Provided by: xmabacus_8.2.4-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       xabacus - Abacus X widget

SYNOPSIS

       /usr/games/xabacus  [-geometry  [{width}][x{height}][{+-}{xoff}[{+-}{yoff}]]]  [-display [{host}]:[{vs}]]
       [-[no]mono]  [-[no]{reverse|rv}]  [-{foreground|fg}  {color}]  [-{background|bg}  {color}]  [-{border|bd}
       {color}]  [-frame  {color}]  [-primaryBeadColor  {color}] [-leftAuxBeadColor {color}] [-rightAuxBeadColor
       {color}]  [-secondaryBeadColor  {color}]  [-highlightBeadColor   {color}]   [-primaryRailColor   {color}]
       [-secondaryRailColor   {color}]   [-highlightRailColor   {color}]  [-lineRailColor  {color}]  [-bumpSound
       {filename}] [-moveSound {filename}] [-dripSound {filename}]  [-[no]sound]  [-delay  msecs]  [-[no]script]
       [-[no]demo]   [-demopath   {path}]  [-{demofont|demofn}  {fontname}]  [-{demoforeground|demofg}  {color}]
       [-[no]teach] [-[no]rightToLeftAdd] [-[no]rightToLeftMult] [-[no]lee] [-rails {int}] [-leftAuxRails {int}]
       [-rightAuxRails {int}] [-[no]vertical] [-colorScheme {int}] [-[no]slot] [-[no]diamond] [-railIndex {int}]
       [-[no]topOrient]  [-[no]bottomOrient]  [-topNumber  {int}]  [-bottomNumber  {int}]   [-topFactor   {int}]
       [-bottomFactor  {int}]  [-topSpaces  {int}]  [-bottomSpaces {int}] [-topPiece {int}] [-bottomPiece {int}]
       [-topPiecePercent {int}] [-bottomPiecePercent {int}] [-shiftPercent  {int}]  [-subdeck  {int}]  [-subbead
       {int}]  [-[no]sign]  [-decimalPosition  {int}] [-[no]group] [-groupSize {int}] [-[no]decimalComma] [-base
       {int}] [-[no]eighth] [-anomaly {int}] [-shiftAnomaly {int}] [-anomalySq  {int}]  [-shiftAnomalySq  {int}]
       [-displayBase    {int}]    [-[no]pressOffset]   [-[no]romanNumerals]   [-[no]latin]   [-[no]ancientRoman]
       [-[no]modernRoman]    [-{chinese|japanese|korean|russian|danish|roman|medieval|generic}]    [-{it|uk|fr}]
       [-version]

DESCRIPTION

       This  is  an  implementation  of  the  classic Chinese Abacus (Suanpan) which has its origins in the 12th
       century.

       The device has two decks.  Each deck, separated by a partition,  normally  has  13  rails  on  which  are
       mounted beads.  Each rail on the top deck contains 1 or 2 beads, and each rod on the bottom deck contains
       4  or  5  beads.   Each bead on the upper deck has a value of five, while each bead on the lower deck has
       value of one.  Beads are considered counted, when moved towards the partition separating the decks,  i.e.
       to  add a value of one, a bead in the bottom deck is moved up, and to add a value of 5, a bead in the top
       deck is moved down.

       The basic operations of the abacus are addition and subtraction.  Multiplication can be done by  mentally
       multiplying  the  digits and adding up the intermediate results on the abacus.  Division would be similar
       where the intermediate results are subtracted.  There are techniques like using your thumb and forefinger
       which does not apply with mouse entry.  Also with multiplication,  one  can  carry  out  calculations  on
       different parts of the abacus for scratch work, here it is nice to have a long abacus.

       The  pre-WWII  Japanese  Abacus (Soroban) (or Korean Jupan) is similar to the Chinese Abacus but has only
       one bead per rail on the top deck.  The later Japanese Abacus was further simplified to have only 4 beads
       per rail on the bottom deck.

       The Roman Hand-Abacus predates the Chinese Abacus and is very similar to the later Japanese  Abacus,  but
       seems  to  have  fallen  out of use with the Fall of the Roman Empire (at least 3 are in existence).  The
       Roman Abaci are brass plates where the beads move in slots.  In addition  to  the  normal  7  columns  of
       beads,  they  generally  have  2  special  columns on the right side.  In two examples: the first special
       column was for 12ths (12 uncia (ounces) = 1 as) and had one extra bead in the bottom deck.  Also the last
       column was a combination of halves, quarters, and twelfths of an ounce and had no beads in the  top  deck
       and  4  beads  at  the bottom (beads did not have to come to the top to be counted but at one of 3 marked
       points where the top bead was for halves, the next  bead  for  quarters,  and  the  last  two  beads  for
       twelfths).   In another surviving example: the 2 special columns were switched and the combination column
       was broken into 3 separate slots.  If available, decimal input is ignored.

       The Russian Abacus was invented in the 17th century, here the beads are moved from right to left.  It has
       colored beads in the middle for ease of  use.   Quarters  represent  1/4  Rubles  and  are  only  present
       historically  on  the  Russian  Abacus (Schoty).  Some of the older Schoty have a extra place for the 1/4
       Kopek (quarter percent) as well as the 1/4 Ruble (quarter).

       The Danish Abacus was used in the early 20th century in elementary schools as a teaching aid.

       The Medieval Counter is a primitive form of the abacus and was used in Europe as late as the  1600s.   It
       was  useful  considering  they  were using it with Roman Numerals.   This is similar to the Salamis Greek
       Tablet from 4th or 5th Century BCE.

       The Mesoamerican Nepohualtzintzin is a Japanese Abacus base 20.  The Mesoamericans had base 20  with  the
       exception  of  the  3rd  decimal  place where instead of 20*20=400 the third place marked 360 and the 4th
       place was 20*360, etc..  They independently created their own zero (only  Babylon  (base  60)  and  India
       (base 10) have done this) but the anomaly took away its true power.

       An  easy way of figuring out time in seconds given hours, minutes, and seconds, can be done on the abacus
       with special anomaly "watch" settings.

       The Chinese Solid-and-Broken-Bar System is a base 12 numbering system and not really an abacus.  When the
       abacus is setup in this way though (topFactor 3, topNumber 3, bottomNumber 2, base 12,  displayBase  12),
       it is easy to relate the two.

       The  signed  bead  is  an  invention  of  the author, and is not present on any historical abacus (to his
       knowledge) and is used to represent negatives.  "New & Improved" abacus models have two  auxiliary  decks
       stacked  above  the  principal  deck  that  enable  multiplication,  division, square-root, and cube-root
       computations to be performed with equal ease as addition and subtraction  (well, so I have read).

FEATURES

       Click "mouse-left" button on a bead you want to move.  The beads will shift themselves to vacate the area
       of the column that was clicked.

       Click "mouse-right" button, or press "C" or "c" keys, to clear the abacus.

       Press "O" or "o" keys to toggle the demo mode.

       Press "$" key to toggle the teach mode.

       In teach mode, "+" key toggles starting side to sum, ""*" key toggles for starting side for multiplicand.

       Press "~" or "`" keys to complement the beads on the rails.

       Press "I" or "i" keys to increment the number of rails.  Press "D" or "d" keys to decrement the number of
       rails.

       Press "F" or "f" keys to switch between Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Danish, Roman,  and  Medieval
       formats.   There  is  an  extra  "Generic"  format, this allows one to break some rules binding the other
       formats (for example, if one wanted more beads on top deck than on bottom deck you  would  use  this,  in
       addition to resource option changes).

       Press "V" or "v" keys to toggle Roman Nvmerals.  (Pardon typo/humor, but ran out of letters).

       Press "X" or "x" keys to toggle Ancient Roman Numerals (when Roman Nvmerals is activated).

       Press  "Y"  or  "y" keys to toggle Latin Numerals (when Roman Nvmerals and quarter beads or twelfth beads
       are activated).

       Press "S" or "s" keys to toggle the sign bead.

       Press "U" or "u" keys to toggle the availability  of  quarter  beads.   (Mutually  exclusive  to  twelfth
       beads).  Intended for the Russian Abacus.

       Press  "T"  or  "t"  keys  to  toggle  the availability of twelfth beads.  (Mutually exclusive to quarter
       beads).  Intended for the Roman Abacus.

       Press "P" or "p" keys to toggle the availability of quarter percent beads.  (Dependent on  quarter  beads
       (or twelfth beads).  Intended for the older Russian Abacus.

       Press  "B"  or  "b" keys to toggle the availability of subdecks.  (Dependent on twelfth beads (or quarter
       beads) and Roman format).  Intended for the Roman Abacus, where the lowest value of two at bottom of  the
       rightmost column of beads are a twelfth of the column second from right.

       Press  "E"  or  "e" keys to toggle the availability of subdecks.  (Dependent on twelfth beads (or quarter
       beads) and Roman format).  Intended for the Roman Abacus, where the lowest value of three  at  bottom  of
       the rightmost column of beads are an eighth of the column second from right.

       Press "M" or "m" keys to switch between it, uk, and fr museum formats.

       Press "Z" or "z" keys to toggle Modern Numerals on frame (when showing Roman Hand Abacus).

       Press  "L"  or  "l"  keys  to toggle the availability of anomaly bars.  Intended to be used with Japanese
       Abacus and base 20 for the Mesoamerican Abacus.  (Mutually exclusive to watch bars).

       Press "W" or "w" keys to toggle the availability of watch bars.   Intended  to  represent  seconds  where
       hours and minutes can be set.  (Mutually exclusive to anomaly bars).

       Press ">" or "." keys to speed up the movement of beads.  Press "<" or "," keys to slow down the movement
       of beads.

       Press "@" key to toggle the sound.

       Press "Esc" key to hide program.

       Press "Q", "q", or "CTRL-C" keys to kill program.

       The abacus may be resized.  Beads will reshape depending on the room they have.  Demo Mode: In this mode,
       the abacus is controlled by the program.  When started with the demo option, a second window is presented
       that  should be placed directly below the abacus-window. Descriptive text, and user prompts are displayed
       in this window.  Pressing 'q' during the demo will quit it.  Clicking  the  left  mouse-button  with  the
       pointer in the window will restart the demo (beginning of current lesson).

OPTIONS

       -geometry {+|-}X{+|-}Y
               This option sets the initial position of the abacus window (resource name "geometry").

       -display host:dpy
               This option specifies the X server to contact.

       -[no]mono
               This  option  allows  you to display the abacus window on a color screen as if it were monochrome
               (resource name "mono").

       -[no]{reverse|rv}
               This option allows you to see the abacus window in reverse video (resource name "reverseVideo").

       -{foreground|fg} color
               This option specifies the foreground of the abacus window (resource name "foreground").

       -{background|bg} color
               This option specifies the background of the abacus window (resource name "background").

       -{border|bd} color
               This option specifies the foreground of the bead border (resource name "borderColor").

       -frame color
               This option specifies the foreground of the frame (resource name "frameColor").

       -primaryBeadColor color
               This option specifies the foreground of the beads (resource name "primaryBeadColor").

       -leftAuxBeadColor color
               This option specifies the foreground of the beads for the left auxiliary abacus in  Lee's  Abacus
               (resource name "leftAuxBeadColor").

       -rightAuxBeadColor color
               This  option specifies the foreground of the beads for the right auxiliary abacus in Lee's Abacus
               (resource name "rightBeadColor").

       -secondaryBeadColor color
               This option specifies the secondary color of the beads (resource name "secondaryBeadColor").

       -highlightBeadColor color
               This option specifies the highlight color of the beads (resource name "highlightBeadColor").

       -primaryRailColor color
               This option specifies the foreground of the rails (resource name "primaryRailColor").

       -secondaryRailColor color
               This option specifies the secondary color of the rails (resource name "secondaryRailColor").

       -highlightRailColor color
               This option specifies the highlight color of the rails (resource name "highlightRailColor").

       -lineRailColor color
               This option specifies the color of the lines when using checkers (resource name "lineRailColor").

       -bumpSound filename
               This option specifies the file for the bump sound for the movement of the  beads  (resource  name
               "bumpSound").

       -moveSound filename
               This  option  specifies  the  file for the move sound for the sliding of the decimal point marker
               (resource name "moveSound").

       -dripSound filename
               This option specifies the file for  the  drip  sound  for  changing  the  format  (resource  name
               "dripSound").

       -[no]sound
               This option specifies if a sliding bead should make a sound or not (resource name "sound").

       -delay msecs
               This  option specifies the number of milliseconds it takes to move a bead or a group of beads one
               space (resource name "delay").

       -[no]script
               This option specifies to log application to stdout, every time the user clicks to move the  beads
               (resource  name  "script").  The  output  is  a  set  of  auxiliary,  deck,  rail, beads added or
               subtracted, and the number of text lines (4).  This can be edited to add text to the  lesson  and
               used  as  a  new  demo  keeping the generated numbers and the number of lines constant.  (Windows
               version writes to abacus.xml.)

       -[no]demo
               This option specifies to run in demo mode.  In this mode, the abacus is controlled by the current
               lesson (resource name "demo").  When started with the demo option, a window contains  descriptive
               text,  and user prompts are displayed in this window.  Pressing 'q' during the demo will quit it.
               Clicking the left mouse-button with the pointer in the window will restart the demo (beginning of
               current lesson).  The demo uses abacusDemo.xml  and  currently  there  are  4  editions  possible
               (Chinese, Japanese (and Roman), Korean, and Russian (and Danish)).

       -demopath path
               This    option    specifies    the    path    for    the    demo,    possibly    something   like
               /usr/local/share/games/xabacus (resource name "demoPath"), with the file name of  abacusDemo.xml.
               For this to work, the program must be compiled with XML2 or else will use a brief static fallback
               demo.

       -demofont fontstring
               This  option  specifies  the  font for the explanatory text that appears in the secondary window,
               during the demo.  The default  font  is  18  point  Times-Roman  (-*-times-*-r-*-*-*-180-*).  The
               alternate font is 8x13.

       -demofg color
               This option specifies the foreground of the abacus demo window (resource name "demoForeground").

       -demobg color
               This option specifies the background of the abacus demo window (resource name "demoBackground").

       -[no]teach
               This  option specifies to run in teach mode.  In this mode, the abacus is controlled by 2 numbers
               separated by an operator: "+" for addition, "-" for subtraction, "*" for multiplication, and  "/"
               for division.  The square root operation is represented by the number to be operated on  followed
               by  the  character  "v"  (this  leaves  you  with  an  answer  from  which you must divide by 2).
               Similarly, the cube root operation is represented by the number to be operated on followed by the
               character "u" (this leaves you with an answer from which you must divide by 3).  Press return key
               to progress through the steps (resource name "teach").

       -[no]rightToLeftAdd
               This option specifies the order for teach  starting  side  for  addition  and  subtraction.   The
               default  is  the  traditional  left  to  right.  Right to left seems easier though (resource name
               "rightToLeftAdd").

       -[no]rightToLeftMult
               This option specifies the order for teach starting side for multiplication.  The default  is  the
               traditional   left  to  right.   Right  to  left  seems  more  straight  forward  (resource  name
               "rightToLeftMult").

       -[no]lee
               This option allows you to turn on and off the two extra auxiliary abaci (resource name "lee").

       -rails int
               This option specifies the number of rails (resource name "rails").

       -leftAuxRails int
               This option allows you to set the number of the rails for the  left  auxiliary  abacus  in  Lee's
               Abacus (resource name "leftAuxRails").

       -rightAuxRails int
               This  option  allows  you  to set the number of the rails for the right auxiliary abacus in Lee's
               Abacus (resource name "rightAuxRails").

       -[no]vertical
               This option allows you  to  set  the  abacus  to  allow  a  Russian  orientation  (resource  name
               "vertical").

       -colorScheme int
               This  option  specifies  the  color scheme for the abacus (resource name "colorScheme") where 0->
               none, 1-> darken middle bead (2 beads if even), 2-> darken   first  bead  of  a  group,  4->  use
               secondary  color  for  second  half  of  a  row  of beads (but if odd color middle bead), 8-> use
               secondary color in alternate groups.  Use a mask of 15 for combinations.

       -[no]slot
               This option allows you to have either slots or rails (resource name "slot").

       -[no]diamond
               This option allows you to have either diamond or round beads (resource name "diamond").

       -railIndex int
               This option specifies the index of color for the rails of the abacus (resource name  "railIndex")
               where a value is 0 or 1.

       -[no]topOrient
               This option specifies the orientation of the beads on top (resource name "topOrient").

       -[no]bottomOrient
               This option specifies the orientation of the beads on bottom (resource name "bottomOrient").

       -topNumber int
               This option specifies the number of beads on top (resource name "topNumber").

       -bottomNumber int
               This option specifies the number of beads on bottom (resource name "bottomNumber").

       -topFactor int
               This option specifies the multiply factor for the beads on top (resource name "topFactor").

       -bottomFactor int
               This option specifies the multiply factor for the beads on bottom (resource name "bottomFactor").

       -topSpaces int
               This option specifies the number of spaces on top (resource name "topSpaces").

       -bottomSpaces int
               This option specifies the number of spaces on bottom (resource name "bottomSpaces").

       -topPiece int
               This option specifies the number of pieces on top (resource name "topPiece").

       -bottomPiece int
               This option specifies the number of pieces on bottom (resource name "bottomPiece").

       -topPiecePercent int
               This option specifies the number of piece percents on top (resource name "topPiecePercent").

       -bottomPiecePercent int
               This   option   specifies   the   number   of   piece   percents   on   bottom   (resource   name
               "bottomPiecePercent").

       -shiftPercent int
               This option specifies the shift of rails for piece percents and also may influence the  precision
               of the calculation (resource name "shiftPercent").

       -subdeck int
               This option specifies the special subdecks column (resource name "subdeck").

       -subbead int
               This option specifies the special subbeads (resource name "subbead").

       -[no]sign
               This option allows you to set the abacus to allow negatives (resource name "sign").

       -decimalPosition int
               This  option  specifies  the  number  of  rails  to  the  right of the decimal point (normally 2)
               (resource name "decimalPosition").

       -[no]group
               This option allows you to group the displayed digits for readability (resource name "group").

       -groupSize int
               This option specifies the group size to the left of the decimal point (normally 3) (resource name
               "groupSize").

       -[no]decimalComma
               This option allows you to swap "." for "," to allow for different display format  (resource  name
               "decimalComma").

       -base int
               This option specifies the base used on abacus (default is base 10) (resource name "base").

       -[no]eighth
               This  option specifies the base for the Roman subdeck, (if set, the resource is set to 8, else it
               is set to 12) (resource name "subbase").

       -anomaly int
               This option specifies the offset from the base for a multiplicative factor of the rail  with  the
               anomaly (if none, this is set to 0) (resource name "anomaly").

       -shiftAnomaly int
               This  option  specifies  the offset from decimal point for the anomaly (usually 2) (resource name
               "shiftAnomaly").

       -anomalySq int
               This option specifies the offset from base for the second anomaly (if none, this  is  set  to  0)
               (resource name "anomalySq").

       -shiftAnomalySq int
               This  option  specifies  the  offset  in  rails from the first anomaly (usually 2) (resource name
               "shiftAnomalySq").  doing).

       -displayBase int
               This option specifies the base displayed (default is base 10) (resource name "displayBase").   If
               this  is  different  then  "base" then it is implemented using "long long" and the calculation is
               limited by its bounds.  Also the fractional part does not scale with the "displayBase" so if  the
               "displayBase" is greater than the "base" it looses some precision.  Also no rounding is done.

       -[no]pressOffset
               This  option  allows you to put a pixel space between all the beads so there is room for the bead
               to move when pressed (resource name "pressOffset").

       -[no]romanNumerals
               This option allows you to set the abacus to allow Roman Numerals (resource name "romanNumerals").
               Roman Numerals above 3999 are normally represented with bars on top,  due  to  ASCII  constraints
               this  is represented instead in lower case (historically case was ignored).  Roman Numerals above
               3,999,999 were not represented historically.   Roman  numerals  change  with  displayBase  in  an
               "experimental"  way.  When used with twelfths and subdecks, named fraction symbols are used.  Due
               to ASCII constraints the sigma is represented as E, the backwards C is represented as a Q, the mu
               as a u, and the Z with a - through the center as a z.  If available, decimal input is ignored.

       -[no]latin
               This option allows you to set the abacus to allow latin fractions  instead  of  symbolic  in  the
               Roman numeral output (resource name "latin").

       -[no]ancientRoman
               This option allows you to set the abacus to allow ancient Roman numerals instead of the modern in
               the Roman numeral output (resource name "ancientRoman").

       -[no]modernRoman
               This option allows you to set the abacus to allow modern Roman numerals instead of the ancient on
               the Roman Hand abacus (resource name "modernRoman").

       -chinese
               This  option  specifies  the  format  on the abacus (resource name "format") to "Chinese" for the
               Chinese Suanpan.

       -japanese
               This option specifies the format on the abacus (resource name "format")  to  "Japanese"  for  the
               Japanese post-WWII Soroban.  This is also similar to the Roman Hand Abacus.

       -korean This  option  specifies  the  format  on  the abacus (resource name "format") to "Korean" for the
               Korean Jupan or Japanese pre-WWII Soroban.

       -russian
               This option specifies the format on the abacus (resource name  "format")  to  "Russian"  for  the
               Russian  Schoty.   To  complete,  specify  piece"  to  be  4,  for  the older Schoty also specify
               piecePercent" to be 4.

       -danish This option specifies the format of the abacus (resource  name  "format")  to  "Danish"  for  the
               Danish Elementary School Abacus teaching aid.

       -roman  This  option specifies the format on the abacus (resource name "format") to "Roman" for the Roman
               Hand Abacus, note beads move in slots.  To complete, specify romanNumerals".

       -medieval
               This option specifies the format of the abacus (resource name "format")  to  "Medieval"  for  the
               Medieval Counter, with counters instead of beads.

       -generic
               This  option  specifies  the  format  on  the abacus (resource name "format") to "Generic".  This
               option specifies a format that is more configurable by using resources, since there are few rules
               to govern its behavior.

       -it     This option specifies the subformat of the abacus in Museum of the Thermae, Rome.

       -uk     This option specifies the subformat of the abacus in British Museum in London.

       -fr     This option specifies  the  subformat  of  the  abacus  in  Cabinet  de  medailles,  Bibliotheque
               nationale, Paris.

       -version
               This option tells you what version of xabacus you have.

REFERENCES

       Luis Fernandes  http://www.ee.ryerson.ca/~elf/abacus/

       Lee Kai-chen, How to Learn Lee's Abacus, 1958, 58 pages.

       Abacus Guide Book, 57 pages.

       Georges Ifrah, The Universal History of Numbers, Wiley Press 2000, pp 209-211, 288-294.

       Review of the above: http://www.ams.org/notices/200201/rev-dauben.pdf

       David Eugene Smith, History of Mathematics Volume II, Dover Publications, Inc 1958, pp 156-195.

SEE ALSO

       X(1),  xcubes(6), xtriangles(6), xhexagons(6), xmlink(6), xbarrel(6), xpanex(6), xmball(6), xpyraminx(6),
       xoct(6), xrubik(6), xskewb(6), xdino(6)

COPYRIGHTS

       ® Copyright 1994-2019, David A. Bagley

       Luis Fernandes, <elf AT ee.ryerson.ca> wrote an independent program (xabacus 1.00) with a demo  mode  and
       postscript  file.   I  tried,  with  his  permission, to take the best features of both into one program.
       Also, I had help with some of the abacus in the Java  version  by  Sarat  Chandran,  <saratcmahadevan  AT
       yahoo.com> and some of these ideas were ported back into this X version.

BUG REPORTS AND PROGRAM UPDATES

       Send bugs (or their reports, or fixes) to the author:
              David A. Bagley, <bagleyd AT verizon.net>

       The latest version is currently at:
              https://www.sillycycle.com/abacus.html
              http://ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/apps/math

V8.2.4                                             4 Dec 2019                                         XABACUS(6)