units=[1;W] range=[0,) dB(x) W ;  ~dB(dBW/W)

       If you wish a synonym to refer to an existing nonlinear unit without modification, you can
       do  so more simply by adding the synonym with appended parentheses as a new unit, with the
       existing nonlinear unit—without parentheses—as the definition.  So to create a synonym for
       'tempF' you could write

          fahrenheit()  tempF

       The definition must be a nonlinear unit; for example, the synonym

          fahrenheit()  meter

       will result in an error message when 'units' starts.

       You  may  occasionally wish to define a function that operates on units.  This can be done
       using a nonlinear unit definition.  For example, the definition below provides  conversion
       between  radius  and the area of a circle.  This definition requires a length as input and
       produces an area as output, as indicated by the 'units='  specification.   Specifying  the
       range as the nonnegative numbers can prevent cryptic error messages.

          circlearea(r) units=[m;m^2] range=[0,)   pi r^2 ; sqrt(circlearea/pi)

   Defining Piecewise Linear Units
       Sometimes  you  may  be  interested  in  a piecewise linear unit such as many wire gauges.
       Piecewise linear units can be defined by specifying conversions to linear units on a  list
       of  points.   Conversion  at other points will be done by linear interpolation.  A partial
       definition of zinc gauge is

          zincgauge[in] 1 0.002, 10 0.02, 15 0.04, 19 0.06, 23 0.1

       In this example, 'zincgauge' is the name of the piecewise linear unit.  The definition  of
       such  a  unit  is  indicated by the embedded '[' character.  After the bracket, you should
       indicate the units to be attached to the numbers in  the  table.   No  spaces  can  appear
       before  the ']' character, so a definition like 'foo[kg meters]' is invalid; instead write
       'foo[kg*meters]'.  The definition of the unit consists  of  a  list  of  pairs  optionally
       separated  by  commas.   This  list  defines  a function for converting from the piecewise
       linear unit to linear units.  The first item in each pair is the  function  argument;  the
       second  item  is  the  value  of  the function at that argument (in the units specified in
       brackets).  In this example, we define 'zincgauge' at five points.  For  example,  we  set
       'zincgauge(1)'  equal  to  '0.002 in'.   Definitions  like  this may be  more readable  if
       written using  continuation characters as

          zincgauge[in] \
               1 0.002  \
              10 0.02   \
              15 0.04   \
              19 0.06   \
              23 0.1

       With the preceding definition, the following conversion can be performed:

          You have: zincgauge(10)
          You want: in
              * 0.02
              / 50
          You have: .01 inch
          You want: zincgauge
              5

       If you define a piecewise linear unit that is not strictly  monotonic,  then  the  inverse
       will  not  be  well  defined.   If  the inverse is requested for such a unit, 'units' will
       return the smallest inverse.

       After adding nonlinear units definitions, you should normally run 'units --check' to check
       for  errors.  If the 'units' keyword is not given, the '--check' option checks a nonlinear
       unit definition using a  dimensionless  argument,  and  then  checks  using  an  arbitrary
       combination  of  units,  as  well as the square and cube of that combination; a warning is
       given if any of these tests fail.  For example,

          Warning: function 'squirt(x)' defined as 'sqrt(x)'
                   failed for some test inputs:
                   squirt(7(kg K)^1): Unit not a root
                   squirt(7(kg K)^3): Unit not a root

       Running 'units --check' will print a warning if a non-monotonic piecewise linear  unit  is
       encountered.   For  example, the relationship between ANSI coated abrasive designation and
       mean particle size is non-monotonic in the vicinity of 800 grit:

          ansicoated[micron] \
               . . .
              600 10.55 \
              800 11.5 \
              1000 9.5 \

       Running 'units --check' would give the error message

          Table 'ansicoated' lacks unique inverse around entry 800

       Although the inverse is not well defined  in  this  region,  it's  not  really  an  error.
       Viewing  such  error  messages  can  be tedious, and if there are enough of them, they can
       distract from  true  errors.   Error  checking  for  nonlinear  unit  definitions  can  be
       suppressed by giving the 'noerror' keyword; for the examples above, this could be done as

          squirt(x) noerror domain=[0,) range=[0,) sqrt(x); squirt^2
          ansicoated[micron] noerror \
               . . .

       Use the 'noerror' keyword with caution.  The safest approach after adding a nonlinear unit
       definition is to run 'units --check' and confirm that there are no  actual  errors  before
       adding the 'noerror' keyword.

   Defining Unit List Aliases
       Unit  list  aliases are treated differently from unit definitions, because they are a data
       entry shorthand rather than a  true  definition  for  a  new  unit.   A  unit  list  alias
       definition  begins  with  '!unitlist'  and  includes  the  alias  and the definition;  for
       example, the aliases included in the standard units data file are

          !unitlist   hms     hr;min;sec
          !unitlist   time    year;day;hr;min;sec
          !unitlist   dms     deg;arcmin;arcsec
          !unitlist   ftin    ft;in;1|8 in
          !unitlist   usvol   cup;3|4 cup;2|3 cup;1|2 cup;1|3 cup;1|4 cup;\
                              tbsp;tsp;1|2 tsp;1|4 tsp;1|8 tsp

       Unit list aliases are only for unit lists, so the definition must  include  a  ';'.   Unit
       list  aliases  can  never  be  combined  with  units  or  other  unit list aliases, so the
       definition of 'time' shown above could not have been shortened to 'year;day;hms'.

       As usual, be sure to run 'units --check' to ensure that the  units  listed  in  unit  list
       aliases are conformable.

NUMERIC OUTPUT FORMAT

       By  default,  'units'  shows results to eight significant digits. You can change this with
       the '--exponential',  '--digits',  and  '--output-format'  options.   The  first  sets  an
       exponential format (i.e., scientific notation) like that used in the original Unix 'units'
       program, the second allows you to specify a different number of  significant  digits,  and
       the  last  allows you to control the output appearance using the format for the 'printf()'
       function in the C programming language.   If  you  only  want  to  change  the  number  of
       significant   digits   or   specify  exponential  format  type,  use  the  '--digits'  and
       '--exponential' options.  The '--output-format' option affords the greatest control of the
       output  appearance,  but  requires at least rudimentary knowledge of the 'printf()' format
       syntax. See Invoking Units for descriptions of these options.

   Format Specification
       The format specification recognized with the '--output-format' option is a subset of  that
       for       'printf()'.       The      format      specification      has      the      form
       '%'[flags][width]['.'precision]type; it must begin with '%', and must end with a floating-
       point  type  specifier: 'g' or 'G' to specify the number of significant digits, 'e' or 'E'
       for scientific notation, and 'f' for fixed-point decimal.  The ISO C99 standard added  the
       'F' type for fixed-point decimal and the 'a' and 'A' types for hexadecimal floating point;
       these types are allowed with compilers that support them.  Type  length  modifiers  (e.g.,
       'L' to indicate a long double) are inapplicable and are not allowed.

       The  default  format  for  'units'  is  '%.8g';  for  greater precision, you could specify
       '-o %.15g'.  The 'g' and 'G' format types use exponential  format  whenever  the  exponent
       would be less than -4, so the value 0.000013 displays as '1.3e-005'.  These types also use
       exponential notation when the exponent is greater than or equal to the precision, so  with
       the  default  format,  the  value 5e7 displays as '50000000' and the value 5e8 displays as
       '5e+008'.  If you prefer fixed-point display, you might specify '-o %.8f'; however,  small
       numbers  will  display  very few significant digits, and values less than 0.5e-8 will show
       nothing but zeros.

       The format specification may include one or more optional flags: '+',  ' '  (space),  '#',
       '-',  or '0' (the digit zero).  The digit-grouping flag ''' is allowed with compilers that
       support it.  Flags are followed by an optional value for the minimum field width,  and  an
       optional  precision specification that begins with a period (e.g., '.6').  The field width
       includes the digits, decimal point, the exponent, thousands separators  (with  the  digit-
       grouping flag), and the sign if any of these are shown.

   Flags
       The '+' flag causes the output to have a sign ('+' or '-').  The space flag ' ' is similar
       to the '+' flag, except that when the value is positive,  it  is  prefixed  with  a  space
       rather  than  a plus sign; this flag is ignored if the '+' flag is also given.  The '+' or
       ' ' flag could be useful if conversions might include positive and negative  results,  and
       you  wanted  to align the decimal points in exponential notation.  The '#' flag causes the
       output value to contain a decimal point in all cases; by default, the  output  contains  a
       decimal  point  only if there are digits (which can be trailing zeros) to the right of the
       point.  With the 'g' or 'G' types, the '#' flag also prevents the suppression of  trailing
       zeros.   The  digit-grouping flag ''' shows a thousands separator in digits to the left of
       the decimal point.  This can be  useful  when  displaying  large  numbers  in  fixed-point
       decimal; for example, with the format '%f',

          You have: mile
          You want: microfurlong
                  * 8000000.000000
                  / 0.000000

       the  magnitude  of  the  first  result may not be immediately obvious without counting the
       digits to the left of the decimal point.  If the thousands separator is the  comma  (','),
       the output with the format '%'f' might be

          You have: mile
          You want: microfurlong
                  * 8,000,000.000000
                  / 0.000000

       making  the  magnitude  readily apparent.  Unfortunately, few compilers support the digit-
       grouping flag.

       With the '-' flag, the output value is left aligned within the specified field width.   If
       a  field  width  greater than needed to show the output value is specified, the '0' (zero)
       flag causes the output value to be left padded with zeros until the specified field  width
       is reached; for example, with the format '%011.6f',

          You have: troypound
          You want: grain
                  * 5760.000000
                  / 0000.000174

       The '0' flag has no effect if the '-' (left align) flag is given.

   Field Width
       By  default,  the  output value is left aligned and shown with the minimum width necessary
       for the specified (or  default)  precision.   If  a  field  width  greater  than  this  is
       specified,  the value shown is right aligned, and padded on the left with enough spaces to
       provide the specified field width.  A width specification is typically  used  with  fixed-
       point decimal to have columns of numbers align at the decimal point; this arguably is less
       useful with 'units' than with long columnar output,  but  it  may  nonetheless  assist  in
       quickly  assessing  the  relative  magnitudes  of  results.   For example, with the format
       '%12.6f',

          You have: km
          You want: in
                  * 39370.078740
                  /     0.000025
          You have: km
          You want: rod
                  *   198.838782
                  /     0.005029
          You have: km
          You want: furlong
                  *     4.970970
                  /     0.201168

   Precision
       The meaning of ``precision'' depends on the format type.  With 'g' or  'G',  it  specifies
       the number of significant digits (like the '--digits' option); with 'e', 'E', 'f', or 'F',
       it specifies the maximum number of digits to be shown after the decimal point.

       With the 'g' and 'G' format types, trailing zeros  are  suppressed,  so  the  results  may
       sometimes have fewer digits than the specified precision (as indicated above, the '#' flag
       causes trailing zeros to be displayed).

       The default precision is 6, so '%g' is equivalent to '%.6g', and would show the output  to
       six  significant  digits.   Similarly,  '%e' or '%f' would show the output with six digits
       after the decimal point.

       The C 'printf()' function allows a precision of arbitrary size, whether or not all of  the
       digits  are  meaningful.  With most compilers, the maximum internal precision with 'units'
       is 15 decimal digits (or 13 hexadecimal digits).  With  the  '--digits'  option,  you  are
       limited  to  the  maximum  internal  precision; with the '--output-format' option, you may
       specify a precision greater than this, but it may  not  be  meaningful.   In  some  cases,
       specifying  excess  precision  can  result in rounding artifacts.  For example, a pound is
       exactly 7000 grains, but with the format '%.18g', the output might be

          You have: pound
          You want: grain
                  * 6999.9999999999991
                  / 0.00014285714285714287

       With the format '%.25g' you might get the following:

          You have: 1/3
          You want:
                  Definition: 0.333333333333333314829616256247

       In this case the displayed value includes a series of digits that represent the underlying
       binary  floating-point  approximation  to  1/3  but  are  not  meaningful  for the desired
       computation.  In general, the result with  excess  precision  is  system  dependent.   The
       precision  affects  only  the display of numbers; if a result relies on physical constants
       that are not known to the specified precision, the number of physically meaningful  digits
       may be less than the number of digits shown.

       See  the  documentation  for  'printf()'  for  more  detailed  descriptions  of the format
       specification.

       The '--output-format' option  is  incompatible  with  the  '--exponential'  or  '--digits'
       options;  if  the  former is given in combination with either of the latter, the format is
       controlled by the last option given.

LOCALIZATION

       Some units have  different  values  in  different  locations.   The  localization  feature
       accommodates  this by allowing a units data file to specify definitions that depend on the
       user's locale.

   Locale
       A locale is a subset of a user's  environment  that  indicates  the  user's  language  and
       country,  and  some  attendant  preferences, such as the formatting of dates.  The 'units'
       program attempts to determine the locale from the POSIX setlocale function; if this cannot
       be  done,  'units'  examines  the  environment  variables 'LC_CTYPE' and 'LANG'.  On POSIX
       systems, a locale is of the form language'_'country, where language is  the  two-character
       code  from  ISO  639-1  and country is the two-character code from ISO 3166-1; language is
       lower case and country is upper case. For example, the POSIX locale for the United Kingdom
       is 'en_GB'.

       On  systems running Microsoft Windows, the value returned by setlocale() is different from
       that on POSIX systems; 'units' attempts to map the Windows value to a POSIX value by means
       of  a  table  in  the file 'locale_map.txt' in the same directory as the other data files.
       The file includes entries for many combinations  of  language  and  country,  and  can  be
       extended  to  include  other  combinations.   The 'locale_map.txt' file comprises two tab-
       separated columns; each entry is of the form

          Windows-locale   POSIX-locale

       where POSIX-locale is as described above, and Windows-locale typically spells out both the
       language and country.  For example, the entry for the United States is

          English_United States   en_US

       You can force 'units' to run in a desired locale by using the '-l' option.

       In  order  to  create  unit  definitions  for  a  particular  locale  you begin a block of
       definitions in a unit datafile with '!locale' followed by a locale name.  The '!'  must be
       the first character on the line.  The 'units' program reads the following definitions only
       if the current locale matches.  You end the block of localized  units  with  '!endlocale'.
       Here is an example, which defines the British gallon.

          !locale en_GB
          gallon       4.54609 liter
          !endlocale

   Additional Localization
       Sometimes  the  locale  isn't  sufficient  to  determine unit preferences.  There could be
       regional preferences, or a company  could  have  specific  preferences.   Though  probably
       uncommon,  such differences could arise with the choice of English customary units outside
       of English-speaking countries.  To address this,  'units'  allows  specifying  definitions
       that depend on environment variable settings.  The environment variables can be controlled
       based on the current locale, or the user can set them  to  force  a  particular  group  of
       definitions.

       A  conditional  block  of  definitions  in  a units data file begins with either '!var' or
       '!varnot' following by an environment variable name and then a  space  separated  list  of
       values.   The  leading  '!'  must appear in the first column of a units data file, and the
       conditional block is terminated by '!endvar'.  Definitions in blocks beginning with '!var'
       are  executed  only  if  the  environment  variable  is exactly equal to one of the listed
       values.  Definitions  in  blocks  beginning  with  '!varnot'  are  executed  only  if  the
       environment variable does not equal any of the list values.

       The  inch has long been a customary measure of length in many places.  The word comes from
       the latin uncia meaning ``one twelfth,'' referring to its relationship with the foot.   By
       the  20th  century, the inch was officially defined in English-speaking countries relative
       to the yard, but until 1959, the yard differed slightly among those countries.  In  France
       the customary inch, which was displaced in 1799 by the meter, had a different length based
       on a french foot.  These customary definitions could be accommodated as follows:

          !var INCH_UNIT usa
          yard          3600|3937 m
          !endvar
          !var INCH_UNIT canada
          yard          0.9144 meter
          !endvar
          !var INCH_UNIT uk
          yard          0.91439841 meter
          !endvar
          !var INCH_UNIT canada uk usa
          foot          1|3 yard
          inch          1|12 foot
          !endvar
          !var INCH_UNIT france
          foot          144|443.296 m
          inch          1|12 foot
          line          1|12 inch
          !endvar
          !varnot INCH_UNIT usa uk france canada
          !message Unknown value for INCH_UNIT
          !endvar

       When  'units'  reads  the  above  definitions  it  will  check  the  environment  variable
       'INCH_UNIT'  and load only the definitions for the appropriate section.  If 'INCH_UNIT' is
       unset or is not set to one of the four values listed then 'units' will run the last block.
       In  this  case  that  block  uses  the  '!message'  command  to display a warning message.
       Alternatively that block could set default values.

       In order to create default values that are overridden by user settings the data  file  can
       use  the '!set' command, which sets an environment variable only if it is not already set;
       these settings are only for the current 'units' invocation and do not persist.  So if  the
       example  above  were preceded by '!set INCH_UNIT france' then this would make 'france' the
       default value for 'INCH_UNIT'.  If the user had set the variable in the environment before
       invoking 'units', then 'units' would use the user's value.

       To  link  these  settings  to  the  user's  locale you combine the '!set' command with the
       '!locale' command.  If you wanted to combine the above example with suitable  locales  you
       could do by preceding the above definition with the following:

          !locale en_US
          !set INCH_UNIT usa
          !endlocale
          !locale en_GB
          !set INCH_UNIT uk
          !endlocale
          !locale en_CA
          !set INCH_UNIT canada
          !endlocale
          !locale fr_FR
          !set INCH_UNIT france
          !endlocale
          !set INCH_UNIT france

       These  definitions  set  the  overall  default for 'INCH_UNIT' to 'france' and set default
       values for four locales appropriately.  The overall default setting comes last so that  it
       only applies when 'INCH_UNIT' was not set by one of the other commands or by the user.

       If  the variable given after '!var' or '!varnot' is undefined then 'units' prints an error
       message and ignores the definitions that follow.  Use '!set' to create defaults to prevent
       this  situation from arising.  The '-c' option only checks the definitions that are active
       for the current environment and locale, so when adding new definitions take care to  check
       that all cases give rise to a well defined set of definitions.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The 'units' program uses the following environment variables:

       HOME   Specifies  the  location  of  your  home directory; it is used by 'units' to find a
              personal units data file '.units'.  On systems running Microsoft Windows, the  file
              is  'unitdef.units',  and if 'HOME' does not exist, 'units' tries to determine your
              home directory from the 'HOMEDRIVE' and 'HOMEPATH' environment variables; if  these
              variables    do    not   exist,   units   finally   tries   'USERPROFILE'—typically
              'C:\Users\username'       (Windows       Vista       and       Windows 7)        or
              'C:\Documents and Settings\username' (Windows XP).

       LC_CTYPE, LANG
              Checked  to  determine  the  locale  if 'units' cannot obtain it from the operating
              system.  Sections of the standard units data file are specific to certain locales.

       MYUNITSFILE
              Specifies your personal units data file.  If this variable exists, 'units' uses its
              value  rather  than searching your home directory for '.units'.  The personal units
              file will not be loaded if any data files are given using the '-f' option.

       PAGER  Specifies the pager to use for help and for displaying the conformable units.   The
              help function browses the units database and calls the pager using the '+n'n syntax
              for specifying a line number.  The default pager is 'more'; 'PAGER' can be used  to
              specify alternatives such as 'less', 'pg', 'emacs', or 'vi'.

       UNITS_ENGLISH
              Set  to  either 'US' or 'GB' to choose United States or British volume definitions,
              overriding the default from your locale.

       UNITSFILE
              Specifies the units data file to use  (instead  of  the  default).   You  can  only
              specify  a  single  units data file using this environment variable.  If units data
              files are given using the '-f' option, the file specified by  'UNITSFILE'  will  be
              not   be   loaded   unless   the  '-f'  option  is  given  with  the  empty  string
              ('units -f ""').

       UNITSLOCALEMAP
              Windows only; this variable has no effect  on  Unix-like  systems.   Specifies  the
              units  locale map file to use (instead of the default).  This variable seldom needs
              to be set, but you can use it to ensure that the locale map file will be  found  if
              you  specify a location for the units data file using either the '-f' option or the
              'UNITSFILE' environment variable, and that  location  does  not  also  contain  the
              locale map file.

DATA FILES

       The 'units' program uses two default data files: 'definitions.units' and 'currency.units'.
       The program can also use an optional personal units data  file  '.units'  ('unitdef.units'
       under  Windows)  located  in  the  user's home directory.  The personal units data file is
       described in more detail in Units Data Files.

       On Unix-like systems, the data  files  are  typically  located  in  '/usr/share/units'  if
       'units'  is  provided with the operating system, or in '/usr/local/share/units' if 'units'
       is compiled from the source distribution.

       On systems running Microsoft Windows, the files may be in the same locations if  Unix-like
       commands  are available, a Unix-like file structure is present (e.g., 'C:/usr/local'), and
       'units' is  compiled  from  the  source  distribution.   If  Unix-like  commands  are  not
       available,  a  more  common  location  is  'C:\Program Files (x86)\GNU\units'  (for 64-bit
       Windows installations) or 'C:\Program Files\GNU\units' (for 32-bit installations).

       If 'units' is obtained from the GNU Win32 Project (http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/),  the
       files are commonly in 'C:\Program Files\GnuWin32\share\units'.

       If the default units data file is not an absolute pathname, 'units' will look for the file
       in the directory that contains the 'units' program;  if  the  file  is  not  found  there,
       'units'  will  look  in  a  directory  '../share/units' relative to the directory with the
       'units' program.

       You can determine the  location  of  the  files  by  running  'units --version'.   Running
       'units --info'  will  give  you  additional  information about the files, how 'units' will
       attempt to find them, and the status of the related environment variables.

UNICODE SUPPORT

       The standard units data file is in Unicode, using UTF-8 encoding.   Most  definitions  use
       only  ASCII  characters  (i.e., code points U+0000 through U+007F); definitions using non-
       ASCII characters appear in blocks beginning with '!utf8' and ending with '!endutf8'.

       When 'units' starts, it checks the locale to determine the character set.  If  'units'  is
       compiled  with  Unicode  support and definitions; otherwise these definitions are ignored.
       When Unicode support is active, 'units' will check every line of all  of  the  units  data
       files  for  invalid  or  non-printing  UTF-8  sequences;  if such sequences occur, 'units'
       ignores the entire line.  In addition to checking validity, 'units' determines the display
       width  of  non-ASCII  characters to ensure proper positioning of the pointer in some error
       messages and to align columns for the 'search' and '?'  commands.

       At present, 'units' does not support Unicode under  Microsoft  Windows.   The  UTF-16  and
       UTF-32 encodings are not supported on any systems.

       If  definitions  that  contain  non-ASCII characters are added to a units data file, those
       definitions should be enclosed within '!utf8' ...  '!endutf8' to ensure that they are only
       loaded  when  Unicode  support  is available.  As usual, the '!'  must appear as the first
       character on the line.  As discussed in Units Data Files, it's usually best  to  put  such
       definitions  in  supplemental  data files linked by an '!include' command or in a personal
       units data file.

       When Unicode support is not active, 'units' makes no assumptions about character encoding,
       except  that characters in the range 00-7F hexadecimal correspond to ASCII encoding.  Non-
       ASCII characters are simply  sequences  of  bytes,  and  have  no  special  meanings;  for
       definitions  in  supplementary  units data files, you can use any encoding consistent with
       this assumption.  For example, if you wish to use non-ASCII characters in definitions when
       running  'units' under Windows, you can use a character set such as Windows ``ANSI'' (code
       page 1252 in the US and Western Europe).  You can even use UTF-8, though some messages may
       be  improperly  aligned,  and 'units' will not detect invalid UTF-8 sequences.  If you use
       UTF-8 encoding when Unicode support is not active, you should place any  definitions  with
       non-ASCII  characters  outside  '!utf8'  ...   '!endutf8'  blocks—otherwise,  they will be
       ignored.

       Typeset material other than code examples usually uses the Unicode minus  (U+2212)  rather
       than  the  ASCII  hyphen-minus operator (U+002D) used in 'units'; the figure dash (U+2012)
       and en dash (U+2013) are also occasionally used.  To allow such material to be copied  and
       pasted  for  interactive  use or in units data files, 'units' converts these characters to
       U+002D before further processing.  Because of this, none of these characters can appear in
       unit names.

READLINE SUPPORT

       If  the  'readline' package has been compiled in, then when 'units' is used interactively,
       numerous command line editing features are available.  To check if your version of 'units'
       includes 'readline', invoke the program with the '--version' option.

       For  complete  information  about 'readline', consult the documentation for the 'readline'
       package.  Without any configuration, 'units' will allow editing in the style of emacs.  Of
       particular use with 'units' are the completion commands.

       If you type a few characters and then hit ESC followed by '?'  then 'units' will display a
       list of all the units that start with the characters typed.   For  example,  if  you  type
       'metr' and then request completion, you will see something like this:

          You have: metr
          metre             metriccup         metrichorsepower  metrictenth
          metretes          metricfifth       metricounce       metricton
          metriccarat       metricgrain       metricquart       metricyarncount
          You have: metr

       If  there is a unique way to complete a unitname, you can hit the TAB key and 'units' will
       provide the rest of the unit name.  If 'units' beeps, it means that  there  is  no  unique
       completion.  Pressing the TAB key a second time will print the list of all completions.

       The  readline  library also keeps a history of the values you enter.  You can move through
       this  history  using  the  up  and  down  arrows.   The  history  is  saved  to  the  file
       '.units_history'  in  your  home directory so that it will persist across multiple 'units'
       invocations.  If you wish to keep work for a certain project separate you can  change  the
       history  filename using the '--history' option.  You could, for example, make an alias for
       'units' to 'units --history .units_history' so that 'units' would save separate history in
       the  current  directory.   The length of each history file is limited to 5000 lines.  Note
       also that if you run several concurrent copies of 'units'  each  one  will  save  its  new
       history to the history file upon exit.

UPDATING CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATES

       The  units program includes currency exchange rates and prices for some precious metals in
       the database.  Of course, these values change  over  time,  sometimes  very  rapidly,  and
       'units'  cannot  provide  real  time  values.   To  update  the  exchange  rates  run  the
       'units_cur',  which  rewrites  the  files  containing  the   currency   rates,   typically
       '/usr/share/units/currency.units'.   This  program requires 'python', and must be run with
       suitable permissions to write the file.  To keep the rates updated automatically,  run  it
       using  a  cron  job  on a Unix-like system, or a similar scheduling program on a different
       system.  Currency exchange rates  are  taken  from  Yahoo  (http://finance.yahoo.com)  and
       precious metals pricing from Packetizer (www.packetizer.com).  These sites update once per
       day, so there is no benefit in running the update script more often than daily.   You  can
       run  'units_cur'  with a filename specified on the command line and it will write the data
       to that file.  If you give '-' for the file it will write to standard output.

DATABASE COMMAND SYNTAX

       unit definition
              Define a regular unit.

       prefix- definition
              Define a prefix.

       funcname(var)    noerror    units=[in-units,out-units]    domain=[x1,x2]     range=[y1,y2]
       definition(var) ; inverse(funcname)
              Define  a  nonlinear  unit or unit function.  The four optional keywords 'noerror',
              'units=', 'range=' and 'domain=' can appear in any order.  The  definition  of  the
              inverse is optional.

       tabname[out-units] noerror pair-list
              Define a piecewise linear unit.  The pair list gives the points on the table listed
              in ascending order.  The 'noerror' keyword is optional.

       !endlocale
              End a block of definitions beginning with '!locale'

       !endutf8
              End a block of definitions begun with '!utf8'

       !endvar
              End a block of definitions begun with '!var' or '!varnot'

       !include file
              Include the specified file.

       !locale value
              Load the following definitions only of the locale is set to value.

       !message text
              Display text when the database is read unless the quiet option ('-q') is enabled.

       !set variable value
              Sets the environment variable, variable, to the specified value only if it  is  not
              already set.

       !unitlist alias definition
              Define a unit list alias.

       !utf8  Load the following definitions only if 'units' is running with UTF-8 enabled.

       !var envar value-list
              Load  the  block of definitions that follows only if the environment variable envar
              is set to one of the values listed in the space-separated value list.  If envar  is
              not set, 'units' prints an error message and ignores the block of definitions.

       !varnot envar value-list
              Load  the  block of definitions that follows only if the environment variable envar
              is set to value that is not listed in the space-separated value list.  If envar  is
              not set, 'units' prints an error message and ignores the block of definitions.

GNU FREE DOCUMENTATION LICENSE

FILES

       /usr/share/units/definitions.units — the standard units data file

AUTHOR

                                         16 October 2017                                 UNITS(1)