On Sat, 2006-12-02 at 19:33 +0000, Anne Wilson wrote: > On Saturday 02 December 2006 19:21, Matthew Miller wrote: > > On Sat, Dec 02, 2006 at 07:12:51PM +0000, Anne Wilson wrote: > > > I couldn't find it on the menu, so I tried : > > > /usr/bin/units > > > 2438 units, 71 prefixes, 32 nonlinear units > > > You have: > > > Clearly this is not what I intended :-) > > > Question 1 - what units is this talking about? > > > Question 2 - does anyone know how I can access the 'units' converter? > > > > No, this is it. It just has a dumb user interface. It works like this: > > > > You have: 1 meter > > You want: inches > > * 39.370079 > > / 0.0254 > > You have: 20000 leagues > > You want: miles > > * 60000.12 > > / 1.6666633e-05 > > > Arghh!! Never thought of that. So is the line > 2438 units, 71 prefixes, 32 nonlinear units > actually telling me something about itself? Section form man usits: INTERACTING WITH ‘UNITS’ To invoke units for interactive use, type ‘units’ at your shell prompt. The program will print something like this: 2131 units, 53 prefixes, 24 nonlinear units -- Aaron Konstam <akonstam@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>