|
|
1.1 ! root 1: .TH WX 7 ! 2: .SH NAME ! 3: wx - get weather information ! 4: .SH SYNOPSIS ! 5: .B wx ! 6: [ ! 7: .B -cemnoOs ! 8: ] ! 9: [ ! 10: .B -a ! 11: .I state ! 12: ] ! 13: .SH DESCRIPTION ! 14: .I Wx ! 15: writes the local (greater New York and Philadelphia) ! 16: weather forecast. ! 17: .PP ! 18: The following options are available: ! 19: .TP 15 ! 20: .B \-e ! 21: Print only the extended forecasts. ! 22: .TP 15 ! 23: .B \-m ! 24: Print the marine weather and forecast, ! 25: which gives coastal and offshore information ! 26: (winds, tides, wave heights, visibilities, etc.) ! 27: for an area from Watch Hill, R.I. to Manasquan, ! 28: N.J. ! 29: .TP 15 ! 30: .B \-c ! 31: Print a summary of temperatures and weather ! 32: for selected U.S. cities. ! 33: .TP 15 ! 34: .B \-n ! 35: Print the national weather summary. ! 36: .TP 15 ! 37: .B \-s ! 38: Print ski conditions ! 39: for New York and New England. ! 40: .TP 15 ! 41: .B \-oO ! 42: Print the previous ! 43: .B (-o) ! 44: and oldest avalable ! 45: .B (-O) ! 46: national weather summaries. ! 47: .TP 15 ! 48: \fB \-a\fI state \fR ! 49: (where ! 50: .I state ! 51: is a two-letter, lower case ! 52: state abbreviation) Print (cat) an ! 53: area forecast (if available) for any state requested ! 54: in the continental U.S.; e.g. ! 55: .I ! 56: wx -a mi ! 57: will print the state forecast for Michigan. ! 58: The required 2-letter abbreviation for any ! 59: state may be found by typing, ! 60: .I ! 61: wx -a ?. ! 62: .PP ! 63: Except for ! 64: .I ! 65: wx -a, ! 66: all information is printed under the ! 67: .I ! 68: p ! 69: command. ! 70: For details of ! 71: .I p, ! 72: refer to the manual page. ! 73: .SH FILES ! 74: .TP 30 ! 75: /usr/lbin/wx ! 76: .TP 30 ! 77: /usr/pub/weather/* ! 78: weather and forecast files, updated daily ! 79: .SH BUGS ! 80: What comes out is ! 81: only as good as ! 82: what went in. If the ! 83: information you are ! 84: requesting was not sent ! 85: over the weather line, you ! 86: will get no meaningful output. ! 87: If information over the line ! 88: came in with faulty separator ! 89: codes, you will get strange, ! 90: often cryptic, output.
This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.