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A GTK/Maemo port of XTide (based on XTide 2.10)
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XTide: Harmonic tide clock and tide predictor San Francisco graph Preface Welcome to the verbose documentation for XTide 2. If you are reading this as a text file, please be aware that the text was extracted from the illustrated HTML version of the documentation that resides at [1]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/. The web version may also be more up-to-date than what you are reading. __________________________________________________________________ THE XTIDE SOFTWARE DISTRIBUTION IS AVAILABLE FROM: [2]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html __________________________________________________________________ [3]Buoy in the mist Contents * [4]License and disclaimer ("NOT FOR NAVIGATION," "ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY") * Verbose documentation + [5]Introduction + [6]System requirements + [7]Installation instructions for supported platforms + [8]Available ports for unsupported platforms + [9]Modes and formats + [10]Using the interactive interface + [11]Advanced usage + [12]Using the command line interface + [13]Running the web server + [14]Customizing XTide + [15]What to do if your location isn't listed + [16]Quirks, limitations, and bugs + [17]FAQ + [18]Design notes + [19]Credits + [20]Bibliography + [21]Appendix A -- Historical predictions and Y2038 compliance + [22]Appendix B -- Application of offsets for Min Flood and Min Ebb events + [23]Appendix C -- Making calendars fit onto a single page * Short attention span documentation for experienced XTide users + [24]Differences from XTide 1 + [25]Quick install instructions + [26]Change log + [27]News (current XTide developments) The XTide software distribution resides at [28]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html. Hint: If you have no idea what all this is about, try reading the [29]FAQ first. -- David Flater ([email protected]) References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/ 4. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/disclaimer.html 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/introduction.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/sysreq.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/interactive.html 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/tty.html 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xttpd.html 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 15. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 17. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html 18. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/design.html 19. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/credits.html 20. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bibliography.html 21. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html 22. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html 23. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 24. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide1diff.html 25. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/quickinst.html 26. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/changelog.html 27. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/news.html 28. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 29. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html ################################################################ [1]-> Next [2]Contents Icon License and disclaimer NOTE. The license and disclaimer appearing below applies to the XTide program itself. For information about permissions on the harmonic constants, see [3]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics_boilerplate.txt and [4]http://harmonics.unh.edu/xtide/harmonics_boilerplate.txt. XTide Copyright © 1998 David Flater This software is provided under the terms of the GNU General Public License, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. Although the package as a whole is GPL, some individual source files are public domain. Consult their header comments for details. NOT FOR NAVIGATION This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. The author assumes no liability for damages arising from use of this program OR of any 'harmonics data' that might be distributed with it. For details, see the appended GNU General Public License. (Accurate tide predictions can only be made if the 'harmonics data' for the relevant location are good. Unfortunately, the only way the maintainer of those data has of knowing when they are bad is when someone with access to authoritative tide predictions or observations reports a problem. You should not use this program or any data files that might be distributed with it if anyone or anything could come to harm as a result of an incorrect tide prediction. NOAA and similar agencies in other countries can provide you with certified tide predictions if that is what you need.) XTide's predictions do not incorporate the effects of tropical storms, El Niño, seismic events, subsidence, uplift, or changes in global sea level. __________________________________________________________________ The tide prediction algorithm used in this program was developed with United States Government funding, so no proprietary rights can be attached to it. For more information, refer to the following publications: Manual of Harmonic Analysis and Prediction of Tides. Special Publication No. 98, Revised (1940) Edition (reprinted 1958 with corrections; reprinted again 1994). United States Government Printing Office, 1994. Computer Applications to Tides in the National Ocean Survey. Supplement to Manual of Harmonic Analysis and Prediction of Tides (Special Publication No. 98). National Ocean Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, January 1982. __________________________________________________________________ GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 3, 29 June 2007 Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <[5]http://fsf.org/> Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. Preamble The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for software and other kinds of works. 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It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. <one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.> Copyright (C) <year> <name of author> This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: <program> Copyright (C) <year> <name of author> This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see <[6]http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this License. But first, please read <[7]http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. __________________________________________________________________ [8]-> Next [9]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/introduction.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics_boilerplate.txt 4. http://harmonics.unh.edu/xtide/harmonics_boilerplate.txt 5. http://fsf.org/ 6. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ 7. http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/introduction.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Bald Head Cliff, Ogunquit, Maine, 1998-06-15 Introduction XTide is a package that provides tide and current predictions in a wide variety of formats. Graphs, text listings, and calendars can be generated, or a tide clock can be provided on your desktop. XTide can work with X-windows, plain text terminals, or the web. This is accomplished with three separate programs: the interactive interface (xtide), the non-interactive or command line interface (tide), and the web interface (xttpd). The algorithm that XTide uses to predict tides is the one used by the [5]National Ocean Service in the U.S. It is significantly more accurate than the simple tide clocks that can be bought in novelty stores. However, it takes more to predict tides accurately than just a spiffy algorithm--you also need some special data for each and every location for which you want to predict tides. XTide reads these data from harmonics files. See [6]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html for details on where to get one. Ultimately, XTide's predictions can only be as good as the available harmonics data. Due to issues of data availability and of compatibility with non-U.S. tide systems, the predictions for U.S. locations tend to be a lot better on average than those for locations outside of the U.S. It is up to you to verify that the predictions for your locale match up acceptably well with the officially sanctioned ones. * Deviations of 1 minute from official predictions are typical for U.S. locations having the latest data. * Deviations of 20 minutes are typical for non-U.S. locations or U.S. locations that are using obsolete data. * Much longer deviations indicate a problem. The XTide software distribution resides at [7]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html. XTide and its documentation are maintained by David Flater ([email protected]). __________________________________________________________________ [8]<- Previous [9]-> Next [10]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/disclaimer.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/sysreq.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/ 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/disclaimer.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/sysreq.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Cutler in the fog System requirements Hardware The base configuration for which XTide 2 was written was a 166 MHz Pentium PC with 32 MiB of RAM (circa 1997). XTide version 2.9 was successfully tested on the same PC in 2007, although by that time the RAM had been expanded to 96 MiB. Comparable non-PC hardware (e.g., Sun Sparcstation) also works. XTide uses less than 10 MB of memory for a typical interactive session. Operating system XTide is Unix software. It is intended to compile and run correctly on any reasonably modern version of Unix. However, I no longer have direct access to any flavor of Unix other than Linux, so I can only make portability fixes if and when issues are reported. In order for tide predictions to have the correct Daylight Savings Time (Summer Time) adjustments, your platform must provide a sufficiently up-to-date version of the tz database. This has recently become an issue again since the U.S. changed its Daylight Savings Time rules for 2007. If your time zone database is obsolete, you may be able to upgrade it using the latest version from [5]ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/ or by installing an operating system patch. Some non-Unix platforms have limited support: * XTide can be run under Windows using [6]Cygwin. * A native Windows binary for the command-line client can be built using [7]Visual C++ Express Edition. * XTide has been ported to a variety of other operating systems with differing levels of success as detailed in the [8]ports section. Software XTide is intended to compile under any reasonably modern C++ compiler that supports the Standard Template Library. However, I no longer have direct access to any compiler other than GCC, so I can only make portability fixes if and when issues are reported. For GCC, "reasonably modern" means version 3.4 or newer. You need [9]bzip2, [10]7-Zip or some other archiver that supports the bzip2 format to uncompress the files. A list of libraries on which XTide is dependent is provided in the [11]next section. __________________________________________________________________ [12]<- Previous [13]-> Next [14]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/introduction.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/ 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#cygwin 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#VC++ 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html 9. http://www.bzip.org/ 10. http://www.7-zip.org/ 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/introduction.html 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Prospect Harbor Pt. Light, Prospect Harbor, Maine, 1998-06-14 Installation instructions for supported platforms Assumptions These installation instructions assume that you are building from sources obtained from [5]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html. However, some users may be able to shortcut this process: XTide has been included in [6]Fedora and [7]Debian, and a Windows native binary for the command-line client is available under [8]contrib files. (Thanks to the relevant package maintainers.) These instructions also assume that you are building XTide version 2.9. Previous versions of XTide were not packaged with [9]GNU automake, so the installation process was not as standardized. In addition, they statically linked with an included version of libtcd instead of using a shared libtcd that was installed separately. For these reasons and others it is advisable that you upgrade to XTide 2.9. Dependencies In addition to the minimal set of X11 libraries that pretty much everyone has, you need the following libraries: * [10]libXpm 3.4 or newer compatible version * [11]libpng version 0.96 or newer compatible version * [12]zlib (a.k.a. libz) version 1.0.4 or newer compatible version * [13]libtcd version 2.2 or newer compatible version XTide 2.9 will link with [14]libdstr (version 20080124 or compatible) if it is found on the system, but installing it is completely optional. If it is not present, XTide will link statically with a bundled copy of Dstr. tide and xttpd can be compiled in the absence of X11 libraries and libXpm. However, you still need the other stuff. Downloading Mandatory: You need the XTide source code distribution, available in bzipped tar format at [15]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#xtide. Mandatory: You need at least one harmonics file. Harmonics files contain the data that are required for XTide to predict tides for different locations. Canonical harmonics files and information on getting others is provided at [16]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles. Optional: If you want to enable XTide to draw coastlines on the map, you will also have to download the World Vector Shoreline (WVS) files, which are available in bzipped tar format at [17]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#WVS. WVS is optional because the minimum recommended hardware (166 MHz Pentium PC) takes 16 seconds to draw shorelines for a hemisphere of the globe. A 3.2 GHz P4 takes less than 1 second. Installing a harmonics file First you need to decompress it. You can use the command-line tool [18]bzip2 as shown below, or you can use [19]7-Zip or any other archiver that supports the bzip2 format. bzip2 -d harmonics-dwf-YYYYMMDD-free.tcd.bz2 Then move the uncompressed TCD file to a permanent location, e.g., /usr/local/share/xtide, and make it world readable: mkdir /usr/local/share/xtide chmod 755 /usr/local/share/xtide chmod 644 harmonics-dwf-YYYYMMDD-free.tcd mv harmonics-dwf-YYYYMMDD-free.tcd /usr/local/share/xtide Installing the World Vector Shoreline files (optional) 1. Create a directory to contain the WVS files. 2. Change your current working directory to that directory. 3. Unpack the tar file in that directory. Under Linux and any other system with GNU tar: tar xvjf wvs.tar.bz2 Elsewhere: bzip2 -dc wvs.tar.bz2 | tar xvf - Unpacking the sources Under Linux and any other system with GNU tar: tar xvjf xtide-2.xyz.tar.bz2 Elsewhere: bzip2 -dc xtide-2.xyz.tar.bz2 | tar xvf - Configuring I. Specify the location of the harmonics file(s) There are two ways to do this. 1. The first way is by setting the environment variable HFILE_PATH. export HFILE_PATH=/usr/local/share/xtide/harmonics.tcd In the event that you have more than one harmonics file that you wish to use simultaneously, list them separated by colons. export HFILE_PATH=/usr/local/share/xtide/harmonics-free.tcd:/usr/local/share/xti de/harmonics-nonfree.tcd Alternately, make sure that they are by themselves in a special directory and specify that directory as the value of HFILE_PATH. If an element of HFILE_PATH is a directory, XTide will attempt to load every file in that directory (so be sure that they are all harmonics files!) If you are installing as root, then it is recommended that you add this definition to a system-wide script such as /etc/profile if you have one. 2. The other way is by creating the file /etc/xtide.conf. The environment variable, if set, takes precedence over the config file. If a configuration file is used, the first line should consist of the value that would be assigned to HFILE_PATH: /usr/local/share/xtide/harmonics-free.tcd:/usr/local/share/xtide/harmonics-nonfr ee.tcd II. Specify the location of the World Vector Shoreline files (optional) Either set the environment variable WVS_DIR to the name of that directory or supply the directory name as the second line of the configuration file /etc/xtide.conf. III. Run the configure script bash-3.1$ ./configure XTide 2.9 is packaged with the popular and portable [20]GNU automake, so all usual GNU tricks should work. Help on configuration options can be found in the CONFIGURE-HELP file or obtained by entering ./configure --help. The web server xttpd is not necessary to use tide or xtide, so most users needn't worry about it. However, if you plan to run it, there is additional configuration at this point. To change the user and/or group under which xttpd tries to run (the defaults are nobody/nobody), provide the options --with-xttpd-user=user and/or --with-xttpd-group=group to configure. If you want to run xttpd but you don't have root, you will have to set these to your own username and the name of some group to which you belong. bash-3.1$ ./configure --with-xttpd-user=xttpd --with-xttpd-group==scarydæmons You can also set the webmaster address for xttpd this way. bash-3.1$ ./configure --with-webmaster="[email protected]" IV. Other optional and alternative configurables --enable-time-workaround Work around Y2038 problem; disable time zones. See [21]Appendix A -- Historical predictions and Y2038 compliance. --enable-gnu-attributes Use with g++ -Wall -Wextra to make warnings smarter. --enable-semicolon-pathsep Use ; instead of : to separate names in HFILE_PATH (good idea if they begin with C:\) --enable-local-files Locate xtide.conf, .xtide.xml, and .disableXTidedisclaimer files in current working directory You can change the compile-time defaults (colors, etc.) set in config.hh if you so choose. However, the easiest way to set all of those things is with the [22]control panel in the interactive XTide program. The e-mail address for feedback in xttpd can also be changed by setting the environment variable XTTPD_FEEDBACK, in lieu of the configure option mentioned above. Compiling bash-3.1$ make bash-3.1$ su bash-3.1# make install Special cases Mac OS X XTide version 2.9.5 or newer should compile cleanly and run under Mac OS 10.3.3 or later. If the PNG package is installed via Fink ([23]http://fink.sourceforge.net/), use CPPFLAGS="-I/sw/include" and LDFLAGS="-L/sw/lib" to find the Fink-installed PNG files. A [24]native port to OS X is also available. Sun XTide version 2.10 or newer should work. If compiling with Sun's own compiler, use CXX="CC -fast -library=stlport4" and CPPFLAGS="-I.". Use CPPFLAGS="-I/opt/csw/include" and LDFLAGS="-R/opt/csw/lib/ -L/opt/csw/lib" to find libraries from [25]Blastwave installed under /opt/csw. IRIX Some SGI machines come with a broken make program. Use GNU make. HP-UX Long ago, a user submitted the following flags to get XTide to compile using the aCC compiler under HP-UX. If somebody still uses this platform and the flags are still needed, they can be supplied to configure: bash-3.1$ CXX="aCC" CXXFLAGS="-Wc,-koenig_lookup,on +DAportable" LDFLAGS="-lPW" ./configure It is possible that the latest configuration scripts add all needed flags automatically, but they have not been tested under HP-UX. Don't have X11 If you don't have any version of X11 installed and just want to compile xttpd or tide, generate a Makefile using ./configure and then type 'make xttpd' or 'make tide'. You will probably need to install the binaries by hand. CPU-bound platform If running on the minimum recommended hardware (166 MHz Pentium PC) it is advisable to forego installing the [26]World Vector Shoreline database. If a true color display is present, graph drawing can be sped up enormously by turning off anti-aliasing (see [27]settings, XTide*antialias). Cygwin XTide can be compiled and run using [28]Cygwin, which is an emulated Unix environment for Windows that is free for typical non-commercial users. The Cygwin distribution and its full license terms are available from [29]http://www.cygwin.com/. Cygwin packages are all versioned separately, so there is no baseline "Cygwin version" against which to test XTide. Testing was most recently performed with XTide 2.9.2 using the collection of packages that was current as of 2007-03-31. As of then, the quirks apparent after brief testing were as follows. 1. If only building certain of the programs, you must type (e.g.) 'make tide.exe' instead of 'make tide'. 'make tide' causes the automake-generated makefile to do something silly. 2. Graph drawing in the interactive interface is an order of magnitude slower. The slowdown can be mitigated by turning off anti-aliasing (see [30]settings, XTide*antialias). 3. When you drag a window around, fine-grained exposure events for any overlapped windows are queued but not delivered until you drop it. The resulting redraw behavior is suboptimal. 4. When you resize a graph window, instead of delivering one ConfigureNotify event, Cygwin delivers a huge pile forming a continuum between the old size and the new one.^[31]1 This is worse than suboptimal as it can take a long time to resize the graph that many times. Once again, the slowdown can be mitigated by turning off anti-aliasing (see [32]settings, XTide*antialias). Cygwin used to have worse problems than that, so it is highly advisable to update your installation before compiling XTide. Visual C++ Express Edition A native Windows binary for the command-line client tide can be built using Visual C++ Express Edition (either 2005 or 2008). However, you will still need a [33]Cygwin environment to run the build process. GCC is not required, but you'll need the bash shell, GNU make, etc. Visual C++ ignores most of the standard command-line switches that the build process tries to use. These instructions include a minimal set of workarounds so that tide will compile anyway. However, because of the basic incompatibilities, you will still get a lot of warnings. Before attempting to run configure or make, the environment variables PATH, INCLUDE, and LIB must be set to cover (A) the Visual C++ environment itself and (B) your installations of [34]libpng, [35]zlib and [36]libtcd native Windows libraries. To set variables for Visual C++, Visual C++ provides a batch file called vsvars32.bat that can be found somewhere in the Visual C++ program folder (e.g., C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\Common7\Tools\vsvars32.bat). To get these settings into the Cygwin environment, follow these three steps: 1. Start a Command Prompt (Start->Accessories->Command Prompt or run cmd.exe). 2. At the command prompt, invoke vsvars32.bat (use Search to find it if necessary). 3. At the command prompt, invoke cygwin.bat (use Search to find it if necessary). At that point you should have a bash prompt, and Visual C++ should work. You can add the directories for your [37]libpng, [38]zlib and [39]libtcd library installations using bash commands, e.g., export LIB="${LIB};C:\\FunkyLibs\\lib" export INCLUDE="${INCLUDE};C:\\FunkyLibs\\include" Having done that, run the configure script like this: bash-3.1$ ./configure CC=cl CXX=cl LD=cl CPP="cl /E" LDFLAGS="zdll.lib libpng.li b libtcd.lib" --enable-semicolon-pathsep --enable-local-files Depending on how you compiled your [40]libpng, [41]zlib and [42]libtcd libraries, the specific file names to be listed in LDFLAGS may be different. If you get a pop-up saying that "conftest.exe has encountered a problem," keep clicking on "Don't Send" until configuration proceeds. Then run 'make tide.exe'. You will get a lot of warnings. The resulting executable might not work from the Cygwin bash prompt but it should work when run from a Windows command prompt (DOS box). In accordance with the selected configure options, the following behaviors will differ from the default Unix behaviors: * File names in the environment variable HFILE_PATH or the configuration file xtide.conf should be separated by semicolons instead of colons. * The file xtide.conf (and any other configuration files that you use) should go in the current working directory. So for example you could put the following in an xtide.conf file in the current working directory: C:\Documents and Settings\Mumble\Foo\harmonics-free.tcd;C:\Documents and Setting s\Mumble\Foo\harmonics-nonfree.tcd Troubleshooting Q: Trying to compile tide using Visual C++, the configure script complains that it can't find a library, and the following error messages appear in config.log. Alternately, these errors can occur when linking tide.exe. MSVCRT.lib(MSVCR80.dll) : error LNK2005: _malloc already defined in LIBCMT.lib(m alloc.obj) MSVCRT.lib(MSVCR80.dll) : error LNK2005: _free already defined in LIBCMT.lib(fre e.obj) LINK : warning LNK4098: defaultlib 'MSVCRT' conflicts with use of other libs; us e /NODEFAULTLIB:library conftest.exe : fatal error LNK1169: one or more multiply defined symbols found A: These errors occur when libraries are compiled with conflicting settings of the Visual C++ compiler switches /MT, /MD and /LD. Try recompiling the libraries without using any such switches. Q: tide.exe compiles and runs with Visual C++ 2003, but non-ASCII characters (degrees symbol, accented characters, etc.) are not output correctly. A: This is why Visual C++ 2003 is unsupported. The function that is needed to select a codeset other than the default MS-DOS legacy codeset does not work. Use 2005 or 2008 instead. Q: Trying to compile XTide 2.9.4 or earlier on a Mac or Windows file system, the configure script crashes immediately. A: This is fixed in XTide 2.9.5. XTide 2.9.4 and earlier did not anticipate case-insensitive file systems.. Q: XTide compiles, but when I try to run it I get an error like error while loading shared libraries: libtcd.so.0: cannot open shared object fil e: No such file or directory A: Somehow, g++ found the shared library but your dynamic linker didn't. To get the dynamic linker to find the library, you can just add its directory to the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH. For example, if you find the library in /usr/local/lib, you would add this to your .bashrc (if using bash): export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib Or you would add this to your .cshrc (if using csh or tcsh): setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH /usr/local/lib Q: Trying to compile XTide using Sun compilers, the following error occurs: "/opt/SUNWspro/prod/include/CC/Cstd/./map", line 251: Error: Multiple declaratio n for std::map<const Dstr, Configurable, std::less<const Dstr>, std::allocator<s td::pair<const Dstr, Configurable>>>::insert(const std::pair<const Dstr, Configu rable>&). "BetterMap.hh", line 28: Where: While specializing "std::map<const Dstr, Con figurable, std::less<const Dstr>, std::allocator<std::pair<const Dstr, Configura ble>>>". "BetterMap.hh", line 28: Where: Specialized in BetterMap<const Dstr, Configu rable>. "Settings.hh", line 30: Where: Specialized in non-template code. A: This problem is resolved by the -library=stlport4 compiler switch. Q: XTide 2.8.3 or earlier compiles, but when run the following error occurs: X Error of failed request: BadName (named color or font does not exist) Major opcode of failed request: 45 (X_OpenFont) A: You need to install the Schumacher fonts. These fonts were reliably present on every X11 installation until 2006, when Linux distributions started breaking fonts out into lots of separate packages in accordance with upstream advice. For what it's worth, XTide 2.9 gives a more helpful error message that tells you which font it could not load. Q: When compiling XTide, I get an error involving xml-something or lex.xml.c. A: For XTide 2.9 or later, do make xmlclean and then try again. For XTide 2.8.3 or earlier, run the script do_xml.sh and then try again. __________________________________________________________________ [43]<- Previous [44]-> Next [45]Contents ^1 The Xlib Programming Manual says the ConfigureNotify event is to be generated when the resize request "actually completes." Unlike Expose events, there is no mechanism for handling consecutive ConfigureNotify events as a batch. This suggests that the Cygwin interpretation is not what was intended. References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/sysreq.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 6. http://fedoraproject.org/ 7. http://www.debian.org/ 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#contrib 9. http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/automake.html 10. ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/libraries/ 11. http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html 12. http://www.zlib.net/ 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#libtcd 14. http://www.flaterco.com/util/index.html 15. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#xtide 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles 17. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#WVS 18. http://www.bzip.org/ 19. http://www.7-zip.org/ 20. http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/automake.html 21. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html 22. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html#cp 23. http://fink.sourceforge.net/ 24. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html#Mac 25. http://www.blastwave.org/ 26. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#WVS 27. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#antialias 28. http://www.cygwin.com/ 29. http://www.cygwin.com/ 30. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#antialias 31. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#fn1 32. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#antialias 33. http://www.cygwin.com/ 34. http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html 35. http://www.zlib.net/ 36. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#libtcd 37. http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html 38. http://www.zlib.net/ 39. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#libtcd 40. http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html 41. http://www.zlib.net/ 42. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#libtcd 43. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/sysreq.html 44. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html 45. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Bridge Street Available ports (and non-ports) for unsupported platforms If a program is derived from XTide source code, I call it a port. If a program contains no XTide source code but can use the same harmonics files that some version of XTide did, I call it a non-port. These are only listed if there is no good port to a given platform. This is not an attempt to track all tide-predicting software, only that with some commonality with XTide. Better software having nothing to do with XTide may be available, but is not listed here. These programs are all maintained by different people. They may be significantly different from XTide 2 as documented here. If you have problems with a port or non-port, please contact the correct maintainer. I cannot help with anything but the canonical Unix distribution. Microsoft Windows You might not need to use a port: * XTide can be compiled and run using [5]Cygwin, which is an emulated Unix environment for Windows that is free for typical non-commercial users. The Cygwin distribution and its full license terms are available from [6]http://www.cygwin.com/. Please refer to the [7]Installation section for special instructions about using XTide under Cygwin. * A native Windows binary for the command-line client tide can be built using Visual C++ 2005 or 2008 Express Edition. However, you still need a [8]Cygwin environment to run the build process. See the [9]Installation section for details, or just use the pre-built binary available under [10]contrib files. If that isn't good enough, read on. The latest native port of the interactive client to Windows, [11]WTides by Phil Thornton, is based on XTide 2 but contains significant enhancements. A "nagware" binary is available for downloading; sources are available for a fee. Caution: There have been several accusations that Mr. Thornton is violating the GNU General Public License and even some ire directed at me for having linked to his site. Firstly, please note that a link is not an endorsement. Secondly, the requirement for "equivalent access" to source code that is in [12]GPLv3 was ambiguous in [13]GPLv2, which was the license in effect at the time that Mr. Thornton built his port. There are two older native ports to Microsoft Windows, distributed with both sources and binary: * The newer older port, "WXTide32" by Mike Hopper, is based on XTide 1.6.2 but includes its own location chooser. It works under Windows 95 or Windows NT. It has a web page at [14]http://www.wxtide32.com/. * The older older port, "WTide16" and "WTide32" by Paul C. Roberts, was originally based on XTide 1.3 but may have been updated somewhat. It works under Windows 3.1 or Windows 95. It can be found at [15]ftp://ftp.demon.co.uk/pub/ibmpc/win3/apps/wtide. Mac You might not need to use a port: XTide should compile cleanly and run under Mac OS 10.3.3 or later. See the [16]installation instructions for details. Lee Ann Rucker has done a nativized port to OS X using [17]Cocoa and Objective-C. It is available at [18]http://homepage.mac.com/lrucker/XTide/. For some earlier versions of Mac OS, there is a GPL'd non-port called Mr. Tides that you can find at [19]http://homepage.mac.com/augusth/MrTides/index.html. Palm Palm [20]Walt Bilofsky has implemented [21]Tide Tool for the Palm Pilot or any other compatible device running PalmOS. Judging from the picture it does produce output comparable to that of XTide. Bilofsky writes: "Tide Tool used to qualify as a port, and still has a modest amount of code from XTide 1.5. But since Jeff Dairiki redid the algorithm to use integer math, I'm not sure how much of it is XTide any more. I guess I'd call it the descendant of a port." Pocket PC / Windows CE PocketPC Dave Buchholz has implemented [22]cTide for the PocketPC 2000 or PocketPC 2002. It's a port of a port ([23]WXTide32), but the screenshots still look a lot like XTide. You can find it at [24]http://airtaxi.net/ctide/. Timex Datalink USB Timex Datalink with DTide Paulo Marques has implemented DTide for the Timex Datalink USB wristwatch. It uses a patched version of WXTide32 on the PC to allow the user to select locations and prepare simplified harmonics data to feed the application on the watch. It can store more than 200 (simplified) locations in the watch's memory. The application on the watch is an assembly language non-port using only integer math. To get the application, download TreeBrowser_vX.zip and Tree Browser Feeders/DTide.zip from the Files > WristApps archive of Yahoo Group [25]timexdatalinkusb. To get the source (TreeBrowser asm and patch against WXTide32), download TreeBrowser_src.zip and DTide_src.zip from the Files > WristApps archive of Yahoo Group [26]timexdatalinkusbdevelop. HP Calculator HP Calculator David MacCuish and Dennis Straley have done a similar-in-spirit non-port for HP48G and HP49G series calculators. As of 2001-11-08, [27]HpTide is still in development, but it now supports a larger number of locations. For current news and status, please see the HpTide web site, [28]http://heygus.2y.net/hptide. __________________________________________________________________ [29]<- Previous [30]-> Next [31]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.cygwin.com/ 6. http://www.cygwin.com/ 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#cygwin 8. http://www.cygwin.com/ 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#VC++ 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#contrib 11. http://www.wtides.com/ 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/disclaimer.html 13. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html 14. http://www.wxtide32.com/ 15. ftp://ftp.demon.co.uk/pub/ibmpc/win3/apps/wtide/ 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#mac 17. http://developer.apple.com/cocoa/ 18. http://homepage.mac.com/lrucker/XTide/ 19. http://homepage.mac.com/augusth/MrTides/index.html 20. http://www.toolworks.com/bilofsky/ 21. http://www.toolworks.com/bilofsky/tidetool/ 22. http://airtaxi.net/ctide/ 23. http://www.wxtide32.com/ 24. http://airtaxi.net/ctide/ 25. http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/timexdatalinkusb/ 26. http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/timexdatalinkusbdevelop/ 27. http://heygus.2y.net/hptide 28. http://heygus.2y.net/hptide 29. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html 30. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 31. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Morning in OC Modes This page provides an overview of the kinds of things that XTide can do. How to do them will be explained in the [5]next section. Graph mode San Francisco graph Graph mode gives you a plot of the water level (or water velocity, in the case of currents) versus time. The times of high and low tide (or max flood and max ebb) are printed across the top. Sunrise and sunset are denoted with different background colors; moonrise, moonset, and moon phases are shown along the bottom. A + mark on the graph indicates the conditions at the time that the graph was generated. For currents, the times of [6]slack water are also shown along the bottom. If necessary, crowding of the bottom caption line can be relieved in several ways (see [7]Advanced usage). San Francisco Current graph Clock mode Clock mode Clock mode is similar to graph mode, but the captions are different and the window is automatically updated once a minute to show the latest conditions. From top to bottom, the window shows the current time, the next high tide (or maximum flood), the predicted height or velocity for the current time (shown with a +), and the next low tide (or maximum ebb). Other events like slack water and moon phases do not appear. Classic analog tide clock If a tide clock is iconified using an ancient window manager like twm, the icon will appear as a classic round tide clock that gives a vague idea of where you are in the tide cycle. Unfortunately, this feature is not accessible at all from newer windows environments that disregard the old icon protocol. Even some of the old window managers had trouble with it; they would crash, or the icon would fail to update. Plain mode Plain text listing of events, no foo-foo. San Francisco, California 37.8067° N, 122.4650° W 2003-02-13 2:17 PM PST Moonrise 2003-02-13 3:25 PM PST -0.32 feet Low Tide 2003-02-13 5:46 PM PST Sunset 2003-02-13 10:49 PM PST 4.64 feet High Tide 2003-02-14 3:05 AM PST 3.16 feet Low Tide 2003-02-14 5:44 AM PST Moonset 2003-02-14 7:01 AM PST Sunrise 2003-02-14 9:02 AM PST 6.27 feet High Tide Calendar mode Calendar mode arranges most of the information available in text mode into a commonly used tabular layout. January 2007 Day High Low High Low High Phase Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Mon 01 3:48 AM EST 0.17 m 9:58 AM EST -0.14 m 5:07 PM EST 0.43 m 7:26 AM EST 4:53 PM EST 2:49 PM EST 5:49 AM EST Tue 02 12:25 AM EST -0.01 m 4:46 AM EST 0.16 m 10:52 AM EST -0.14 m 6:00 PM EST 0.42 m 7:26 AM EST 4:54 PM EST 3:48 PM EST 6:54 AM EST Wed 03 1:15 AM EST -0.01 m 5:40 AM EST 0.17 m 11:45 AM EST -0.14 m 6:50 PM EST 0.41 m Full Moon 7:26 AM EST 4:55 PM EST 4:54 PM EST 7:49 AM EST Thu 04 2:00 AM EST -0.01 m 6:32 AM EST 0.18 m 12:37 PM EST -0.13 m 7:37 PM EST 0.39 m 7:26 AM EST 4:56 PM EST 6:03 PM EST 8:34 AM EST Fri 05 2:42 AM EST -0.00 m 7:20 AM EST 0.19 m 1:28 PM EST -0.12 m 8:21 PM EST 0.37 m 7:26 AM EST 4:57 PM EST 7:10 PM EST 9:09 AM EST Sat 06 3:20 AM EST -0.00 m 8:08 AM EST 0.20 m 2:16 PM EST -0.10 m 9:02 PM EST 0.35 m 7:26 AM EST 4:58 PM EST 8:15 PM EST 9:37 AM EST Sun 07 3:56 AM EST -0.00 m 8:56 AM EST 0.21 m 3:04 PM EST -0.08 m 9:40 PM EST 0.32 m 7:26 AM EST 4:59 PM EST 9:17 PM EST 10:02 AM EST "Alt" calendar mode arranges the information into a traditional weekly calendar layout. Sun 07 Mon 08 Tue 09 Wed 10 Thu 11 Fri 12 Sat 13 Low Tide -0.00 m 3:56 AM EST Sunrise 7:26 AM EST High Tide 0.21 m 8:56 AM EST Moonset 10:02 AM EST Low Tide -0.08 m 3:04 PM EST Sunset 4:59 PM EST Moonrise 9:17 PM EST High Tide 0.32 m 9:40 PM EST Low Tide -0.01 m 4:28 AM EST Sunrise 7:26 AM EST High Tide 0.22 m 9:46 AM EST Moonset 10:23 AM EST Low Tide -0.05 m 3:53 PM EST Sunset 5:00 PM EST High Tide 0.30 m 10:16 PM EST Moonrise 10:17 PM EST Low Tide -0.02 m 4:58 AM EST Sunrise 7:26 AM EST High Tide 0.22 m 10:39 AM EST Moonset 10:43 AM EST Low Tide -0.01 m 4:46 PM EST Sunset 5:00 PM EST High Tide 0.27 m 10:51 PM EST Moonrise 11:16 PM EST Low Tide -0.04 m 5:28 AM EST Sunrise 7:25 AM EST Moonset 11:03 AM EST High Tide 0.24 m 11:35 AM EST Sunset 5:01 PM EST Low Tide 0.03 m 5:49 PM EST High Tide 0.24 m 11:27 PM EST Moonrise 12:14 AM EST Low Tide -0.06 m 6:00 AM EST Sunrise 7:25 AM EST Last Quarter 7:45 AM EST Moonset 11:23 AM EST High Tide 0.25 m 12:32 PM EST Sunset 5:02 PM EST Low Tide 0.05 m 7:01 PM EST High Tide 0.21 m 12:07 AM EST Moonrise 1:15 AM EST Low Tide -0.08 m 6:35 AM EST Sunrise 7:25 AM EST Moonset 11:46 AM EST High Tide 0.28 m 1:29 PM EST Sunset 5:04 PM EST Low Tide 0.06 m 8:18 PM EST High Tide 0.18 m 12:52 AM EST Moonrise 2:17 AM EST Low Tide -0.09 m 7:15 AM EST Sunrise 7:25 AM EST Moonset 12:14 PM EST High Tide 0.30 m 2:22 PM EST Sunset 5:05 PM EST Low Tide 0.06 m 9:30 PM EST Calendar mode is not available from the interactive client. Banner mode Banner mode is a specialization of graph mode for output on old tractor feed dot matrix or line printers that use continuous reams of paper. Also useful as a workaround if your printing application does stupid things with color graphs. The graph is turned sideways and the aspect ratio is adjusted for Pica type. This mode is only available in the command line client. San Francisco, San Francisco Bay, California 37.8067° N, 122.4650° W -11****-****-****-*********************** *******3****2****1****0*****1****2****3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ******* **** **** **** ***** **** ** -12****f****f****f****f*****f****f f f f f f f f *******t****t****t****t*****t** t t t t t t t t ***************************** **************************+ | | | | | | | | | -1************************ | | | | | | | | | ****Moonrise************ | | | | | | | | | -***1:55 PM PST******** | | | | | | | | | -2********************* | | | | | | | | | **********************| | | | | | | | | 2007-02-27 **********************| | | | | | | | | 2:56 PM PST -3********************| | | | | | | | | | **********************| | | | | | | | | | *********************** | | | | | | | | | -4********************* | | | | | | | | | ************************ | | | | | | | | | ************************* | | | | | | | | | -5************************* | | | | | | | | | ****************************| | | | | | | | | ****************************** | | | | | | | | -6******************************·|····|····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· **********************************····|····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· ***********************************···|····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· -7***********************************·|····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· ***************************************····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· *****************************************··|····|····|····|·····|····|········· -8*****************************************|····|····|····|·····|····|········· *********************************************···|····|····|·····|····|········· **********************************************··|····|····|·····|····|········· -9*********************************************·|····|····|·····|····|········· ************************************************|····|····|·····|····|········· *************************************************····|····|·····|····2007-02-27 -10**********************************************····|····|·····|··10:06 PM PST *************************************************····|····|·····|····|········· ************************************************|····|····|·····|····|········· -11*********************************************|····|····|·····|····|········· ***********************************************·|····|····|·····|····|········· -*********************************************··|····|····|·····|····|········· -12******************************************···|····|····|·····|····|········· -******************************************|····|····|····|·····|····|········· ******************************************·|····|····|····|·····|····|········· -1***************************************··|····|····|····|·····|····|········· ****************************************···|····|····|····|·····|····|········· ***************************************····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· -2*************************************····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· **************************************|····|····|····|····|·····|····2007-02-28 **************************************|····|····|····|····|·····|···2:45 AM PST -3************************************|····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· **************************************|····|····|····|····|·····|····|········· Stats mode Stats mode is mainly for finding the highest high tide and lowest low tide within some period of time. However, it also provides an estimation of the Mean Lower Low Water datum based on the generated predictions. In cases where an authoritative benchmark for a station is not available, this can be used to derive a reasonable approximation. If the datum for the station has already been set to MLLW (as it should have been, for all U.S. stations) then the estimated value should be close to zero. Stats mode is only available in the command line client. Bar Harbor, Frenchman Bay, Maine 44.3917° N, 68.2050° W Mathematical upper bound: 15.21 feet Mathematical lower bound: -3.87 feet Mathematical mean, assuming symmetry: 5.67 feet Searched interval from 2007-01-01 12:00 AM EST to 2008-01-01 12:00 AM EST Maximum was 13.44 feet at 2007-11-25 10:31 AM EST Minimum was -2.05 feet at 2007-04-18 5:53 AM EDT Mean of maxima and minima was 5.67 feet Estimated MLLW: 0.15 feet CPU time used: 0.167974 s Raw mode Raw mode is for getting machine-readable output that can be fed into other Unix programs. The first column is a Unix time_t timestamp (seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00Z); the second column is tide heights in whatever units were selected for the location. 896624777 0.180580 896628377 1.271889 896631977 3.463100 896635577 6.084148 896639177 8.402840 896642777 9.943272 896646377 10.421064 896649977 9.672793 896653577 7.856022 896657177 5.543402 896660777 3.413487 896664377 1.926805 896667977 1.371479 Medium rare mode Medium rare mode is just like raw mode except that the timestamps are "cooked" according to the date and time format settings that are in effect. 2002-02-06 4:56 PM EST 2.054437 2002-02-06 5:56 PM EST 1.573781 2002-02-06 6:56 PM EST 1.086896 2002-02-06 7:56 PM EST 0.656111 2002-02-06 8:56 PM EST 0.224729 2002-02-06 9:56 PM EST -0.161049 2002-02-06 10:56 PM EST -0.265521 2002-02-06 11:56 PM EST 0.077530 List mode List mode does not provide tide predictions at all. It is simply a way to get the list of supported locations from the command line client. The 'Type' column shows Ref for reference stations and Sub for subordinate stations. [8]You should care about the difference. Location Type Coordinates 0.8 n.mi. above entrance, Alloway Creek, New Jersey Sub 39.4967° N, 75.5167° W 130th Street, Hudson River, New York Sub 40.8167° N, 73.9667° W 2.5 miles above mouth, Little Satilla River, Georgia Sub 31.0583° N, 81.4933° W 2.5 n.mi. above entrance, Alloway Creek, New Jersey Sub 39.5050° N, 75.4833° W 3 miles above A1A highway bridge, Loxahatchee River, Florida Sub 26.9700° N, 80.1267° W 37th Avenue, Long Island City, East River, New York, New York Sub 40.7617° N, 73.9467° W About mode About mode does not provide tide predictions either. Instead, it shows the metadata for a station ("About this station"). Name Eastport, Passamaquoddy Bay, ME In file harmonics-dwf-2004-10-18-v2.tcd Station ID context NOS Station ID 8410140 Date imported 2004-09-01 Coordinates 44.9033° N, 66.9850° W Country U.S.A. Time zone :America/New_York Source http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/ Restriction Public domain Comments Harmonic constants from web snapshot taken 2004-08-26 Datum from benchmark sheet, publication date 2003-04-21 Type Reference station, tide Meridian 0:00 Datum Mean Lower Low Water Native units meters Confidence 10 Formats XTide can render output in seven different formats: X-windows, HTML, LaTeX, iCalendar, PNG, CSV, or text. The X-windows format is implicit in the interactive client and can't be selected explicitly. The others can be selected in the non-interactive client and are invoked automatically by the the interactive and web clients (e.g., when you save output to a file). The currently supported combinations of mode and format are as follows: Mode Legal forms about text, HTML, X-windows banner text calendar text, HTML, LaTeX, iCalendar, CSV alt. calendar text, HTML, LaTeX clock text, PNG, X-windows graph text, PNG, X-windows list text, HTML plain text, X-windows, CSV raw text, X-windows, CSV medium rare text, X-windows, CSV stats text The HTML and PNG formats are adequately demonstrated by the examples above in the Modes section. Text format Several of the preceding examples, like plain mode, were in text format. Here is an example of graph mode using the text format: ·················San Francisco, San Francisco Bay, California ······ -12·····2003-02-13·············2003-02-13 2003-02-13 ······ PST····2:18 AM PST············8:12 AM PST 3:25 PM PST ······ ································ ······ ································ ······ ································ ······ ································ ······ 2 m·--------------------------------------------------------------------------- ·····························************* ······ ··························****************** ······ ***···················************************ ······ **********·······******************************* ······ 1 m***********************************************----------------------------- **************************************************** ·····* ****************************************************** ···*** ******************************************************** ****** ********************************************************** ********* 0 m**************************************************************************** ******************************************************************************* ******************************************************************************* ********************Moonset****************************Moonrise**************** ******************4:51 AM PST*************************2:17 PM PST************** 1**12***1***2***3**4***5***6***7***8***9*10**11**12***1***2***3***4**5***6***7* |**|||**|***|***|**|***|***|***|***|***|**|***|***|***|***||**|***|**|***|***|* Calendar mode is kind of cramped in text format if you use all default settings, but it can be made to work by using a compact time format, setting a wider TTY width, and/or turning off sun and moon information. These are [9]settings that you can change with the [10]control panel or [11]command-line switches. See [12]Appendix C for related discussion. Bar Harbor, Frenchman Bay, Maine 44.3917° N, 68.2050° W May 2006 Day High Low High Low High Phase Sunris Sunset Moonri Moonse Mon 01 01:42 08:10 14:23 20:23 05:23 19:36 07:38 Tue 02 02:32 09:02 15:16 21:16 05:22 19:37 08:38 00:32 Wed 03 03:25 09:56 16:10 22:12 05:20 19:39 09:44 01:17 Thu 04 04:21 10:52 17:07 23:12 05:19 19:40 10:51 01:52 Fri 05 05:20 11:49 18:05 First 05:18 19:41 11:58 02:19 Sat 06 00:13 06:20 12:45 19:01 05:16 19:42 13:03 02:40 Sun 07 01:11 07:18 13:38 19:52 05:15 19:44 14:07 02:59 Mon 08 02:06 08:12 14:26 20:39 05:14 19:45 15:10 03:15 Tue 09 02:55 09:01 15:10 21:21 05:12 19:46 16:14 03:31 Wed 10 03:39 09:46 15:51 21:59 05:11 19:47 17:19 03:47 Thu 11 04:21 10:27 16:28 22:36 05:10 19:48 18:27 04:05 Fri 12 04:59 11:06 17:05 23:11 05:09 19:49 19:38 04:26 Sat 13 05:36 11:45 17:41 23:48 Full M 05:07 19:51 20:51 04:52 Sun 14 06:15 12:24 18:19 05:06 19:52 22:02 05:26 Mon 15 00:26 06:55 13:05 18:59 05:05 19:53 23:07 06:11 Tue 16 01:08 07:38 13:49 19:44 05:04 19:54 07:08 Wed 17 01:55 08:25 14:38 20:35 05:03 19:55 00:02 08:17 Thu 18 02:46 09:18 15:32 21:32 05:02 19:56 00:45 09:34 Fri 19 03:43 10:14 16:30 22:34 05:01 19:57 01:19 10:53 Sat 20 04:45 11:13 17:30 23:40 Last Q 05:00 19:58 01:46 12:12 Sun 21 05:50 12:14 18:31 04:59 19:59 02:08 13:30 Mon 22 00:46 06:56 13:14 19:31 04:58 20:00 02:29 14:47 Tue 23 01:50 07:59 14:12 20:27 04:57 20:01 02:49 16:05 Wed 24 02:49 08:59 15:07 21:21 04:56 20:02 03:10 17:23 Thu 25 03:45 09:56 15:59 22:12 04:56 20:03 03:34 18:43 Fri 26 04:38 10:49 16:49 23:00 04:55 20:04 04:03 20:01 Sat 27 05:28 11:39 17:38 23:48 New Mo 04:54 20:05 04:40 21:15 Sun 28 06:16 12:27 18:25 04:53 20:06 05:26 22:18 Mon 29 00:34 07:03 13:15 19:13 04:53 20:07 06:23 23:09 Tue 30 01:21 07:51 14:03 20:01 04:52 20:08 07:27 23:49 Wed 31 02:09 08:38 14:51 20:50 04:52 20:09 08:35 LaTeX format Running LaTeX formatted output through pdflatex yields a PDF that looks approximately [13]like this. See [14]Appendix C for hints on obtaining the best results. iCalendar format The iCalendar format yields an .ics file that can be imported by standards-compliant calendar tools to put tide events on your schedule. It is only useful in calendar mode. CSV format CSV stands for Comma-Separated Values, a.k.a. comma-delimited. This rigid format is useful for importing XTide output into database and spreadsheet applications with fixed columns. Commas that are part of field values are replaced by the pipe character (|). Washington| D.C.,2004-03-04,3:40 PM EST,,Moonrise Washington| D.C.,2004-03-04,6:04 PM EST,,Sunset Washington| D.C.,2004-03-04,6:23 PM EST,2.75 ft,High Tide Washington| D.C.,2004-03-05,1:30 AM EST,0.21 ft,Low Tide In calendar mode, the columns in CSV format are: location name, date, five reps of (max time, max value), five reps of (min time, min value), ten reps of slack time, sunrise, sunset, moonrise, moonset. The number of columns allocated is controlled by the compile-time constants numMaxMin and numRiseSet in CalendarFormC.cc. Events exceeding the number of columns available are discarded with a warning. Moon phases and mark level crossings are just discarded. The use of compile-time constants instead of dynamically adjusted values is intentional, since whatever application is reading the CSV output needs the interpretation of columns to be predictable. However, the default configuration allowing one column for rise and set events is not always adequate. Yes! You can have two sunsets in one day, and you don't even need Daylight Savings Time to do it: Isla Neny, Antarctica 68.2000° S, 67.0000° W 2001-01-24 12:03 AM ARST Sunset 2001-01-24 3:17 AM ARST Sunrise 2001-01-24 11:57 PM ARST Sunset __________________________________________________________________ [15]<- Previous [16]-> Next [17]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/interactive.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/interactive.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#240 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html#crowding 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#refsub 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html#cp 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/BarHarbor.pdf 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 15. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/interactive.html 17. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Pemaquid bell Using the interactive interface The first time you run xtide, you will get a license and disclaimer window. Read it, then click "Don't show this again" and dismiss it. When XTide is finished indexing the harmonics files you will get a location chooser. The location chooser initially shows a hemisphere of the globe. The location list enumerates every tide station that is plotted on the map. Buttons with labels such as "A-S" and "S-Z" will appear on the location list window if the list is too long to display all at once; use these buttons to switch between the different pieces of the list. (If you do not get outlines of coastlines, please refer to the [5]installation section regarding World Vector Shoreline files.) Globe window Location list window You can change to a flat map projection that shows the entire world at once by clicking on Flat. You can make this your default location chooser if desired (see the later section [6]Customizing XTide). Map window You can zoom in on an area by clicking on the map with the left mouse button; zooming out is accomplished with the button at the bottom of the map window. Your view can be shifted left, right, up, or down using the arrow keys on the keyboard. The location list updates to contain only those tide stations that are visible. You can cause the location list to include all available locations at once by clicking on List All. This will also bring up locations whose coordinates are unknown. Instead of zooming, you can narrow the list to a small area by clicking on that area with the right mouse button. A circle will be drawn on the map indicating the area selected: Map window with circle When you are ready to choose a location, you can either click on it in the location list or zoom down to it on the map and click on the appropriate red dot with the middle mouse button. A tide graph for the selected location will then pop up. Graph window The Backward and Forward buttons allow you to move forward or backward in time by a small amount. Pull down the Options menu to gain access to the Set Time option, which allows arbitrarily large adjustments. The Options menu also provides these other options: Option Function Save Export the contents of the window to a PNG or text file, as appropriate. (In raw and medium rare modes, you are given the opportunity to adjust the start and end times for the output.) Set Mark See [7]next section. Convert ft<->m Convert units to the preferred system. Set Aspect See [8]next section. Set Step See [9]next section. New Graph Window Pop up a graph mode window for the location. New Plain Mode Window Pop up a plain mode window for the location. New Raw Mode Window Pop up a raw mode window for the location. New Medium Rare Mode Window Pop up a medium rare mode window for the location. New Clock Window Pop up a clock mode window for the location. About This Station Show station metadata. New Location Chooser Pop up a new location chooser. Control Panel See [10]next section. Without getting into the complicated options, you can navigate from the location chooser to a graph window to other modes for the same location as you see fit. Use the Dismiss buttons to get rid of windows that you are through with. Text window Text windows provide Forward and Backward buttons for scrolling forward and backward in time, and they also provide the same Options menu that is available on graph windows. Note: Starting with XTide 2.9, text windows support mouse wheel scrolling provided that the mouse wheel has been mapped to buttons 4 and 5. This mapping is typically configured in xorg.conf (Option "ZAxisMapping" "4 5"). Clock window Clock window with buttons By default, clock windows first appear with no buttons whatsoever, which is how you want them if you are going to leave them running on your desktop. However, you can make the buttons appear and disappear by clicking anywhere on the graph inside of the clock window. The Options menu is again the same. Forward and Backward buttons are not provided for the obvious reason. __________________________________________________________________ [11]<- Previous [12]-> Next [13]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#WVS 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]The tide cometh, Provincetown, MA Advanced usage Mark level The "mark level" is a specific tidal height or current velocity of your choosing. When you set a mark level for a location, the times at which the tide level crosses the mark level will be displayed at the bottom of graphs and included in plain listings and calendars. This option is useful to determine the times when the tide will be low enough to expose something that is submerged at high tide or high enough to provide a desired depth. You can set a mark level by selecting the Set Mark option on the Options menu. In the following example, a mark level of 1 m has been applied to Bar Harbor predictions to find the approximate time at which one can walk to Bar Island without getting one's feet wet. Bar Harbor with mark level Mark level crossings are not displayed in clock mode windows due to lack of space. Aspect The "aspect" is a number that controls how stretched out or scrunched up a graph is. If timestamps are overlapping one another on a tide graph and becoming unreadable, you can increase the aspect to make them farther apart. An aspect of 1.0 is "normal;" an aspect of 2.0 stretches the graph by a factor of 2; an aspect of 0.5 does the opposite, compressing the graph. You can change the aspect by selecting the Set Aspect option on the Options menu. Step In raw and medium rare modes, tide levels are normally listed with an increment of one hour for successive lines of output. You can adjust this increment using the Set Step option. The control panel The control panel is the easiest way to customize the many user-serviceable [5]settings of XTide. It's not pretty, but it gets the job done. XTide control panel Colors can be changed to any of the "standard" X-windows color names or to 24-bit RGB specifications of the form rgb:hh/hh/hh by typing the new colors in the dialog boxes. Other settings have pull-down choice menus or counting buttons to help you along. Least user-friendly, but most powerful, are the timestamp formats. In return for reading the Unix man page for the strftime library function, you are empowered to change the timestamp formats to practically anything you could ever need. You can choose Apply to see how the settings look in the current session only, or Save to make the settings permanent. They will be saved in the file ~/.xtide.xml. Example 1: Three ways to fix crowding of the bottom caption line Original graph with crowded caption line: San Francisco Current graph With aspect 1.25 (to stretch out the graph): San Francisco Current graph With time format "%H:%M" (to eliminate AM/PM and time zone verbiage): San Francisco Current graph With event mask "Mm" (to filter out moonrise and moonset events): San Francisco Current graph Example 2: Two ways to fix missing depth axis This station has such a small tidal range that the only label on the depth axis is zero meters, which is kind of useless: Missing depth example With option to label tenths of units enabled: Missing depth example With preferred units set to feet: Missing depth example Command line options The interactive client supports all of the command line switches related to [6]settings which are described in a later section. In addition, it supports the following. -b "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM" With -l, specify the begin (start) time for predictions using the ISO 8601 compliant format YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM, where hours range from 00 to 23. The timestamp is in the local time zone for the location, or in UTC if the [7]-z setting is engaged. If clock mode is selected or if no -b is supplied, the current time will be used. (Note [8]Quirk #1) -display "X display" Specify the X display, e.g. "quake:0.0". This overrides the DISPLAY environment variable. -fn "font" Specify the font to use for text windows, buttons, and labels. This will not affect the font used in tide graphs and other cramped spaces, which is not a user-selectable parameter. -geometry "±XOFF±YOFF" Specify a position for the window corresponding to the first use of -l. (Width and height are controlled by different [9]settings.) -l "Location Name" Specify a location for tide predictions. When given to the interactive client, this causes it to start a tide clock for the specified location instead of launching a location chooser on startup. This is useful for starting a tide clock automatically when you log on. Multiple uses of -l will result in multiple tide clocks. -m a|g|k|m|p|r With -l, specify mode to be about, graph, clock, medium rare, plain, or raw. -v Print version string and exit. Please note that versions marked as DEVELOPMENT versions are not really versioned; they are work in progress and will change without warning. If you use the same location a lot, you can set the environment variable XTIDE_DEFAULT_LOCATION to its name instead of using -l every time. Other switches that are supported by the [10]non-interactive interface are not supported by the interactive interface and will be ignored. The arguments to -display, -fn, and -geometry cannot be concatenated with the switches (see [11]Quirk #5). _________________________________________________________________________ [12]<- Previous [13]-> Next [14]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/interactive.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/tty.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#zulu 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/tty.html 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/interactive.html 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/tty.html 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Tide closes in Using the command line interface The command line interface, tide, supports a number of [5]modes that cannot be accessed with the interactive client. It can run without X-windows, and unlike the interactive client, it can easily be invoked from shell scripts. The minimal usage is simply to specify a location with -l. The default mode is plain, and the default format is text: $ tide -l "anchorage, al" Anchorage, Alaska 61.2383° N, 149.8883° W 2003-02-12 7:27 AM AKST Moonset 2003-02-12 8:50 AM AKST Sunrise 2003-02-12 10:19 AM AKST 10.72 feet Low Tide 2003-02-12 11:34 AM AKST Moonrise 2003-02-12 3:42 PM AKST 24.41 feet High Tide 2003-02-12 5:37 PM AKST Sunset 2003-02-12 11:00 PM AKST 1.95 feet Low Tide 2003-02-13 5:31 AM AKST 25.51 feet High Tide 2003-02-13 8:29 AM AKST Moonset If you use the same location a lot, you can set the environment variable XTIDE_DEFAULT_LOCATION to its name instead of using -l every time. The non-interactive client supports all of the command line switches related to [6]settings which are described in a later section. In addition, it supports the following. -b "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM" Specify the begin (start) time for predictions using the ISO 8601 compliant format YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM, where hours range from 00 to 23. The timestamp is in the local time zone for the location, or in UTC if the [7]-z setting is engaged. If clock mode is selected or if no -b is supplied, the current time will be used. (Note [8]Quirk #1) -e "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM" Specify the end (stop) time for predictions in banner, calendar, alt. calendar, medium rare, plain, raw, or stats mode. Does not apply in graph and clock modes: the effective end time for graph and clock modes is entirely determined by the start time (-b), the width ([9]-cw, [10]-gw or [11]-tw), and the aspect ([12]-ga). The format and time zone are the same as for -b. If no -e is supplied, the end time will be set to four days after the begin time. (Note [13]Quirk #2) When it matters, -b and -e ranges mean specifically "all t such that b <= t < e." -f c|h|i|l|p|t Specify the output format as CSV, HTML, iCalendar, LaTeX, PNG, or text. See the [14]modes page for legal modes and formats. The default is text. -l "Location Name" Specify a location for tide predictions. You can use the -l switch more than once if you want to specify multiple locations. -m a|b|c|C|g|k|l|m|p|r|s Specify mode to be about, banner, calendar, alt. calendar, graph, clock, list, medium rare, plain, raw, or stats. See the [15]modes page for legal modes and formats. The default is plain. -ml [-]N.NN(ft|m|kt) Specify the mark level to be used in predictions. The predictions will include the times when the tide level crosses the mark. Not supported in clock mode. Example usage: -ml -0.25ft -o "filename" Redirect output to the specified file (appends). -s "HH:MM" Specify the step interval, in hours and minutes, for raw or medium rare mode predictions. The default is one hour. -v Print version string and exit. Please note that versions marked as DEVELOPMENT versions are not really versioned; they are work in progress and will change without warning. The interactive interface does not support all of these switches and options. For example, you can't pop up a graph with a mark line on it by saying xtide -m g -ml 1ft. Refer to the [16]previous page for a list of the options supported by the interactive interface. Starting with version 2.6, XTide understands the following syntactic shortcuts: * Arguments can be concatenated with their switches. * A yes/no switch that omits its argument implies "y". * Using +xx instead of -xx for a yes/no switch inverts the argument (so if the argument is omitted, "n" is implied). Some shorthand forms are ambiguous. For example, -lw5 could mean "set the line width to 5" (-lw 5) or it could mean "load the location named w5" (-l w5). If this happens, you will get an error and will need to spell out what you meant. __________________________________________________________________ [17]<- Previous [18]-> Next [19]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xttpd.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#zulu 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#cwidth 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#gwidth 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#ttywidth 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#gaspect 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 15. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html#intopts 17. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html 18. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xttpd.html 19. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Nobska Light, Cape Cod, MA, 1998-06-17 Running the web server xttpd is an XTide web server. It provides web-based access to XTide's tide predictions by allowing a web browser to speak directly to the XTide program in HTTP. xttpd can replace httpd or it can co-exist with one. Usage: xttpd [port] [...other xtide [5]settings switches...]. xttpd forks itself into the background and uses the syslog facility for all logging. Hosts connecting to xttpd are logged with priority INFO. If you run xttpd with no command line arguments, it will assume that it is replacing httpd and try to bind port 80. If you want it to co-exist with an existing server, or if you do not have privilege to get port 80, give it the port number as the first command line argument: % xttpd 8080 You will then need to link it up as http://www.wherever.org:8080/ instead of just http://www.wherever.org/, but otherwise, no damage done. Similarly, if you wish to bind a specific address, you can specify that as the first argument: % xttpd 127.0.0.2 If you need to specify both address and port number, separate the two with a slash, like this: % xttpd 127.0.0.2/8080 Once the port is established, xttpd will try to set its UID and GID to values that were specified at compile time. If it is unable to do this, it will log failure messages to syslog and then exit. Consequently, if it is to be started by someone other than root, that user's UID and GID must be configured at compile time. Instructions for doing this are available at [6]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#xttpd. You can set the address for feedback either at compile time as described in the installation instructions or with the environment variable XTTPD_FEEDBACK. xttpd will produce a small number of zombie processes during normal operation. They are cleaned up after each new connection, so there is no cause for concern. Since a web site is supposed to be self-explanatory, the process of using xttpd will not be documented here. If there are problems with people not being able to figure out how to use it, these should be reported to me as bugs, and the explanatory text in the web server will be updated accordingly. Troubleshooting Q: When I run xttpd, it exits immediately with no errors to tell me what went wrong. A: When executed, xttpd immediately disassociates itself from your terminal and starts logging all diagnostics to syslog. So look in your system logs. You will find these someplace like /var/log or /var/adm/log. _________________________________________________________________________ [7]<- Previous [8]-> Next [9]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/tty.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#xttpd 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/tty.html 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Girl feeding gulls Customizing XTide XTide is customized by changing its settings. The most convenient way to do this is generally through the control panel that is documented in a [5]previous section. However, you can also change these settings in config.hh, in your X resources database, or on the command line. The order of precedence, from least significant to most significant, is: 1. config.hh 2. Xdefaults (X resources) 3. ~/.xtide.xml (control panel) 4. command line Note that only xtide (not xttpd or tide) reads Xdefaults. Canonically, all command line settings take the form -xx value, with a space between the switch and the supplied value. The yes-or-no settings get a value of "y" or "n". However, starting with version 2.6, XTide understands the following syntactic shortcuts: * Arguments can be concatenated with their switches. * A yes/no switch that omits its argument implies "y". * Using +xx instead of -xx for a yes/no switch inverts the argument (so if the argument is omitted, "n" is implied). Some shorthand forms are ambiguous. For example, -lw5 could mean "set the line width to 5" (-lw 5) or it could mean "load the location named w5" (-l w5). If this happens, you will get an error and will need to spell out what you meant. XTide*antialias Anti-alias tide graphs on true color displays? (y/n) Default: y Command line: -aa config.hh: antialias .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions aa="y"/> XTide*background Background color for text windows and location chooser. Default: white Command line: -bg config.hh: bgdefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions bg="white"/> XTide*buttoncolor Background color of buttons. Default: gray80 Command line: -bc config.hh: buttondefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions bc="gray80"/> XTide*cbuttons Create tide clocks with buttons? (y/n) Default: n Command line: -cb config.hh: cbuttons .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions cb="n"/> XTide*cwidth Initial width for tide clocks. Note: Initial clock height is the same as initial graph height (XTide*gheight). Default: 84 Command line: -cw config.hh: defcwidth .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions cw="84"/> XTide*datefmt Strftime style format string for printing dates. Default: %Y-%m-%d Command line: -df config.hh: datefmt .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions df="%Y-%m-%d"/> XTide*datumcolor Color of datum line in tide graphs. [[6]*] Default: white Command line: -Dc config.hh: datumdefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions Dc="white"/> XTide*daycolor Daytime background color in tide graphs. Default: SkyBlue Command line: -dc config.hh: daydefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions dc="SkyBlue"/> XTide*ebbcolor Foreground in tide graphs during outgoing tide. Default: SeaGreen Command line: -ec config.hh: ebbdefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions ec="SeaGreen"/> XTide*eventmask Events to suppress (p = phase of moon, S = sunrise, s = sunset, M = moonrise, m = moonset), or x to suppress none. E.g, to suppress all sun and moon events, set eventmask to the value pSsMm. Default: x Command line: -em config.hh: eventmask .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions em="x"/> XTide*extralines Draw datum and middle-level lines in tide graphs? (y/n) [[7]*] Default: n Command line: -el config.hh: extralines .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions el="n"/> XTide*flatearth Prefer flat map to round globe location chooser? (y/n) Default: n Command line: -fe config.hh: flatearth .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions fe="n"/> XTide*floodcolor Foreground in tide graphs during incoming tide. Default: Blue Command line: -fc config.hh: flooddefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions fc="Blue"/> XTide*font Font used for button labels and verbiage in text windows. Default: as incoming from X11 Command line: -fn config.hh: N/A .xtide.xml: N/A XTide*foreground Color of text and other notations. Default: black Command line: -fg config.hh: fgdefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions fg="black"/> XTide*gaspect Initial aspect for tide graphs. Default: 1.0 Command line: -ga config.hh: defgaspect .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions ga="1.0"/> XTide*gheight Initial height for tide graphs and clocks. Default: 312 Command line: -gh config.hh: defgheight .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions gh="312"/> XTide*globelongitude Initial center longitude for location chooser. Valid values: -180 -150 -120 -90 -60 -30 0 30 60 90 120 150 360 360 will pick the longitude with the most tide stations. Default: 360 Command line: -gl config.hh: defgl .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions gl="360"/> XTide*graphtenths Label tenths of units in tide graphs? (y/n) Default: n Command line: -gt config.hh: graphtenths .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions gt="n"/> XTide*gwidth Initial width for tide graphs. Default: 960 Command line: -gw config.hh: defgwidth .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions gw="960"/> XTide*hourfmt Strftime style format string for printing hour labels on time axis. Default: %l Command line: -hf config.hh: hourfmt .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions hf="%l"/> XTide*infer Use inferred values for some constituents. For expert use only. Default: n Command line: -in config.hh: infer .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions in="n"/> XTide*lwidth Width for lines in tide graphs with nofill. Default: 2.5 Command line: -lw config.hh: deflwidth .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions lw="2.5"/> XTide*markcolor Color of mark line in graphs and of location dots on the spinning globe. Default: red Command line: -mc config.hh: markdefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions mc="red"/> XTide*mslcolor Color of middle-level line in tide graphs. [[8]*] Default: yellow Command line: -Mc config.hh: msldefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions Mc="yellow"/> XTide*nightcolor Nighttime background color in tide graphs. Default: DeepSkyBlue Command line: -nc config.hh: nightdefcolor .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions nc="DeepSkyBlue"/> XTide*nofill Draw tide graphs as line graphs? (y/n) Default: n Command line: -nf config.hh: nofill .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions nf="n"/> XTide*nosunmoon Deprecated. Use eventmask instead. Default: n Command line: -ns config.hh: N/A (use eventmask) .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions ns="n"/> XTide*pageheight Nominal length of paper in LaTeX output (mm). This need not match your actual paper; use "Shrink oversized pages" in print options. Default: 420 Command line: -ph config.hh: defpageheight .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions ph="420"/> XTide*pagemargin Nominal width of top, bottom, left and right margins in LaTeX output (mm). Actual width will depend on print scaling. Default: 10 Command line: -pm config.hh: defpagemargin .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions pm="10"/> XTide*pagewidth Nominal width of paper in LaTeX output (mm). This need not match your actual paper; use "Shrink oversized pages" in print options. Default: 297 Command line: -pw config.hh: defpagewidth .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions pw="297"/> XTide*timefmt Strftime style format string for printing times. Default: %l:%M %p %Z Command line: -tf config.hh: timefmt .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions tf="%l:%M %p %Z"/> XTide*toplines Draw depth lines on top of tide graph? (y/n) Default: n Command line: -tl config.hh: toplines .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions tl="n"/> XTide*ttyheight Height of ASCII graphs and clocks (characters). Default: 24 Command line: -th config.hh: defttyheight .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions th="24"/> XTide*ttywidth Width of ASCII graphs, clocks, banners, and calendars (characters). Default: 79 Command line: -tw config.hh: defttywidth .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions tw="79"/> XTide*units Preferred units of length: ft, m, or x (no preference). Default: x Command line: -u config.hh: prefunits .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions u="x"/> XTide*zulu Coerce all time zones to UTC? (y/n) Default: n Command line: -z config.hh: forceZuluTime (XTide 2.9+) or zulu (previously) .xtide.xml: <xtideoptions z="n"/> [*] The National Ocean Service (NOS) defines both Mean Sea Level (MSL) and Mean Tide Level (MTL) in terms of averages taken over observations. The middle-level line is drawn at the midpoint of the theoretical tidal range, which usually corresponds to the mathematical mean level of the predictions. This approximates both MSL and MTL, but, strictly speaking, is equivalent to neither. Moreover, subordinate station offsets may shift the actual mean so that it no longer falls at the midpoint of the tidal range. The datum line is drawn at the zero level of the predictions, which usually corresponds to the station's benchmark, but this too can be rendered inaccurate by subordinate station offsets. Format of ~/.xtide.xml If you have compiled the interactive client (xtide), then you do not need to worry about ~/.xtide.xml at all, because the control panel will configure it for you automatically. In the event that you cannot use xtide but still need to make some settings for the command line client, use the example below as the starting point for your ~/.xtide.xml file. This example just sets the TTY geometry. You can add more settings by adding more attributes (like the tw and th attributes shown here) to the xtideoptions entity. The attributes that are recognized for each setting are documented above. <?xml version="1.0"?> <xtideoptions tw="79" th="24"/> __________________________________________________________________ [9]<- Previous [10]-> Next [11]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xttpd.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html#cp 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#splat 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#splat 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#splat 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xttpd.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Portland Head Light About harmonic constants and sub station corrections (What to do if your location isn't listed) As was explained in the [5]introduction, tide predictions for a given location cannot be conjured out of the void--you need to get some special data for each and every location for which you want to predict tides. XTide reads these data from harmonics files. Information on obtaining harmonics files is at [6]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles. Currently there are two sources of harmonics files. David Flater maintains a conservative set of data, emphasizing responsiveness to updates and traceability to authoritative sources instead of maximum coverage of locations and historical predictions. These data and the list of locations they support can be found at [7]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles. Bob Kenney maintains a more liberal set of data, retaining some data that are old and expired in order to support users who continue to get good results with the old data. These data and the much longer list of locations they support can be found at [8]http://harmonics.unh.edu/xtide/files.html. Because they are out of date, use of these legacy data is not recommended. Check to make sure that your location does not appear anywhere in these harmonics files by any alias. If your location is not already on the list, you need to obtain either a set of harmonic constants or a set of corrections and send this information to David Flater and/or Bob Kenney, as appropriate. You could import these data yourself using the tools available at [9]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html, but please forward the data anyway so that others may benefit. Harmonic constants [10]National Ocean Service tide station at Bar Harbor, Maine Harmonic constants of the first kind, the kind worth having, are created by analysis of regular water level readings taken by automated tide stations like the one pictured here. Harmonic constants of the second kind, the kind not worth having, are created by mangling the first kind to approximate the results of applying corrections. We are only interested in the first kind. XTide can do corrections properly, so mangled data just junk up the database. [11]harmonics-dwf contains all U.S. stations available from the NOS web site. If it has fallen out of date, email [12][email protected] to check whether an update is in progress. In countries other than the U.S., you might have a really hard time getting the resident tide-predicting authority to release harmonic constants. They may be paternalistic, not wanting to trust non-government people with something as dangerous as tide prediction. They may be fearful that the data will be used to time an invasion by sea. Or they may simply want to retain a monopoly on tide predictions, for whatever rea$on. Regardless, if you do manage to obtain harmonic constants, please obtain and forward a statement from the authority either granting permission for non-commercial use or explaining that such permission is not required. There is a collection of old harmonic constants for ports world wide that had to be withdrawn because of the permissions issue (for the full sob story, see the [13]FAQ). If you have contact with your local marine authorities and could obtain and forward a statement that use of these tide data is not restricted in your region, Mr. Kenney could reinstate the old data. However, it would be better if they just sent us the newest data. If you have access to at least a year's worth of regular water level readings for some locale, you can derive the harmonic constants yourself using the Harmgen program available from [14]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#experts, or send the time series to [15][email protected] (again, with all necessary permissions attached) and harmonic constants will be derived for you, time permitting. Corrections A subordinate station is a tide station whose predictions are obtained by applying corrections to a reference station, i.e., one for which we have good harmonic constants. The words 'corrections,' 'differences,' and 'offsets' are used interchangeably. [16]harmonics-dwf contains all U.S. stations available from the NOS web site. If it has fallen out of date, email [17][email protected] to check whether an update is in progress. While harmonic constants can be hard to get, you should be able to get offsets with relative ease from a local boating magazine, chartbook, yacht club, or marine authority. If you find suitable offsets, you can add them to harmonics.tcd using the tideEditor program available from [18]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#extras. There are two other ways to do it (via build_tide_db in tcd-utils or via Harmbase 2), but tideEditor is most expedient for the non-expert. General notes and warnings * There are many different flavors of offsets for subordinate stations. At this time, XTide supports all commonly appearing flavors except for the Admiralty one that has different height differences depending on the time of month. The following rare and freakish sorts are not supported: those that use different offsets depending on whether the flood at the reference station crossed some threshold; those that rely on more than one reference station; those that use different offsets for higher high or low water versus lower high or low water; currents that use a regular tide station as reference, or vice-versa. * If you can't find the latitude and longitude, just estimate the coordinates as best you can using an atlas. * The timezone attribute is only used to choose the time zone in which to render output for the location. In the majority of cases this will be the same as for the reference station. However, if your reference station is in a different time zone, you may need to alter the time offsets to REMOVE compensation for the time zone difference. In XTide, offsets are independent of the time zone. * If you don't get slack offsets (floodbegins, ebbbegins) for a current station, OMIT those fields! When slack offsets are omitted, XTide will interpolate a reasonable value. But if you specify zero, you get zero--even if that's unreasonable with respect to the specified max and min. Adding corrections using tideEditor 1.4 First make a backup copy of whatever you are about to modify. TideEditor version 1.4 takes the name of the file to modify as the command-line argument. bash-3.1$ tideEditor whatever.tcd When you start tideEditor, you get a map of the world. Point at the location where you want to add a subordinate station and right click. You will get a prompt asking "Will the new station be a reference station or a subordinate station?" Choose Subordinate. You will get a prompt saying "Please select the new reference station." Use the pull-down list to select the reference station and click OK. You will then get a window with the tabs General, Verbiage and Offsets, initially showing General. On the General tab, the Reference Station, Latitude and Longitude fields will be pre-filled based on your previous actions. The other fields that you MUST fill in are as follows: * Station Name: Enter the name of the new subordinate station. * Time Zone: Use the pull-down to set the time zone (select the major city for the applicable region). * Level Units: Select feet or meters for tides, knots for currents. All other fields on the General and Verbiage tabs are optional. Descriptions of the other fields are obtainable using the question mark tool thingy ( [whatsthis.png] ). The Offsets tab has the following fields. * Minimum Time Add. The time adjustment for low tide / max ebb. It is expressed as an integer that is hours times 100 plus minutes, so for -0:20 (negative 0 hours, 20 minutes) you would write -20, and for 1:40 (positive 1 hour, 40 minutes) you would write 140. If you don't have this, leave it blank. * Minimum Level Add. A value, in the units identified by Level Units, that is added to the tide level or current velocity predicted at low tide or max ebb. If you don't have this, leave it blank. * Minimum Level Multiply. A multiplier for the tide level or current velocity predicted at low tide or max ebb. If you don't have this, leave it blank. * Maximum Time Add, Level Add, and Level Multiply are analogous, but correspond to high tide / max flood. * Flood Begins. Another kind of "Time Add" used only by currents to adjust the time of the slack preceding a flood. If you don't have this, leave it blank. If it got initialized to zero, make it blank. * Ebb Begins. Analogous to Flood Begins. When finished, click OK. When you quit tideEditor, your new station will be saved in the updated TCD file. Notations used to describe corrections will vary: Notation Translation -0:20 Time Add -20 1 23 Time Add 123 *1.07 Level Multiply 1.07 +0.4 Level Add 0.4 (*0.65+0.3) Level Multiply 0.65, Level Add 0.3 If you were not given separate corrections for max and min, set both the max and min values to whatever you got. For example, if you get Head Harbor, Isle au Haut -0:20 (Portland) then you should set both Minimum Tide Add and Maximum Time Add to -20. __________________________________________________________________ [19]<- Previous [20]-> Next [21]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/introduction.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles 8. http://harmonics.unh.edu/xtide/files.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/ 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles 12. mailto:[email protected] 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#60 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#experts 15. mailto:[email protected] 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#harmonicsfiles 17. mailto:[email protected] 18. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#extras 19. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 20. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 21. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Lobster boat and the big ocean, Ogunquit, Maine, 1998-06-08. Quirks to be aware of 1. Graphs actually begin a little bit earlier than the nominal start time so that the specified start will appear immediately to the right of the labels for the depth axis instead of being obscured by them. 2. The effective end time for graph and clock modes is entirely determined by the start time, the width, and the aspect. If an end time is also specified by the user, it is ignored. 3. XTide uses shorter descriptions for the tide events listed across the bottom caption line in tide graphs whenever the descriptions get to be longer than the timestamps. Consequently, changing the time format setting to something more concise causes the descriptions to get shorter too, which is what you want. However, this behavior can result in cosmetic inconsistencies; e.g., with default settings, "Mark Rising" is matched by "Mark" instead of "Mark Falling," because the one additional letter puts it over. 4. The -o command line switch causes output to be appended to the specified file instead of overwriting it as is the generally accepted custom. 5. While XTide-specific command-line arguments can be concatenated with their switches or not, the arguments to standard X11 switches sometimes must be separate to work. Affected switches include -display, -fn, and -geometry. 6. What XTide does about minimum current events at subordinate stations might not be what you expect. See [5]Appendix B for details. Known limitations 1. RGB color specs (rgb:N/N/N) in sizes other than 24 bits (rgb:hh/hh/hh) generally will not work. 2. All timestamps have a precision of plus or minus one minute. 3. All predictions are made to an accuracy of plus or minus one minute (in the mathematical sense, not in the sense of matching up with the real world). 4. URLs assigned to specific locations by the xttpd web server are rather transient and will change whenever the harmonics files are updated. The xttpd web space will remain internally consistent, but hyperlinks from outside pages will be screwed. 5. Moonrise and moonset don't work before 1900 or after 2099. 6. The time scale for stations claiming to be in UTC is not strictly speaking UTC since it does not implement [6]leap seconds. The maximum discrepancy as of 2007 is 23 seconds, which is still "below the noise." 7. If a subordinate station has absurd offsets that cause low tides to become higher than high tides, the mathematical upper and lower bounds reported by stats mode may be incorrect. 8. When specifying location names on the command line, multiple data sets having the same name cannot be distinguished, and it is not deterministic which one you will get. 9. XTide is untested and probably dysfunctional on any platform where time_t is a non-integral type. It would probably still work with --enable-time-workaround. 10. XTide assumes that the first 256 characters of the default X11 font agree with ISO-8859-1. Known bugs 1. If the control panel is resized, dismissed, and then shown again, its buttons are missing. Cause of bug: Don't know. Workaround: Close the control panel using the window manager (e.g., hit the × in the upper right corner) and then show it again. The control panel retains its new size but the buttons reappear. 2. Some of the dialog windows cause harmless but annoying toolkit warnings when you dismiss them. Cause of bug: Don't understand what the toolkit grabs are doing. Workaround: Ignore warnings. 3. Line width in line graphs isn't maintained when the slope of the graph becomes drastic. Cause of bug: Need better algorithm for drawing line graphs. Workaround: Set the aspect higher. 4. Buttons will sometimes shift out from under the mouse pointer and get "stuck on." Cause of bug: (1) button moves due to changing geometry of other things in the box, leading to (2) button shifts out from under the pointer, which triggers (3) bug in Athena Widgets where the button release event gets lost. Workaround: As needed, click on the stuck button to un-stick it. This problem can be prevented in the control panel by specifying a fixed-width font with the -fn switch, which avoids (1). The bug is less likely in other windows. 5. The analog tide clock icon flashes when it updates, and doesn't update at all under some window managers. Alternate symptom: Tide clocks crash the window manager at random. Cause of bug: Window managers don't expect icons to keep changing and aren't designed to handle it properly. Workaround: Use a window manager that doesn't suck. 6. Dialog boxes don't behave like you would expect when you hit the Enter key. Cause of bug: Athena widgets use multi-line buffers even for one-line fields. Workaround: Don't hit Enter. 7. Syslog messages generated by xttpd have timestamps in UTC or random time zones intead of local time, which is highly confusing in a log that is otherwise in local time. Cause of bug: Design defect of syslog(): Every program logs in whatever time zone it happens to be using at the time instead of a standard zone. XTide needs to adopt the time zone of each station to generate predictions for it. Workaround: none. __________________________________________________________________ [7]<- Previous [8]-> Next [9]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html 6. http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq/pubs/bulletin/leapsecond.htm 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Perkins Cove, Maine, 1998-06-09 Frequently Asked Questions Note: "Mumble Foo Bar" is a made-up place that is meant to represent whatever place you are looking for. Whatever is said in this FAQ about Mumble Foo Bar applies to your location as well. FAQ of the Day * [5]Are these predictions compliant with the new 2007 Daylight Savings Time rules for the U.S.? Ultra-high frequency questions * [6]Your WWW Tide and Current Predictor blah blah blah... * [7]Can you send me predictions for Mumble Foo Bar? * [8]URGENT - DROP EVERYTHING AND READ THIS! The race starts in 5 hours so I need a tide chart for Mumble Foo Bar NOW! * [9]Can you tell me where I can find a web page with predictions for Mumble Foo Bar? * [10]Can you please add predictions for Mumble Foo Bar? * [11]How do I make the calendar print all on one page? * [12]Can you tell me the offsets for Mumble Foo Bar? * [13]There are multiple listings for the same place, and they give different results. What's going on? * [14]Can you predict the tide and/or current if I give you the latitude and longitude? * [15]The coordinates you provide for Mumble Foo Bar are off by miles. * [16]Why are there no currents in the latest database? XTide operational questions * [17]I am doing some historical research and need to project what the tides would have been a long long time ago. * [18]I live outside of the U.S. and my location is no longer supported. What happened? * [19]The predictions for somewhere in the U.S.A., Mexico or Nunavut are off by one hour or six hours. * [20]For Chesapeake and Delaware Canal Current, Flood and Ebb are not informative. Which way is which? * [21]For Cape Cod Canal Current, Flood and Ebb are not informative. Which way is which? * [22]When compiling XTide, I get errors like.... * [23]I want to change the end time of a tide graph but the settings that I make have no effect. * [24]The text in XTide windows is formatted ugly. * [25]When I run xttpd, it exits immediately with no errors to tell me what went wrong. * [26]I always get a warning about "using obsolete time zone database." * [27]How do I switch from tide to current predictions or vice-versa for a given location? * [28]What are bogo-knots? * [29]First it says high tide is at 3:15 PM but then when I run it again it says 3:14 PM. * [30]Has this been ported to Windows / PalmOS / anything but Unix? * [31]Xttpd sucks! Can't XTide work with PHP? * [32]The tides for my location are totally wrong! * [33]The tides for Mumble Foo Bar are obviously bogus because they have too many high tides on this day / only one high tide on this day / tides that are just a few minutes apart. * [34]I have five constituents and some seasonal corrections for my location. Can you get this to work? General tide related questions * [35]I have a tide watch that only goes through the year 1999. What year could I set it to that would be the same as this year? * [36]Is there a set time advancement each day for the next high and low tide? Does it always repeat 12 1/2 hours later? * [37]Somebody gave me a tide clock, but the instructions say it only works on the east coast. How can this be? * [38]Why do the high and low tides have such different levels to them on any given day? * [39]If it's high tide here, is it low tide in [faraway place]? * [40]What does the zero (0) on a tide chart represent? * [41]Why is it that the tides two miles from here are an hour different than the tides here? * [42]Why are there two high tides per day, anyway? How is this possible? * [43]What does "slack water" mean? * [44]I have a theory that [random phenomenon] is related to tidal forces, but I am landlocked. Can you, like, predict the "tides" for [landlocked location]? * [45]I want to write my own tide predicting program. Can you provide a SIMPLE explanation of the tide-predicting function? Business questions * [46]I want to license XTide so I can build a commercial product around it. * [47]I have a lot of specific questions about the GNU General Public License and/or want a ruling that my specific plan is OK. * [48]We are a non-profit and we want to sell calendars with predictions from your web site. Is that OK? * [49]I have a great idea to make money selling tide predictions, but I'm not good with technical stuff, so would you just do this for me... * [50]I already make money selling tide prediction products, but your stuff is better, so would you just do this for me... * [51]I need to do [poorly researched brainstorm having something to do with tide prediction]--how much would you charge in consulting fees to help me do it? Academic questions * [52]How should I cite XTide within publications? Questions that you should have asked, but didn't * [53]What is the difference between a reference station and a subordinate station? * [54]These predictions are nonsense--what is going on here? * [55]Where can I find tons of information about tides that is both more authoritative and better written than this FAQ? __________________________________________________________________ FAQ of the Day Q: Are these predictions compliant with the new 2007 Daylight Savings Time rules for the U.S.? A: XTide relies on [56]the de facto standard time zone database to handle Daylight Savings Time. XTide's results will obey the new Daylight Savings Time rules if and only if the version of zoneinfo installed is sufficiently new. See [57]System Requirements. Ultra-high frequency questions Q: Your WWW Tide and Current Predictor blah blah blah... A: I am not the maintainer of the [58]WWW Tide and Current Predictor. I am the maintainer of [59]XTide. Although the [60]WWW Tide and Current Predictor uses some version of [61]XTide behind the scenes, I have no control over the behavior of the web site or its maintenance. Q: Can you send me predictions for Mumble Foo Bar? A: I cannot possibly provide this level of service to everyone who wants it. Please use a commercial service and/or a web site. Q: URGENT - DROP EVERYTHING AND READ THIS! The race starts in 5 hours so I need a tide chart for Mumble Foo Bar NOW! A: You might not believe it, but sometimes I go two weeks without reading my e-mail. Really! And when I do get back to it, there are always lots of messages just like this one, so far past their use-by dates that green fuzz has started to grow on them. The answer is the same: I cannot possibly provide this level of service to everyone who wants it. Please use a commercial service and/or a web site. Q: Can you tell me where I can find a web page with predictions for Mumble Foo Bar? A: * Germany: [62]Bundesamt für Seeschifffahrt und Hydrographie (BSH) * Netherlands: [63]Ministerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat * New Zealand: [64]Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) * Norway: [65]Norwegian Hydrographic Service * U.K.: [66]National Tidal and Sea Level Facility (NTSLF) * U.K.: [67]U.K. Hydrographic Office * U.S.A.: [68]National Ocean Service (NOS), Center for Operational Products and Services (CO-OPS) Q: Can you please add predictions for Mumble Foo Bar? A: Probably not. Please read the section entitled [69]What to do if your location isn't listed. Q: How do I make the calendar print all on one page? A: The short answer for Windows XP users is to do the following: 1. Bring the calendar up in Internet Explorer version 7 (not 6). 2. Click the arrow to the right of the Print button, and then click Print Preview. 3. Pull down the print size menu ( Shrink To Fit ) and try different options until the calendar fits nicely on a page. 4. When ready, click on the tiny printer icon to print. For a more complete answer and/or instructions tailored for Linux, see [70]Appendix C. Q: Can you tell me the offsets for Mumble Foo Bar? A: You can get them easier than I can by checking the sources described in the section entitled [71]What to do if your location isn't listed. Q: There are multiple listings for the same place, and they give different results. What's going on? A: There are two different approaches to predicting the tides at a given place. One approach is to calculate them directly from a data set; when this is done it is called a "reference station." The other approach is to estimate them using adjustments to the tides at a nearby reference station; when this is done it is called a "subordinate station." Data gathered from the NOAA web site sometimes include both a reference station and a subordinate station for the same place. For example, the subordinate station may be used for published tide tables while the reference station is still relatively new and untested. The results will differ, but they should be close (assuming that there are no problems with the data). If you are concerned about matching predictions up with those from some particular source, you should try each data set and see which one matches the best. In rare cases, data gathered from the NOAA web site include two reference stations or two subordinate stations with exactly the same name and nearly the same location. When this happens, one of them has (2) suffixed to its name. Again, if you are trying to match official predictions, you should try both to determine which is better. If you are using old legacy data or a web site that does, you may see additional listings for the same place. These may be expired and/or have dubious traceability to authoritative sources. They cannot be expected to agree with up-to-date predictions. Q: Can you predict the tide and/or current if I give you the latitude and longitude? A: The short answer is no. XTide cannot predict tides unless you provide harmonic constants (see [72]What to do if your location isn't listed). From what I'm told, the tide models that were built from [73]TOPEX/Poseidon data work on a global scale, but they are inaccurate on continental shelves. Some organizations have constructed models that function in coastal waters in localized regions. For example, NIWA has a [74]model for New Zealand's coastal waters, and NOAA has a [75]model of currents in San Francisco Bay. Although XTide could make use of harmonic constants generated from these models, XTide does not implement any such models. Q: The coordinates you provide for Mumble Foo Bar are off by miles. A: XTide reports coordinates in degrees only. Some sources report coordinates in degrees and minutes and run these together in a confusing way. For example, a coordinate shown as 2846.330 may actually mean 28 degrees, 46.330 minutes, which XTide would report as 28.7722 degrees. If this is not sufficient to explain the discrepancy then by all means report the problem. All coordinates in the latest harmonics data are traceable to an authoritative source. Q: Why are there no currents in the latest database? A: The [76]Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services (CO-OPS) of [77]NOAA's [78]National Ocean Service (NOS) does not presently supply harmonic constants for currents on its public web site. This text from [79]http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/ncop.html may partially explain why not: Approximately 70 percent of the stations in the 2001 Tidal Current Tables are over 30 years old. Many of these stations are based on analyses of less than 7 days of data (the data duration is known for 24% of all stations). Channel dredging and changes in the configuration of ports and harbors over the years have significantly altered the physical oceanography of many of the nation's estuaries. Reports from local users indicate that many of NOS's tidal current predictions may be inaccurate. NOS intends to address these deficiencies by rebuilding the program and resampling the currents at every major port and estuary within the next 20 years. XTide operational questions Q: I am doing some historical research and need to project what the tides at Mumble Foo Bar would have been a long long time ago. A: This is generally ill-advised. It is technically possible to get XTide to make projections back to 1 AD (see [80]Appendix A for details). However, such projections are usually unverifiable and are likely to be wildly inaccurate. If you work from these projections with no means of independent verification, you deserve what you get. The perishability of tide data for a given location varies depending on how quickly the local topography changes. Some places go rotten in less than a decade. All locations are impacted by global sea level change, which becomes significant in less than a century. Over even longer spans, the physics start to go wrong. Some of the astronomical "constants" used in the U.S. method of tide prediction really aren't constant; they change very slowly. For example, the speeds of harmonic constituents change. We are still using constant speeds that were calibrated for the year 1900. When you change the speeds of the harmonic constituents, it changes everything. As we get too far away from 1900 in either direction, eventually the model collapses and the results are garbage. As far as I know, nobody has done an analysis to determine exactly when this occurs. When this happens in the future, we can just update the speeds and generate fresh harmonic constants that work within the new model. But we can't do that for historical predictions because we don't have the water level observations from that period in history to derive the harmonic constants. We have no choice but to use the physics of 1900, with data derived from observations in 2000, to extrapolate back to whenever, and hope that we haven't pushed the model too far. Needless to say, the credibility of projections for anywhere reaches zero well before you get back to 1 AD. So please don't ask for BC support. Q: I live outside of the U.S. and my location is no longer supported. What happened? A: After a legal threat from the U.K. Hydrographic Office (UKHO) and the subsequent discovery that country-by-country permissions are now required to use harmonic constants (the data needed to predict tides), all of the data that arrived via the International Hydrographic Office (IHO) or the Table des Marées des Grands Ports du Monde (TMGPM) were removed from the harmonics files in January 2001. Back in the old days, the collection of hydrographic data was done almost exclusively using public funds. The resulting harmonic constants were treated as scientific results, published, and distributed on request from an international data bank. But in the late 20th century, a wave of privatizations occurred, and harmonic constants became the intellectual property of the collecting agencies. You wouldn't think it possible to "un-publish" data that were distributed with considerable freedom at one time. Nevertheless, the international data bank was abolished, the Table des Marées des Grands Ports du Monde was withdrawn from publication, and I was coerced into removing the associated data from the harmonics files. Was I spineless? Perhaps. Those who wrote the threatening letter clearly had not done their homework and may have overreached their jurisdiction. But even with the benefit of hindsight and experience, knowing that some unethical companies habitually make legal threats to manipulate people into doing things that they aren't necessarily obliged to do, I don't blame myself for not fighting it. Why take a risk for the sake of some tide data of questionable pedigree that were doomed to become useless from age pretty soon anyway? For my own part, I do not consider privatization to be inherently evil. It would have been reasonable to keep newly generated data secret while leaving the old data in the public domain until their useful life expired. But in my opinion it was wrong to lay claim to the old data that were once shared in the spirit of scientific openness. It was a disservice and dishonor to all of us who accepted those data on good faith and donated our own time to maintain them and add value to them to end up accused of copyright infringement. For someone who had invested himself in writing free software as a public service, the reward was a slap in the face. Although only the UKHO made an issue of it, the fact that they did sufficed to "poison" all of the IHO and TMGPM data for every country. We can no longer assume that we have permission to use any of them. In countries other than the U.K., if you have contact with your local marine authorities and could obtain and forward to Mr. Kenney a statement that use of the old data is not restricted in your region, they could be reinstated. (Bob Kenney is the maintainer of a database of legacy data that can be used by XTide and other programs. You can find it on his web site at [81]http://harmonics.unh.edu/xtide/files.html.) However, if they have newer data, it would be better if they just sent those to me and Mr. Kenney with all necessary permissions attached. I regret that former British colonies having no independent tide authority have effectively been disenfranchised. In 2003-12, new data for 44 stations in the U.K. became available thanks to the generosity of the [82]British Oceanographic Data Centre (BODC) based at the [83]Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory in Liverpool. The legal details can be found at [84]http://flaterco.com/pol.html. I encourage other organizations who maintain tide gauges anywhere in the world to contact us about deriving some harmonic constants. Q: The predictions for somewhere in the U.S.A., Mexico or Nunavut are off by one hour or six hours. A: The referenced nations have recently made changes to their time zones or daylight savings time rules. In order for XTide to give predictions in local time correctly, a recent version of the Zoneinfo library must be installed. You can obtain this library from [85]ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/. Q: For Chesapeake and Delaware Canal Current, Flood and Ebb are not informative. Which way is which? A: Based on observations by Richard W. Reynolds and friends, it appears that "Flood" for this data set indicates that water is flowing from the Chesapeake to the Delaware bay. Q: For Cape Cod Canal Current, Flood and Ebb are not informative. Which way is which? A: According to Reinhard Schumann, "Flood" for this data set means "current towards the east." Woods Hole current is probably the same. Q: When compiling XTide, I get errors like.... A: Please refer to the [86]troubleshooting section of the installation instructions. If your error is not shown there, please email [87][email protected] for assistance. Q: I want to change the end time of a tide graph but the settings that I make have no effect. A: This is [88]Quirk #2. In graph mode, the end time is determined by the applicable width and aspect, not the other way around. Thus, neither the -e switch nor the compiled-in defpredictinterval constant have any effect in this case. In the interactive client, you can resize the window as you would any window and change the aspect from the Options menu. The applicable command-line switches are -gw for X-windows or PNG formats, -tw for text format, and -ga. For more details, refer to "[89]Customizing XTide." Q: The text in XTide windows is formatted ugly. A: For windows containing lots of text, XTide uses the default font offered by the X11 environment. If this is not a monospace font, the results could indeed be ugly. The default font can be overridden using the command line switch -fn. Give this a try: xtide -fn "-adobe-courier-bold-r-normal-*-12-*-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1" If that looks better, you can make the change permanent by adding this line to your ~/.Xresources file: XTide*font: -adobe-courier-bold-r-normal-*-12-*-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1 Q: When I run xttpd, it exits immediately with no errors to tell me what went wrong. A: When executed, xttpd immediately dissociates from your terminal and starts logging all diagnostics to syslog. So look in your system logs. You will find these someplace like /var/log or /var/adm/log. Q: I always get a warning about "using obsolete time zone database." A: Please see the [90]System requirements section for details of what this means and what you can do to fix it. Q: How do I switch from tide to current predictions or vice-versa for a given location? A: Alas, although the two are clearly connected in the physical world, they are unrelated from the perspective of XTide. Even for the same location, tide predictions and current predictions require two completely separate data sets, and rarely will you get both. As of 2005-01, there are no currents available in the latest data (the National Ocean Service has not made them available on their web site). If current predictions are available for a location in legacy data, they will appear in the location list with the word "Current" at the end of the name. Q: What are bogo-knots? A: If you are still seeing bogo-knots, then you are definitely using obsolete data and an obsolete version of XTide, or accessing a web site that is using obsolete data and an obsolete version of XTide. I am not the maintainer of any such web sites, and I recommend upgrading to XTide 2, which will barf all over any harmonics files that still contain "bogo-knots." Q: First it says high tide is at 3:15 PM but then when I run it again it says 3:14 PM. A: XTide's accuracy is plus or minus one minute. The behavior that you witnessed is normal. Q: Has this been ported to Windows / PalmOS / anything but Unix? A: Yes, to varying degrees. Please see the [91]ports page. Q: Xttpd sucks! Can't XTide work with PHP? A: A number of people have expressed interest in getting XTide to work through PHP. Thus far I have just been introducing them to each other through e-mail and waiting for cool things to happen. There is now a [92]WordPress plugin by Mir Rodríguez. Q: The tides for my location are totally wrong! A: Unfortunately, there have been some problems recently with data sets being assigned the wrong meridians upstream. The symptom is that all predictions are shifted earlier or later by the same number of hours. If you can verify that this has happened by comparison with published tide tables (available at [93]http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/tides07/), please report the problem for corrective action. Q: The tides for Mumble Foo Bar are obviously bogus because they have too many high tides on this day / only one high tide on this day / tides that are just a few minutes apart. A: That is not necessarily a problem. Some places really do have only one tide cycle per day. Others generate "extra" tides when the tidal forces align in such a way as to produce a "double" high or low tide or a temporary reversal near mid-tide. These extra tides can be arbitrarily close together. Official predictions might omit them, but XTide faithfully reports all maxima and minima that it finds. The legacy data contain some data sets in which harmonic constants were generated for subordinate stations by munging the constants of a reference station. This operation was fragile and sometimes it led to spurious maxima and minima. The fix is to upgrade to the latest data, which contains no "munged" data sets. Q: I have five constituents and some seasonal corrections for my location. Can you get this to work? A: XTide is not presently enabled to handle seasonal corrections directly. To my knowledge, seasonal corrections are only used in publications by the British Admiralty that do not allow redistribution of data, so the value of providing better support for them in XTide would be marginal at best. However, if you have legal access to such data and are determined to use it with XTide, it may be possible to synthesize values for long-term constituents to "approximate the approximation." A spreadsheet for doing this is available from [94]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#experts. It might also help to enable constituent inference in XTide. This can be done from the [95]control panel or using the [96]infer setting. General tide related questions Q: I have a tide watch that only goes through the year 1999. What year could I set it to that would be the same as this year? A: Sorry. It just doesn't work like that. Q: Is there a set time advancement each day for the next high and low tide? Does it always repeat 12 1/2 hours later? A: No. The 12 hour 25 minute cycle is literally only a first-order approximation. Most tide predictions involve twenty to thirty terms, and some require over a hundred. The 12:25 cycle is just the most dominant term. Q: Somebody gave me a tide clock, but the instructions say it only works on the east coast. How can this be? A: "Dumb" tide clocks assume that the 12 hour 25 minute cycle mentioned in the [97]previous question is a good enough approximation. For the west coast, it isn't. The following tide graphs illustrate the differences between east and west coast tides. The high and low tide times that would be indicated by a "dumb" tide clock are shown with vertical yellow lines. San Francisco shows a 2-hour discrepancy on the lower high tide. Emulation of dumb tide clock for Bangor, Maine Emulation of dumb tide clock for San Francisco, California Q: Why do the high and low tides have such different levels to them on any given day? Does it actually coincide with the amount of pull exerted by the phase or closeness of the moon? A: The tides do not coincide too closely with the moon. While the moon produces most of the force that drives them, the exact tide levels result from the sloshing around of huge amounts of water, the effects of the shape of the coastline, and things like that. Q: If it's high tide here, is it low tide in [faraway place]? A: It's hard to infer anything over large distances since localized effects can have a huge influence on tides. Q: What does the zero (0) on a tide chart represent? A: Tide heights are given relative to the "datum" which in most cases is one of several benchmarks corresponding to low tides of varying extremeness. The preferred benchmark in the U.S. is Mean Lower Low Water (MLLW). The odds of the predicted tide getting below MLLW on any given day are about half. The preferred benchmark in the Netherlands is Mean Low Water Springs (MLWS). MLWS is lower than MLLW. The predicted tide will get below MLWS on average only about twice a month. The preferred benchmark in Germany is Lowest Astronomical Tide (LAT). LAT is the lowest tide predicted over a 19 year period. The predicted tide will not get below LAT in that 19 year period, and is unlikely to get below it by any significant amount ever. In harmonics-dwf, some U.S. locations for which a MLLW benchmark was unavailable use an estimated value of MLLW that is derived from the predictions. These estimates tend to yield predictions that differ from National Ocean Service published tables by (0.1-0.2) ft. Older versions of harmonics-dwf used LAT for these stations, which of course yielded much larger discrepancies. For more information on datums, read the National Ocean Service publication [98]Tidal Datums and their Applications. Q: Why is it that the tides two miles from here are an hour different than the tides here? If the tidal bulge follows the moon at 1,000 miles per hour, how can the difference be so great? A: When the water tries to follow the moon, it runs up against a lot of obstacles, including its own inertia, the shape of the coastline, and the resonances that are set up by the continual tidal motion. In some cases the tides are fighting a permanent current, e.g., going up a river, and this slows down the tidal crest. The result is that the tides at any one place at any given time don't have a whole lot to do with the moon any more. Q: Why are there two high tides per day, anyway? How is this possible? A: The standard simple answer to this question is that the water on the side of the earth opposite the moon bulges out due to decreased lunar gravity in the same way that the water on the side of the earth nearest the moon bulges out due to increased lunar gravity. This is counter-intuitive in that one might expect all of the water to just rush over to the side where the moon is. To explain this, I quote from "Our Restless Tides," a NOAA tutorial at [99]http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/restles1.html: To all outward appearances, the moon revolves around the earth, but in actuality, the moon and earth revolve together around their common center of mass, or gravity. The two astronomical bodies are held together by gravitational attraction, but are simultaneously kept apart by an equal and opposite centrifugal force produced by their individual revolutions around the center-of-mass of the earth-moon system. This balance of forces in orbital revolution applies to the center-of-mass of the individual bodies only. At the earth's surface, an imbalance between these two forces results in the fact that there exists, on the hemisphere of the earth turned toward the moon, a net (or differential) tide-producing force which acts in the direction of the moon's gravitational attraction, or toward the center of the moon. On the side of the earth directly opposite the moon, the net tide-producing force is in the direction of the greater centrifugal force, or away from the moon. Q: What does "slack water" mean? A: This and many other terms are defined in the [100]NOAA tide glossary. Q: I have a theory that [random phenomenon] is related to tidal forces, but I am landlocked. Can you, like, predict the "tides" for [landlocked location]? A: There is no support for this in XTide (ocean tides have only the vaguest connection to latitude, longitude, and the position of the moon), but you can find relevant information by searching the web for "land tide." Q: I want to write my own tide predicting program. Can you provide a SIMPLE explanation of the tide-predicting function? A: The tide prediction function is fairly simple, requiring only a cosine function. The piles of code surrounding it in XTide are to optimize the process of finding maxima and minima. This can be done less optimally with significantly less code and effort (as early versions of XTide did). Since it is hard to draw summation symbols in ASCII, here is the pseudocode instead: Height = Datum; for a = 1 to numconst Height = Height + amplitude[a] * nodefactor[a] * cos (speed[a] * time + phase[a]) next a The datum is provided at the top of the data set in the harmonics.txt file. The amplitudes are the first column of numbers in the data set in the harmonics file. The node factors are tabulated for each year at the top of the harmonics file, or can be calculated from scratch using libcongen, available in the Congen package at [101]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#experts. Most likely you will just want to tabulate them. The speeds of the numconst constituents are listed at the top of the harmonics file in degrees per hour. If speed is in degrees or radians per X, then time is in X since the beginning of the year. The specific time zone for the beginning of the year is chosen as described below. Phase includes a yearly adjustment called the equilibrium argument that is tabulated at the top of the harmonics file (or calculated from scratch like the node factors), minus the location-specific phases that are the second column of numbers in the data set (given in degrees). By default, you will get phases such that the time is measured from January 1 00:00 in the time zone specified by the meridian. Customarily, the meridian is chosen to be the standard time of the location in question to make life easier on simple tide prediction programs that don't mess with time zones or summer time adjustments. In the harmonics.txt file, you will find the meridian of each data set right before the time zone identifier, in hours and minutes: e.g., -05:00 :America/Montreal. It is trivial to adjust the phases of the constituents for any desired meridian. What XTide does is adjust them all to UTC and then use the Unix time zone functions to render the output with Daylight Savings Time and everything. Business questions Q: I want to license XTide so I can build a commercial product around it. A: XTide is released under the terms of the GNU General Public License. [102]This FAQ about the GPL may be applicable to you. XTide has been used by commercial packages "at arm's length," to use the wording of the FAQ cited above, but I have never licensed it by any terms other than the GPL, nor have I ever offered any kind of warranty or service that one might expect if it were licensed commercially. PLEASE NOTE: The question whether you can use XTide is completely separate from the question of whether you can use the tide data (harmonics files). In general, data for U.S. ports are public domain, while others are for non-commercial use only. [103]Read the boilerplate for details. Q: I have a lot of specific questions about the GNU General Public License and/or want a ruling that my specific plan is OK. A: Please read the GPL FAQ, available [104]here or [105]here. If that does not answer your question, the people to ask are at [106][email protected]. Q: We are a not-for-profit organization and we want to sell calendars with predictions from your web site. Is that OK? A: Firstly, it's not my web site. See [107]Question 1. Secondly, all predictions for places outside the U.S. are for non-commercial use only (i.e. you can't sell them no matter what your tax status is). Lastly, if you do want to sell calendars containing predictions for the U.S., you must include all of the "NOT FOR NAVIGATION" disclaimers and agree to accept full liability in case someone has a problem. Legalities aside, my opinion has always been that people who are selling tide predictions have no business selling anything that is not directly certified by the [108]National Ocean Service. Beggars can't be choosers, but when people are paying for something, they have a right to hold you to a higher standard. Q: I have a great idea to make money selling tide predictions, but I'm not good with technical stuff, so would you just do this for me... A: No. Q: I already make money selling tide prediction products, but your stuff is better, so would you just do this for me... A: No. Q: I need to do [poorly researched brainstorm having something to do with tide prediction]--how much would you charge in consulting fees to help me do it? A: It's moot. Your plan won't work for one or more of the following reasons: * You think that it's possible to predict tides for arbitrary locations based on just the latitude and longitude. It's not. * You are assuming that a database of quality-assured harmonic constants for ports worldwide is obtainable. It isn't. See [109]news about data maintenance and the [110]outside-the-U.S. FAQ for background. * The harmonic constants that you plan to use are encumbered in ways that make what you want to do with them illegal. * You think that harmonic constants can be burned into the firmware of an embedded device and never need maintenance. They can't be; they need to be updated regularly. * You think that you can cut corners with a simple tide clock and still get tide predictions that match those published by NOAA. You can't. Academic questions Q: How should I cite XTide within publications? A: The web site is the best thing you can cite. For a general reference to XTide, I suggest the following, with the current date. [1] David Flater. XTide. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/. 2005-07-04. If you are using specific predictions from XTide rather than just XTide in general, then you should cite the specific version of XTide and the specific data file that you used. In this case, it would be appropriate to use the date indicated in the changelog for that version of XTide and the revision date of the data file. [2] David Flater. XTide version 2.8.2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/. 2005-01-06. [3] harmonics-dwf-2005-06-05-v2. Available from http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html, 2005-06-05. Questions that you should have asked, but didn't Q: What is the difference between a reference station and a subordinate station? A: The following information was copied from [111]NOAA's web site on 2007-02-17. The publication of full daily tide predictions is necessarily limited to a comparatively small number of stations. These stations are referred to as "reference stations". Tide predictions for more than 3000 other locations, referred to as "subordinate stations", can be obtained by applying specific differences to the daily tide predictions for one of the reference stations. [...] Caution: The time differences and height ratios used to calculate predictions at subordinate stations are derived from a comparison of simultaneous tide observations at the subordinate station and its reference station. Because these adjustments are constant, they may not always provide for the daily variations in the actual tides, especially if the subordinate station is some distance from the reference station. Therefore, although the application of time differences and height ratios will generally provide reasonably accurate approximations, they cannot result in predictions as accurate as those listed for the reference stations, which are based on much larger periods of analysis. In plain language, what you need to know is this: All subordinate station predicions are approximate. Tide predictions are always at best approximations of reality, but for subordinate stations that goes double. Q: These predictions are nonsense--what is going on here? Tide graph with a weird zigzag 2007-02-14 12:57 PM AKST 3.46 feet High Tide 2007-02-14 3:00 PM AKST Moonset 2007-02-14 7:08 PM AKST Sunset 2007-02-14 9:06 PM AKST -0.38 feet Low Tide 2007-02-15 6:46 AM AKST 3.08 feet Low Tide 2007-02-15 7:00 AM AKST 2.62 feet High Tide 2007-02-15 9:07 AM AKST Moonrise 2007-02-15 9:22 AM AKST Sunrise 2007-02-15 1:46 PM AKST 3.46 feet High Tide Current graph with weird double-flood 2004-03-31 5:01 AM PST -0.64 knots Max Ebb 2004-03-31 5:49 AM PST Sunrise 2004-03-31 10:06 AM PST 0.02 knots Max Flood 2004-03-31 10:18 AM PST 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-03-31 11:21 AM PST -0.00 knots Slack, Ebb Begins 2004-03-31 1:01 PM PST Moonrise 2004-03-31 4:13 PM PST -0.90 knots Max Ebb These are extreme examples of what can happen when the time differences and height ratios for subordinate stations don't "provide for the daily variations in the actual tides." Although in the average case the offsets might yield good results, in extreme cases they can yield nonsense results like tide events happening in an impossible order or a "low" tide actually being higher than the "high" tide right next to it. There is nothing XTide can do to rationalize these paradoxes, and the tide levels that are interpolated between paradoxical events are essentially garbage. Q: Where can I find tons of information about tides that is both more authoritative and better written than this FAQ? A: [112]http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/education.html __________________________________________________________________ [113]<- Previous [114]-> Next [115]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/design.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#DST 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#5 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#40 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#45 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#20 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#10 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#onepage 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#50 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#duplicates 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#51 15. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#100 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#nocurrents 17. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#HistoricalPredictions 18. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#60 19. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#65 20. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#70 21. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#80 22. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#90 23. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#92 24. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#93 25. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#95 26. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#100 27. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#110 28. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#130 29. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#140 30. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#150 31. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#php 32. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#210 33. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#220 34. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#250 35. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#52 36. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#170 37. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#DumbTideClock 38. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#160 39. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#180 40. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#190 41. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#200 42. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#230 43. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#240 44. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#255 45. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#260 46. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#55 47. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#56 48. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#calendar 49. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#54 50. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#300 51. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#667 52. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#cite 53. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#refsub 54. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#timewarp 55. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#NOAA_education 56. ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/ 57. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/sysreq.html#TZsysreq 58. http://tbone.biol.sc.edu/tide/sitesel.html 59. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ 60. http://tbone.biol.sc.edu/tide/sitesel.html 61. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ 62. http://www.bsh.de/en/Marine%20data/Forecasts/Tides/index.jsp 63. http://www.getij.nl/engels/ 64. http://www.hydro.linz.govt.nz/tides/majports/index.asp 65. http://vannstand.statkart.no/Engelsk/skjema.php 66. http://www.pol.ac.uk/ntslf/tides/ 67. http://easytide.ukho.gov.uk/ 68. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/tide_pred.html 69. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 70. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 71. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 72. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 73. http://topex-www.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/topex.html 74. http://www.niwa.co.nz/services/tides 75. http://sfports.wr.usgs.gov/SFPORTS/vec_map/vec_map.html 76. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/ 77. http://www.noaa.gov/ 78. http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/ 79. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/ncop.html 80. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html 81. http://harmonics.unh.edu/xtide/files.html 82. http://www.bodc.ac.uk/ 83. http://www.pol.ac.uk/ 84. http://flaterco.com/pol.html 85. ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/ 86. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/installation.html#trouble 87. mailto:[email protected] 88. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 89. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 90. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/sysreq.html 91. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/ports.html 92. http://www.almanaqueazul.org/?p=132 93. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/tides07/ 94. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#experts 95. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/advanced.html#cp 96. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html#infer 97. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#170 98. ftp://ftp.flaterco.com/xtide/tidal_datums_and_their_applications.pdf 99. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/restles1.html 100. ftp://ftp.flaterco.com/xtide/glossary2.pdf 101. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#experts 102. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#GPLInProprietarySystem 103. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics_boilerplate.txt 104. http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html 105. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html 106. mailto:[email protected] 107. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#5 108. http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/ 109. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/news.html#datamaint 110. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#60 111. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/t2help.html 112. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/education.html 113. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 114. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/design.html 115. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Sunset over the bar, Bar Harbor, Maine, 1997-06-24 Design notes Principles * Portability + The scope is all "reasonably modern" flavors of Unix, X11, and C++ + Limit language features to those that reliably compile + Respect the holy mantra "./configure; make; make install" + Allow trivial workarounds for platform- and distribution-specific bugs or special requirements + Disallow nontrivial workarounds and those that conflict with correct operation on non-broken platforms * Availability + Limit dependencies on external tools and libraries to those that are typically pre-installed * Usability + Maximize orthogonality of settings and switches + Support both interactive and non-interactive use + Command-line switches should be no more than two characters long * Maintainability + Accept no bogus patches + Maximize orthogonality of modules * Stability + Accept no bogus patches + Use no unstable tools or libraries + If it ain't broke, don't fix it + If it damages usability or maintainability, it's considered broke + Do not merely deprecate that which deserves to be deleted Some noteworthy violations: * Nontrivial workaround for platforms with obsolete zoneinfo databases * The -ns switch is deprecated but deserves to be deleted * libtcd painstakingly purged of bogosity Harmonics files XTide has a long history of harmonics file woes and has been through four different file formats trying to solve them. Readable Extensible Efficient Available TXT X X XML X X SQL X X TCD1 X X TCD2 X X X XTide 1 used a nice, human-readable text format (harmonics.txt) but it was neither efficient nor extensible. New fields that were really, really necessary got wedged in as "hot comments," initiating a long downhill slide into architectural chaos. Unwisely, XTide 2 perpetuated the harmonics.txt format but added a new, extensible XML format for subordinate stations only (offsets.xml). It was anticipated that one of two things would eventually happen: either a reasonably functional and stable SQL database would become standard issue with the average Unix, obviating the need to avoid that external dependency, or harmonics.txt would go away and all stations would be done in extensible XML. Neither one happened. Migration to XML was put off repeatedly because it would exacerbate the performance bottleneck. Everybody suffered with the lousy performance until Jan Depner proposed to implement a binary format (TCD). TCD1 fixed the performance problem but the extensibility problem persisted. New fields could be added with just minor changes to libtcd, but then you needed to recompile the world. Old versions of XTide couldn't read new harmonics files after fields were added. This had a major chilling effect on all development that would have required new fields. TCD2 (a major, incompatible revision) emptied the queue of incompatible changes but also added a field whose content is extension fields encoded as text. Adding fields this way is not as efficient as adding new binary fields, but it avoids the need to make an incompatible revision over small stuff. The option to add new binary fields and bump the major rev remains open should that become necessary. Known problems Lots of serious design problems were fixed in refactorings begining with version 2.7 (early 2004) and continuing through version 2.9. Remaining minor problems: 1. The interface with X11 is still weird, especially bootstrapping. 2. The analog tide clock icon caused more problems (with buggy window managers) than it was worth. 3. URLs assigned to prediction pages by the web server should probably be based on the harmonics file name and the location name rather than a transient "row ID." 4. Constituent inference was patched in via libtcd and maybe could have been integrated better. In theory, you might want to control it on a station-by-station basis like preferred units, and it probably should not require a station reload to turn it on or off. 5. Graph and calendar modes are implemented by transient classes. These are not proper objects, but they are too complicated to be implemented with methods alone. C++ feature footprint At the time XTide 2 was developed, the fancier features of C++ such as the Standard Template Library (STL) and exceptions did not work in a portable fashion among the commonly available compilers, so their use was avoided. Similarly, [5]Qt and other free alternatives to Motif were not widely available, so Athena Widgets were used. The resulting interface may seem [6]primitive by today's standards, but it still works. By the time of the 2.7 refactorings, the STL appeared to be stable and widely available, so standard templates were introduced where appropriate to simplify new code. Old code was not STLified until the Great Cleanup of 2006 (XTide 2.9). The long long int data type was introduced in XTide 2.6 as part of the changes to handle dates before 1970 and after 2037. Nobody complained. Streams were expunged from XTide 2.6 after compilers started deprecating XTide's use of them. In XTide, C++ streams did not add value versus plain old C I/O, but this is not the case for every application. The bool data type was introduced in XTide 2.9. Exceptions are still not used, but probably could be, as those compilers that don't support them don't support the Standard Template Library either. Coding conventions A uniform coding convetion was imposed in XTide 2.9. See the file CodingConventions.txt included in the distribution tarball. __________________________________________________________________ [7]<- Previous [8]-> Next [9]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/credits.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.trolltech.com/ 6. http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/S/stone-knives-and-bearskins.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/credits.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Moonrise over Marginal Way Bibliography Canonical sources on the NOS tide prediction methodology (including a mathematical explanation from first principles in SP98): Manual of Harmonic Analysis and Prediction of Tides. Special Publication No. 98, Revised (1940) Edition (reprinted 1958 with corrections; reprinted again 1994). United States Government Printing Office, 1994. Computer Applications to Tides in the National Ocean Survey. Supplement to Manual of Harmonic Analysis and Prediction of Tides (Special Publication No. 98). National Ocean Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, January 1982. Those can be ordered from NOAA for $5 or $10, depending on the phase of the moon. Miscellaneous publications available from [5]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#pubs: [6]Tide and Current Glossary. National Ocean Service, January 2000. Downloaded from [7]NOS, 2003-12-19. [8]Tidal Datums and their Applications. NOAA Special Publication NOS CO-OPS 1, June 2000. Downloaded from [9]NOS, 2004-08-27. [10]Nathaniel Bowditch, LL.D. The American Practical Navigator: An Epitome of Navigation. NIMA Pub. No. 9, Bicentennial Edition, 2002. Downloaded from [11]NGA, 2004-09-28. 42 MB. Chapter 9 is a tutorial on tides and currents. My sources for X-windows programming reference: Kimball, Paul E. The X Toolkit Cookbook. Prentice Hall P T R, New Jersey, 1995. Nye, Adrian. Xlib Programming Manual. O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., Volume 1, Third Edition, July 1993. A catalog of information on the ISO 8601 standard date and time notation can be found at [12]http://dmoz.org/Science/Reference/Standards/Individual_Standards/IS O_8601/. iCalendar format and usage is according to [13]RFC 2445 and [14]RFC 2446, with some hints taken from [15]RFC 2447 (November 1998). An article about a model-based approach to tide prediction, which is completely different from what XTide does, is Derek Goring, "Computer Models Define Tide Variability," The Industrial Physicist, v. 7, n. 5, October/November 2001, pp. 14-17. Available at [16]http://www.niwa.co.nz/rc/prog/chaz/news/tidalmodel.pdf or [17]http://www.aip.org/tip/INPHFA/vol-7/iss-5/p14.pdf. Michael Foreman's publications are a good read if you are interested in the Doodson approach to tide prediction. Foreman, M.G.G., 1977. Manual for Tidal Heights Analysis and Prediction. Pacific Marine Science Report 77-10, Institute of Ocean Sciences, Patricia Bay, Sidney, B.C., 58 pp. (2004 revision). Foreman, M.G.G., 1978. Manual for Tidal Currents Analysis and Predition. Pacific Marine Science Report 78-6, Institute of Ocean Sciences, Patricia Bay, Sidney, B.C., 57 pp. (2004 revision). Foreman, M.G.G., and R.F. Henry, 1979. Tidal Analysis Based on High and Low Water Observations. Pacific Marine Science Report 79-15, Institute of Ocean Sciences, Patricia Bay, Sidney, B.C., 36 pp. (2004 revision). Miscellaneous publications mentioned by Hugh Casement that I haven't read: On the response method of tide prediction, which is completely different and allegedly better than what XTide does: Munk, Walter H.; Cartwright, David E.: Tidal spectroscopy and prediction. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, A 259 (1966). An interesting-sounding publication that Hugh Casement hasn't read either: Horn, Walter: Some recent approaches to tidal problems (Centre Belge d'Océans, Brussels, year unknown). Horn, Walter: Tafeln der Astronomischen Argumente V0 und der Korrektionen j, v (Deutsches Hydrographisches Institut, Hamburg, 1967). Doodson, in Proceedings of the Royal Society A.100 (London, 1921). Cartwright and Tayler, in Geophysical Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society 23 (1971). Jean Meeus, Astronomical Algorithms, Willmann-Bell. __________________________________________________________________ [18]<- Previous [19]-> Next [20]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/credits.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/ 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html#pubs 6. ftp://ftp.flaterco.com/xtide/glossary2.pdf 7. http://www.tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/pub.html 8. ftp://ftp.flaterco.com/xtide/tidal_datums_and_their_applications.pdf 9. http://www.tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/pub.html 10. ftp://ftp.flaterco.com/xtide/Bowditch.pdf 11. http://pollux.nss.nga.mil/pubs/pubs_j_apn_sections.html?rid=187 12. http://dmoz.org/Science/Reference/Standards/Individual_Standards/ISO_8601/ 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/rfc2445.txt 14. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/rfc2446.txt 15. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/rfc2447.txt 16. http://www.niwa.co.nz/rc/prog/chaz/news/tidalmodel.pdf 17. http://www.aip.org/tip/INPHFA/vol-7/iss-5/p14.pdf 18. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/credits.html 19. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html 20. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents Appendix A -- Historical predictions and Y2038 compliance As of 2002, the average Unix uses a signed 32-bit integer to represent time as a count of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00Z. The limits of that representation are 1901-12-13 20:45:52Z and 2038-01-19 03:14:07Z. Some platforms instead use an unsigned 32-bit integer while others already use 64-bit integers. XTide originally limited itself to the range 1970 to 2037. This provided portability and reliable results regardless of the time_t representation and allowed Interval (the difference between two timestamps) to be represented using a signed 32-bit integer. However, an increasing number of requests for historical "past predictions" combined with slow progress in migrating the average Unix platform to a time representation capable of surviving year 2038 finally motivated the incorporation of a workaround. If XTide is compiled with this workaround, time_t is redefined as a signed 64-bit integer and the platform's time functions are bypassed. Years from 1 to 4000 are allowed. However, time zones and daylight savings time are sacrificed. Everything becomes UTC. [4]* In XTide 2.9 and newer, the workaround can be enabled at configure time using configure --enable-time-workaround. The range of years that is selectable in timestamp dialogs is automatically expanded to 1700 to 2100 when the time workaround is enabled. If a different range is required, the definitions of Global::dialogFirstYear and Global::dialogLastYear in Global.cc must be changed manually. In order to obtain predictions for past and future years, it is also necessary to use a harmonics file that supports those years. The new harmonics file harmonics-dwf, rev. 2004-10-05 or later, supports the years 1700 to 2100. If you need to extend the range of years further, use the following procedure. 1. Obtain and build the most recent versions of Congen, Tcd-utils and Harmbase2, available at [5]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html. You will also need to install the version of Postgres indicated by the Harmbase2 instructions. 2. Obtain the most recent Postgres database dump of harmonics-dwf from the same place and load it: createdb harmbase2; psql harmbase2 < harmonics-dwf-*.sql. 3. Export the database to a new TCD file using the export program of Harmbase2, specifying whatever years you wanted: export -b 1700 -e 2300 harmonics-me. If you are using .txt and .xml files, you can extend the range of years as follows. 1. Obtain and build the most recent versions of Congen and Tcd-utils, available at [6]http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html. 2. Generate the needed years as explained in the README in the Congen distribution. E.g., congen -a1 -b 1700 -e 2300 < congen_input.txt > out.txt. 3. Using a text editor, edit harmonics.txt and replace the segment between "Begin congen output" and "End congen output" with the congen output that you just generated. 4. Convert the data to TCD format using build_tide_db as explained in the README of the Tcd-utils distribution. Please be aware that extrapolating predictions over large spans of time may give extremely inaccurate results. Don't even go there until you [7]read this FAQ about it. * The time scale used by the time workaround is not strictly speaking UTC since it does not implement [8]leap seconds, but neither does the standard library. See [9]Limitation #6. __________________________________________________________________ [10]<- Previous [11]-> Next [12]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bibliography.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html#leap 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#57 8. http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq/pubs/bulletin/leapsecond.htm 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bugs.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/bibliography.html 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]About harmonic constants and sub station corrections [5]Change log Appendix B -- Application of offsets for Min Flood and Min Ebb events [6]B.1 Background [7]B.2 Secondary Station Adjustments Instructions (NOS) [8]B.3 Comparison of old and new results [9]B.4 Comparison with published tables Background XTide distinguishes the following common events for current stations: Max Flood Maximum current in the flood (+) direction. Max Ebb Maximum current in the ebb ( -) direction. Slack, Flood Begins Zero current preceding flood. Slack, Ebb Begins Zero current preceding ebb. Additionally, it distinguishes two events that are not seen as frequently: Min Flood Minimum current in the flood (+) direction between two Max Floods when the current never crosses zero. Min Ebb Minimum current in the ebb ( -) direction between two Max Ebbs when the current never crosses zero. In XTide 2.8, a change was made to the application of offsets for Min Flood and Min Ebb events. Event XTide 2.7 time adjust XTide 2.7 current adjust XTide 2.8 time adjust XTide 2.8 current adjust Min Flood Same as Max Ebb Same as Max Ebb Same as Slack, Flood Begins; if null, use Max Flood Same as Max Flood Min Ebb Same as Max Flood Same as Max Flood Same as Slack, Ebb Begins; if null, use Max Ebb Same as Max Ebb This change was made based on a reading of the highlighted sections of the National Ocean Service web page quoted below, which was downloaded from [10]http://co-ops.nos.noaa.gov/currents04/t2chelp.html on 2004-09-15. The second highlighted passage states that no attempt is made to predict the speed of the minimum currents. It would not make sense for XTide to leave these values unadjusted because a very small ratio could cause the supposed maxima to have lower amplitude than the minimum. Applying the ratio used for the surrounding maxima will give reasonable looking results as long as the adjustment is only a ratio. (Additive adjustments would not produce reasonable results.) __________________________________________________________________ BEGIN NATIONAL OCEAN SERVICE TEXT (highlighting added) __________________________________________________________________ Secondary Station Adjustments Instructions The publication of full daily predictions is necessarily limited to a comparatively small number of stations. These stations are referred to as "reference stations". Tidal current predictions for more than 2500 other locations can be obtained by applying certain differences to the daily predictions for the reference stations. These pages provide a listing of the more than 2500 "subordinate stations" for which such predictions can be made, the differences and ratios to be used, and a link to the appropriate reference station. The stations in the listing are arranged geographically to make it possible to find stations which are available for an area you are interested in. Since all tidal current stations are located offshore, many of them are named for the channels, rivers, and inlets they are located in, or for cities, towns, or navigational points they are located near. Some personal knowledge of the area you are interested in may be necessary to determine which station(s) are most appropriate for your use. Depths: Although current measurements may have been recorded at various depths in the past, the data listed here for most subordinate stations are mean values determined to have been representative of the current at each location. For that reason, no specific current meter depth for those stations are given. Beginning with the Boston Harbor tidal current survey in 1971, data for individual meter depths were published and subsequent new data may be presented in a similar manner. Since most of the current data in these pages came from meters suspended from survey vessels or anchored buoys, the listed depths are those measured downward from the surface. Some later data have come from meters anchored at fixed depths from the bottom. These meter positions were defined as depth below chart datum. Such defined depths in these pages will be accompanied by the small letter "d". Minimum Currents: The user may note that at many locations the current may not diminish to a true slack water or zero speed stage. For that reason, the phrases, "minimum before flood" and "minimum before ebb" are used in these pages rather than "slack water" although either or both minimums may actually reach a zero speed value at some locations. Maximum Currents: Near the coast and in inland waters, the current increases from a minimum current (slack water) for a period of about 3 hours until the maximum speed or strength of the current is reached. The speed then decreases for another period of about 3 hours when minimum current is again reached and the current begins a similar cycle in the opposite direction. The current that flows towards the coast or up a stream is known as the flood current; the opposite flow is known as the ebb current. Speeds of the current at reference stations are listed as positive values for floods and negative values for ebbs. These pages list the average directions of the maximum floods and maximum ebb currents. The directions listed are given in degrees, true, reading from 000 at north to 359 and are the directions toward which the current flow. Differences and Speed Ratios: These pages contain time differences by which the user can compile approximate times for the minimum and maximum current phases at the subordinate stations. Time differences for those phases should be applied to the corresponding phases at the reference station. It will be seen upon inspection that some subordinate stations exhibit either a double flood or a double ebb stage, or both. In those cases, a separate time difference is listed for each of the three flood (or ebb) phases and should be applied only to the maximum flood (or ebb) phase at the reference station. The results obtained by the application of time differences will be based upon the local time meridian. Differences of time meridians between a subordinate stations and its reference station have been accounted for. The speed ratios are used to compile approximations of the daily current speeds at the subordinate stations and refer only to the maximum floods and ebbs. No attempt is made to predict the speed of the minimum currents. These ratios are multiplied to the corresponding maximum current phases at the reference station. As mentioned before, however, some stations may exhibit either a double flood or a double ebb, or both. As with time differences, separate ratios are listed for each of the three flood (or ebb) phases and should be applied only to the daily maximum flood (or ebb) speed at the reference station. It should be noted that although the speed of a given current phase at a subordinate station is obtained by reference to the corresponding phase at a reference station, the directions of the current at the two places may differ considerably. These pages list the average directions of the maximum current phases at the subordinate stations. Example Tidal Current Calculations For Cape May Channel, the time and speed adjustments listed in the tables are: Minimum Minimum Speed Before Flood Before Ebb Ratio Flood Ebb Flood Ebb -1 14 -1 30 -1 11 -0 45 1.1 1.8 and the reference station is Delaware Bay Entrance. If the times and speeds listed in column 1 are the minimum and maximum tidal currents for a day at Delaware Bay Entrance, column 2 are the time corrections, and column 3 are the speed corrections; column 4 will be the predicted currents at Cape May Channel. These values are computed by adding or subtracting the times in column 1 to the adjustments in column 2; and by multiplying the speeds in column 1 by the ratios in column 3. (1) (2) (3) (4) Times Speed Times Speed 0114 0425 1.3 -1 14 -1 30 *1.1 0000 0255 1.4 0736 1055 -1.3 -1 11 -0 45 *1.8 0625 1010 -2.3 1351 1650 1.2 -1 14 -1 30 *1.1 1237 1520 1.3 1958 2316 -1.3 -1 11 -0 45 *1.8 1847 2231 -2.3 __________________________________________________________________ END NATIONAL OCEAN SERVICE TEXT __________________________________________________________________ Comparison of old and new results From [11]http://co-ops.nos.noaa.gov/currents04/tab2pc2.html (2004-09-15): Minimum Mini mum Speed Direction Before Flood Befo re Ebb Ratio At Maximum Station Depth Flood Ebb Flood Ebb Flood Ebb Reference Station Admiralty Head, 0.5 mile west of -0 31 -0 03 +0 0 1 -0 07 1.3 1.2 145 025 Admiralty Inlet Resulting XTide data set: Name Admiralty Head, 0.5 mile west of, Washington Current Reference Admiralty Inlet, Washington Current Max time add -00:03 Max level add NULL Max level mult 1.300 Min time add -00:07 Min level add NULL Min level mult 1.200 Flood begins -00:31 Ebb begins +00:01 NOS predictions for 2004-09-08 and 2004-09-09 at reference station, from [12]http://co-ops.nos.noaa.gov/currents04/ADMIRALI.shtml (2004-09-15): Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Water Current Water Current Water Current Water Current Water Current Day Time Time Veloc Time Time Veloc Time Time Veloc Time Time Veloc Time Time Veloc h.m. h.m. knots h.m. h.m. knots h.m. h.m. knots h.m. h.m. knots h.m. h.m. knots 8 402 -2.3 814 1122 1.5 1449 1801 -1.2 2257 -0.1 9 508 -2.4 909 1219 1.7 1543 1856 -1.5 Corresponding XTide results: Reference station Sub station (XTide 2.7) Sub station (XTide 2.8) 2004-09-08 4:02 AM PDT -2.33 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-08 8:13 AM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-08 11:22 AM PDT 1.51 knots Max Flood 2004-09-08 2:48 PM PDT -0.00 knots Slack, Ebb Begins 2004-09-08 6:01 PM PDT -1.22 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-08 10:57 PM PDT -0.07 knots Min Ebb 2004-09-09 5:08 AM PDT -2.36 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-09 9:08 AM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-09 12:19 PM PDT 1.71 knots Max Flood 2004-09-09 3:42 PM PDT -0.00 knots Slack, Ebb Begins 2004-09-09 6:56 PM PDT -1.47 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-09 11:22 PM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-08 3:55 AM PDT -2.80 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-08 7:42 AM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-08 11:19 AM PDT 1.96 knots Max Flood 2004-09-08 2:49 PM PDT -0.00 knots Slack, Ebb Begins 2004-09-08 5:54 PM PDT -1.47 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-08 10:54 PM PDT -0.09 knots Min Ebb 2004-09-09 5:01 AM PDT -2.84 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-09 8:37 AM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-09 12:16 PM PDT 2.22 knots Max Flood 2004-09-09 3:43 PM PDT -0.00 knots Slack, Ebb Begins 2004-09-09 6:49 PM PDT -1.77 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-09 10:51 PM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-08 3:55 AM PDT -2.80 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-08 7:42 AM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-08 11:19 AM PDT 1.96 knots Max Flood 2004-09-08 2:49 PM PDT -0.00 knots Slack, Ebb Begins 2004-09-08 5:54 PM PDT -1.47 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-08 10:58 PM PDT -0.08 knots Min Ebb 2004-09-09 5:01 AM PDT -2.84 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-09 8:37 AM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins 2004-09-09 12:16 PM PDT 2.22 knots Max Flood 2004-09-09 3:43 PM PDT -0.00 knots Slack, Ebb Begins 2004-09-09 6:49 PM PDT -1.77 knots Max Ebb 2004-09-09 10:51 PM PDT 0.00 knots Slack, Flood Begins __________________________________________________________________ Comparison with published tables When the change in XTide's behavior was made in 2004, the NOS web site did not provide calculated predictions at the subordinate stations for comparison. Upon reviewing the issue in 2007 (at which time those predictions were available), it was found that the published tables did neither of the behaviors that were implemented in XTide. CAPTION: Time offsets applied to Min Ebb event XTide 2.7 XTide 2.8 NOS 2007 Flood Minimum Before Ebb Ebb Whereas the behavior of the published tables seemed to be in conflict with the [13]Secondary Station Adjustments Instructions, it was resolved not to change the behavior of XTide at that time. Reference station NOS table copied from [14]http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/get_predc.shtml?year=2007&stn=6030 +Admiralty+Inlet&fldavgd=179&ebbavgd=003&footnote= 2007-02-24 Admiralty Inlet Predicted Tidal Current March, 2007 Flood Direction, 179 True. Ebb (-)Direction, 003 True. NOAA, National Ocean Service Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Day Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots 12 0049 0347 -0.9 0825 -0.1 1458 -2.4 1917 2229 +1.5 13 0207 0512 -1.0 0948 -0.2 1610 -2.4 2019 2335 +1.8 Comparable XTide output, using harmonics-rmk-20040615.tcd tide -l"admiralty inlet" -b"2007-03-12 00:00" -e"2007-03-14 00:00" -mc -empSsMm -tf"%H%M" -fh Day Slack Flood Slack Ebb Slack Flood Slack Mon 12 0048 0347 -0.93 kt 0824 -0.08 kt 1457 -2.41 kt 1916 2229 1.52 kt Tue 13 0206 0512 -1.04 kt 0948 -0.18 kt 1610 -2.45 kt 2018 2335 1.75 kt Subordinate station Name Agate Pass, North End of, Washington Current Reference Admiralty Inlet, Washington Current Min time add -0:59 Min level add NULL Min level mult 0.700 Max time add -1:00 Max level add NULL Max level mult 0.800 Flood begins -1:28 Ebb begins -0:18 NOS table copied from [15]http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/get_predc.shtml?year=2007&stn=6030 +Admiralty+Inlet&secstn=Agate+Passage,+north+end&sbfh=%2D1&sbfm=28&fldh =%2D1&fldm=00&sbeh=%2D0&sbem=18&ebbh=%2D0&ebbm=59&fldr=0.8&ebbr=0.7&fld avgd=230&ebbavgd=032&footnote= 2007-02-24 Agate Passage, north end Predicted Tidal Current March, 2007 Flood Direction, 230 True. Ebb (-)Direction, 032 True. NOAA, National Ocean Service Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Slack Water Maximum Current Day Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots Time h.m. Time h.m. Veloc knots 12 0031 0248 -0.6 0726 -0.1 1359 -1.7 1749 2129 +1.2 13 0149 0413 -0.7 0849 -0.1 1511 -1.7 1851 2235 +1.4 Comparable XTide output, using harmonics-rmk-20040615.tcd tide -l"Agate Pass, North End of, Washington Current" -b"2007-03-12 00:00" -e"2007-03-14 00:00" -mc -empSsMm -tf"%H%M" -fh Day Slack Flood Slack Ebb Slack Flood Slack Mon 12 0030 0248 -0.65 kt 0806 -0.06 kt 1358 -1.69 kt 1748 2129 1.21 kt Tue 13 0148 0413 -0.73 kt 0930 -0.13 kt 1511 -1.71 kt 1850 2235 1.40 kt __________________________________________________________________ [16]<- Previous [17]-> Next [18]Contents [19]About harmonic constants and sub station corrections [20]Change log References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/changelog.html#2.8 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html#background 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html#instructions 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html#oldnew 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html#tables 10. http://co-ops.nos.noaa.gov/currents04/t2chelp.html 11. http://co-ops.nos.noaa.gov/currents04/tab2pc2.html 12. http://co-ops.nos.noaa.gov/currents04/ADMIRALI.shtml 13. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html#instructions 14. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/get_predc.shtml?year=2007&stn=6030+Admiralty+Inlet&fldavgd=179&ebbavgd=003&footnote= 15. http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/get_predc.shtml?year=2007&stn=6030+Admiralty+Inlet&secstn=Agate+Passage,+north+end&sbfh=%2D1&sbfm=28&fldh=%2D1&fldm=00&sbeh=%2D0&sbem=18&ebbh=%2D0&ebbm=59&fldr=0.8&ebbr=0.7&fldavgd=230&ebbavgd=032&footnote= 16. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/time_t.html 17. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 18. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 19. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/harmonics.html 20. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/changelog.html#2.8 ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents [4]Modes and formats [5]FAQ Appendix C -- Making calendars fit onto a single page Get rid of unwanted information Regardless of which format you are using, having extra stuff in the calendar that you don't want isn't going to help. If you are using a web page somewhere, look for options that allow you to suppress sun and moon events or control the formatting of timestamps. If you are using XTide directly, you do this using the eventmask and timefmt settings. The following examples assume command line usage, but you can change settings in several other ways. See [6]settings for details. To get rid of unwanted columns for sun and moon events, use the -em command line switch to set an event mask. E.g, to suppress all sun and moon events, set the event mask to the value pSsMm. p = phase of moon, S = sunrise, s = sunset, M = moonrise, m = moonset. To get rid of unwanted verbosity in timestamps (AM/PM and/or time zone), use the -tf command line switch to set the time format string. E.g., to reduce it to four digits of 24-hour notation, set the time format string to %H%M. To keep AM/PM but lose the time zone, set the time format string to %l:%M %p. Scale down HTML If the calendar that you want to print is on a web page, the next step is to set up your print scaling to make it fit on the page without a lot of ugly text wrapping. The process for doing this is slightly different depending on your browser and operating system. Firefox 1.5.0.1 Linux Access the print scaling menu via File -> Page Setup. On the Format & Options tab, unselect Shrink To Fit Page Width and specify an arbitrary shrink factor. Try various shrink factors and see how they look in File -> Print Preview. Print when you find one you like. The Format & Options tab also lets you choose between Portrait and Landscape printing, which can be helpful depending on whether your calendar is really long or really wide. Firefox 1.5.0.1 Windows XP Do File -> Print Preview. Use the controls at the top of the window to select Portrait or Landscape printing and to scale down the HTML until it fits nicely on a page. When ready, select Print. Internet Explorer 6 Windows XP Internet Explorer 6 does not support print scaling. No wonder so many Windows users had trouble printing calendars! Doh! (Smack forehead.) Some Windows printer drivers add an option for print scaling on a buried menu, but what that does is not what you need. Internet Explorer 7 Windows XP The following instructions are based on Microsoft's documentation. I cannot test these instructions because IE7 installation fails on my PC. 1. Click the arrow to the right of the Print button, and then click Print Preview. 2. Pull down the print size menu ( Shrink To Fit ) and try different options until the calendar fits nicely on a page. 3. When ready, click on the tiny printer icon to print. Get serious--use LaTeX The problem with printing calendars from HTML is that HTML doesn't know anything about typesetting printed documents. HTML has no concept of pagination. Whether the result ends up on one page or three when you print it was never supposed to be a concern. The right language to use in this case is LaTeX. Like HTML, LaTeX is a markup language, but it is all about typesetting printed documents. XTide can generate calendars in LaTeX format. These can be converted to PDFs using pdflatex, and those PDFs can then be printed on any size paper using Acrobat Reader. If you are using XTide through a web page, you just have to hunt for an option to generate a PDF and hope that there is one. The process to generate and view a PDF from the command line is as follows: bash-3.00$ tide -l"Location Name" -mc -fl -b"Start Time" -e"End Time" > cal.tex bash-3.00$ pdflatex cal.tex bash-3.00$ acroread cal.pdf The default page geometry in LaTeX mode is probably not optimal for making your calendar look nice. Experiment with different values for pageheight (-ph 420) and pagewidth (-pw 297) until the calendar looks nice in PDF. Do not worry that the shape of the pages in the PDF is not what you have in your printer. [7]example of nicely formatted calendar When you are happy with the look of the PDF, do the following to print it. Acrobat Reader 7.0 Linux Use the File -> Print Setup menu of Acrobat Reader to select Portrait or Landscape printing, then on the File -> Print menu check off Shrink oversized pages to paper size and Expand small pages to paper size. Issue: I have experienced disappearing lines when printing via the HP DeskJet 5550 driver of CUPS 1.1.23. This problem does not occur when printing under Windows XP, so clearly there is some print option that I am missing. Acrobat Reader 7.0 Windows XP Use the File -> Print Setup menu of Acrobat Reader to select Portrait or Landscape printing, then on the File -> Print menu, change Page Scaling to Fit to Printer Margins. __________________________________________________________________ [8]<- Previous [9]-> Next [10]Contents [11]Modes and formats [12]FAQ References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide1diff.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#onepage 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/settings.html 7. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/BarHarbor.pdf 8. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/mincurrents.html 9. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide1diff.html 10. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 11. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/modes.html 12. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/faq.html#onepage ################################################################ [1]<- Previous [2]-> Next [3]Contents Icon Differences from XTide 1 XTide 2 is a complete redesign of XTide 1. There are too many subtle improvements to list them all, but here are the not so subtle ones: * New interactive user interface for X windows client * Integrated web server now provided in distribution * Simpler, better command line interface * Handles multiple harmonics files transparently * Subordinate stations are now stored in an external database and are expanded to handle all known styles of offsets * Hydraulic currents are fixed * Removed useless options and modes * Added sun and moon information (by popular demand...) * Fast, efficient binary format for harmonics data These are the non-obvious things you must know in order to migrate: 1. The environment variable HFILE is no longer used to specify the harmonics file; instead, HFILE_PATH is used: export HFILE_PATH=/usr/local/share/xtide/harmonics.tcd If HFILE_PATH is not set, XTide looks for the file "harmonics.tcd" in the default directory. 2. XTide now has its own built-in icon. Remove any icon settings that you made in your window manager init files. 3. You may no longer use anonymous units in harmonics files. The units must be one of the recognized alternatives. These are: feet, meters, knots, knots^2 (for hydraulic currents). If you are still using an ancient harmonics file that contains no units or "bogo-knots," then shame on you. It's high time that you upgraded. __________________________________________________________________ [4]<- Previous [5]-> Next [6]Contents References 1. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 2. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/quickinst.html 3. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents 4. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/pound_to_fit.html 5. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/quickinst.html 6. http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/xtide.html#contents
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