source: git/doc/manual.sgml @ 16734b2

RELEASE/1.2debug-cidebug-ci-sanitisersstereowalls-data
Last change on this file since 16734b2 was 16734b2, checked in by Olly Betts <olly@…>, 10 years ago

doc/manual.sgml,src/commands.c,tests/cs.svx,tests/csbad.out: Add
support for "*cs long-lat".

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File size: 94.7 KB
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1<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.1//EN" [
2 <!-- Define a parameter entity to pull in the standard entities -->
3 <!ENTITY % entities SYSTEM "survex.ent">
4 <!-- Now use the parameter entity -->
5 %entities;
6 <!ENTITY % versionentity SYSTEM "version.ent">
7 %versionentity;
8]>
9
10<!--
11FIXME:
12
133dfile title:
14defaults to a list of the leafnames of the &svx; files specified on the
15command line (with any paths and extensions removed).
16.
17e.g.: cavern entrance.svx \data\2ndpart.svx
18.
19would give a surveytitle of 'entrance 2ndpart'.
20.
21but this may change...
22
23FIXME todo:
24mark-up of Windows Windows NT etc?
25section on "design philosophy"
26
27level sump fudge:
28
29*begin
30*data cartesian from to dx dy dz
31*sd dx dy 100 metres
32*sd dz 0.001 metres
33; upstream - downstream
34nuiping.gowiththeflow.129 dachao.upstream.105 0 0 0 ; last number is drop in height across the sump
35*end
36
37``Quick start'' section
38
39- install (by OS): unpacking, configuration (language, where support files live)
40
41- lead people through entering and processing
42a sample survey.  Take examples from surveying books and real surveys.
43
44
45<Para>The other really important commands apart from *BEGIN, *END, and
46*INCLUDE are *EQUATE and *FIX.
47</Para>
48
49<Para>*EQUATE is used to join surveys together, e.g.
50</Para>
51
52<programlisting>*equate entrance.6 adrian.1</programlisting>
53
54<Para>
55indicates that station 6 of the entrance survey was used as
56the station 1 of the Adrian's Route survey.
57</Para>
58
59<Para>*FIX is for fixing control points - for example:
60</Para>
61
62<programlisting>
63*fix 161.entrance.1    0  0  1780</programlisting>
64
65<Para>fixes the 1st point of the 'entrance' survey at the coordinates
660 (east-west), 0 (north-south), 1780 (altitude).
67</Para>
68
69
70<term>node</term>
71<listitem><para>when talking about the survey network, we talk about an
72<emphasis>n</emphasis>-node to describe the number of connections to
73a station.  So a 1-node is a station with only 1 leg to or from it
74- i.e. The end of a passage or survey. A
752-node is a typical station along a passage with a survey leg coming
76into it, and one going out.  A 3-node is a station with three legs
77joining it, e.g. at a T-junction. And so on.
78</para>
79
80-->
81
82<article Status="draft" id=index>
83 <articleinfo>
84  <Title>&survexsuite; &version; Manual</Title>
85  <AuthorGroup>
86   <Author>
87    <FirstName/Olly/
88    <SurName/Betts/
89    <AuthorBlurb><Para>
90      Olly Betts wrote most of &survexsuite;.
91    </Para></AuthorBlurb>
92    <Affiliation>
93     <Address><Email>&ollyemail;</Email></Address>
94    </Affiliation>
95   </Author>
96   <Author>
97    <SurName/Wookey/
98    <AuthorBlurb><Para>
99      Wookey is a small furry creature.
100    </Para></AuthorBlurb>
101    <Affiliation>
102     <Address><Email>&wookeyemail;</Email></Address>
103    </Affiliation>
104   </Author>
105  </AuthorGroup>
106  <copyright>
107   <year>1998-2014</year>
108   <holder role="mailto:&ollyemail;">Olly Betts</holder>
109  </copyright>
110  <pubdate role="rcs">$Date: 2005-10-17 04:49:04 $</pubdate>
111  <ReleaseInfo>$Id: manual.sgml,v 1.96.2.11 2005-10-17 04:49:04 olly Exp $</ReleaseInfo>
112  <Abstract>
113   <Para>
114    This is the manual for &survexsuite; - an open-source software package for
115    cave surveyors.
116   </Para>
117  </Abstract>
118 </articleinfo>
119
120<Sect1><Title>Introduction</Title>
121<?dbhtml filename="intro.htm">
122
123<Para>
124This section describes what &survexsuite; is, and outlines the scope of this
125manual.
126</Para>
127
128<Sect2><Title>About &survexsuite;</Title>
129
130<Para>&survexsuite; is a multi-platform open-source cave surveying
131package.
132Version 1.2
133currently runs on &unix;, Microsoft Windows 95/NT and
134successors, and Mac OS X.
135We're investigating support for various
136palmtop devices.
137Version 1.0 has fewer features, but also runs on &msdos; and &riscos; machines.
138</Para>
139
140<Para>We are well aware that not everyone has access to super hardware
141- often surveying projects are run on little or no budget and any
142computers used are donated.  We aim to ensure that &survexsuite; is
143feasible to use on low-spec machines.  Obviously it won't be as
144responsive, but we intend it to be usable.
145Please help us to achieve this by giving us some feedback
146if you use &survexsuite; on a slow machine.</Para>
147
148<Para>&survexsuite; is capable of processing extremely complex caves very
149quickly and has a very effective, real-time cave viewer which allows
150you to rotate, zoom, and pan the cave using mouse or keyboard. We have
151tested it extensively using &cucc; and &arge;'s surveys of the caves
152under the Loser Plateau in Austria (over 22,000 survey legs, and over
153120km of underground survey data). This can all be processed in around
15410 seconds on a low-end netbook.
155Survex is also used by many other survey projects around the world,
156including the
157<ulink url="http://www.oucc.org.uk/draenen/draenenmain.htm"
158>Ogof Draenen</ulink> survey, the
159<ulink url="http://www.easegill.org.uk/">Easegill</ulink> resurvey project,
160the <Acronym/OFD/ survey, the
161<!-- url="http://milos2.zoo.ox.ac.uk/~oucc/reports/surveys/surveys.htm" -->
162<ulink url="http://www.oucc.org.uk/reports/surveys/surveys.htm"
163><Acronym/OUCC/ Picos expeditions</ulink>, and the
164<ulink url="http://www.hongmeigui.net/">Hong Meigui China
165expeditions</ulink>. <!-- FIXME more? --></Para>
166
167<Para>&survexsuite; is still actively being worked on.  Version 1.0 was
168complete in some sense, but development continues - initially in reshaping
169Survex into a more integrated GUI package.</Para>
170
171<Para>We encourage feedback from users on important features or problems,
172which will help to direct future development. Contact addresses are at the
173end of this manual.</Para>
174
175</Sect2>
176
177<!--
178<Para>Because &survexsuite; is still being actively developed, this document
179has an unfortunate tendency to lag slightly behind the capabilities of the
180software. The latest version is now available on the web at <ulink
181url="&survexwebsite;">&survexwebsite;</ulink> - check there for latest info.
182</Para>
183-->
184
185<!--
186<Sect2><Title>Other Documentation</Title>
187
188<variablelist>
189<varlistentry>
190<term>NEWS or NEWS.txt</term>
191<listitem><Para>a list of changes of interest to
192&survexsuite; users, broken down by version number.  Consult this file
193when upgrading to find out what has changed since the version you were
194using previously.
195</Para></listitem>
196</varlistentry>
197
198<varlistentry>
199<term>ChangeLog or CHANGES.txt</term>
200<listitem><Para>a much more detailed list of changes, aimed at developers
201rather than end users.
202</Para></listitem>
203</varlistentry>
204
205<varlistentry>
206<term>BUGS or BUGS.txt</term>
207<listitem><Para>a list of known bugs.
208</Para></listitem>
209</varlistentry>
210
211<varlistentry>
212<term>TODO or TODO.txt</term>
213<listitem><Para>planned changes and enhancements.
214</Para></listitem>
215</varlistentry>
216
217FIXME: merge INSTALL* into here, then process separately and textify
218to produce INSTALL*
219
220<varlistentry>
221<term>INSTALL or INSTALL.txt</term>
222<listitem><Para>instructions for installing &survexsuite;.  The
223Microsoft Windows version comes packaged up with an installation wizard,
224so this file doesn't exist there (you just run the package and follow
225the on-screen instructions).
226</Para></listitem>
227</varlistentry>
228</variablelist>
229
230</Sect2>
231-->
232
233<Sect2><Title>About this Manual</Title>
234
235<Para>
236If there's a part of this manual you find hard to understand, please do
237let us know.  We already know Survex well, so it can be hard for us
238to spot areas where the manual doesn't given enough information, or
239doesn't explain things clearly enough to follow when you don't know what's
240going on.  It's helpful is you can suggest a better wording, but don't worry
241if you can't, just explain the problem as precisely as you can.
242</Para>
243
244<Para>
245The master version of this manual is an <acronym>SGML</acronym>
246document written using the <ulink url="http://www.docbook.org/">docbook
247<acronym>DTD</acronym></ulink>,
248and automatically converted to a number of other formats.  If
249you are going to send us <emphasis>major</emphasis> changes, it's much easier
250to include them if you work from this master.  You can get it
251from the source archive (docs/manual.sgml) or from <ulink
252url="http://survex.com/docs.html">the Survex website</ulink>.
253</Para>
254
255<Sect3><Title>Terminology</Title>
256
257<Para>Throughout this document we use British terminology for
258surveying.</Para>
259
260<variablelist>
261<varlistentry>
262<term>station</term>
263<listitem><para>a point in the cave that you survey from and/or to
264</para></listitem></varlistentry>
265
266<varlistentry>
267<term>leg</term>
268<listitem><para>a line joining two stations
269</para></listitem></varlistentry>
270
271<varlistentry>
272<term>survey</term>
273<listitem><para>a group of legs surveyed on the same trip
274</para></listitem></varlistentry>
275
276</variablelist>
277
278</Sect3>
279
280</Sect2>
281
282<!-- FIXME: Further sources of info: website, mailing lists, other docs -->
283
284</Sect1>
285
286<Sect1><Title>Getting Started</Title>
287<?dbhtml filename="getstart.htm">
288
289<Para>This section covers how to obtain the software, and how to unpack and
290install it, and how to configure it.</Para>
291
292<Sect2><Title>Obtaining &survexsuite;</Title>
293
294<Para>The latest version is available from the &survexsuite; website:
295<ulink url="&survexwebsite;">&survexwebsite;</ulink>. If you do not
296have internet access or would prefer to get a copy by post, we are
297also happy to send out up-to-date copies on a floppy on receipt of
298a stamped, self-addressed envelope. See the end of this
299document for addresses.</Para>
300
301<Para>
302There's also a CD containing versions of &survexsuite; for every supported
303platform.  You can download an image for this from the website, or we'll
304send you a copy on a CD-R if you send us money to cover the costs.
305</Para>
306
307</Sect2>
308
309<Sect2><Title>Installing &survexsuite;</Title>
310
311<Para>The details of installation depend greatly on what platform you
312are using, so there is a separate section below for each platform.</Para>
313
314<Sect3><Title>&linux;</Title>
315
316<Para>
317We supply pre-compiled versions for x86 &linux; machines in RPM format
318(suitable for Redhat, Mandrake, and some other distributions).
319Survex Debian packages are available from Debian mirror sites in
320the usual way.
321</Para>
322
323<Para>
324You'll need root access to install these prebuilt packages.
325If you don't have root access you will need to build from source
326(see the next section).
327</Para>
328
329<!-- FIXME Add Gnome file association note for Linux/Unix
330<Para>On Microsoft Windows, &survexsuite; installs with
331suitable file associations so that you can drive it from the GUI.
332On &unix; you need to drive &survexsuite; from a command-line
333prompt (or set some a filemanager or graphics shell).
334</Para>
335-->
336
337<Sect3><Title>Other versions of &unix;</Title>
338
339<Para>For other &unix; versions you'll need to get the source code
340and compile it on your system.  Unpack the sources and read
341the file called INSTALL in the top level for details about building
342from source.
343</Para>
344
345</Sect3>
346
347<Sect3><Title>Microsoft Windows 95/NT and successors</Title>
348
349<Para>
350This version comes packaged with an installation wizard.  Just
351run the downloaded package and it will lead you through the
352installation process.  If installing on MS Windows NT, 2000, XP, or newer
353we recommend you run the installer as administrator (or as a
354user with administrator rights) so that the file associations
355can be set up for all users.
356</Para>
357
358<Para>
359The survey viewer that's part of &survexsuite; is called aven, and uses OpenGL
360for 3d rendering.
361OpenGL comes as standard as of Windows 98, and was included in the
362OSR2 update to Windows 95.  It's also possible that you've installed
363OpenGL with another application already (especially a 3D game like Quake).
364If you can view a survey in aven, all is well.  Otherwise you can
365<ulink url="http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;q154877
366">download OpenGL drivers from Microsoft's website</ulink> (or here's
367a <ulink url="http://download.microsoft.com/download/win95upg/info/1/W95/EN-US/Opengl95.exe">direct link to the file you actually need</ulink>).
368</Para>
369
370<Para>
371If you find that 3D rendering is sometimes very slow (e.g. one user reported
372very slow performance when running full screen, while running in a window
373was fine) then try installing the OpenGL driver supplied by the manufacturer
374of your graphics card rather than the driver Microsoft supply.
375</Para>
376
377<Para>
378The installer creates a Survex group in the Programs sub-menu of the
379Start menu containing the following items:
380</Para>
381
382<ItemizedList>
383
384<ListItem><Para>Aven</Para></ListItem>
385
386<ListItem><Para>Documentation</Para></ListItem>
387
388<ListItem><Para>Uninstall Survex</Para></ListItem>
389
390</ItemizedList>
391
392<Para>
393Icons are installed for &svx;, &x3d;, &err;, and &pos; files, and also for
394Compass Plot files (<filename>.plt</filename> and <filename>.plf</filename>)
395(which Survex can read). <!-- FIXME XYZ -->
396Double-clicking on a &svx; file loads it for editing.  To process it to
397produce a &x3d; file, right click and choose "Process" from the menu.
398Double-clicking the resultant &x3d; file views it in aven.
399All the &survexsuite; file types can be right clicked on to give a menu of
400possible actions. 
401</Para>
402
403<VariableList>
404<VarListEntry><Term>&svx;</Term>
405<ListItem>
406  <VariableList>
407  <VarListEntry><Term>Open</Term>
408  <ListItem><Para>
409  Load file into SvxEdit
410  </Para></ListItem>
411  </VarListEntry>
412  <VarListEntry><Term>Process</Term>
413  <ListItem><Para>
414  Process file with cavern to produce &x3d; file (and &err; file)
415  </Para></ListItem>
416  </VarListEntry>
417  </VariableList>
418</ListItem>
419</VarListEntry>
420   
421<VarListEntry><Term>&x3d;</Term>
422<ListItem>
423  <VariableList>
424  <VarListEntry><Term>Open</Term>
425  <ListItem><Para>
426  Load file into Aven
427  </Para></ListItem>
428  </VarListEntry>
429  <VarListEntry><Term>Print</Term>
430  <ListItem><Para>
431  Send to the printer
432  </Para></ListItem>
433  </VarListEntry>
434  <VarListEntry><Term>Extend</Term>
435  <ListItem><Para>
436  Produce extended elevation
437  </Para></ListItem>
438  </VarListEntry>
439  <VarListEntry><Term>Convert to DXF</Term>
440  <ListItem><Para>
441  Convert to a DXF file (suitable for importing into many CAD packages)
442  </Para></ListItem>
443  </VarListEntry>
444  <VarListEntry><Term>Convert for hand plotting</Term>
445  <ListItem><Para>
446  Produce a &pos; file listing all the stations and their coordinates
447  </Para></ListItem>
448  </VarListEntry>
449  </VariableList>
450</ListItem>
451
452<VarListEntry><Term>&err;</Term>
453<ListItem>
454  <VariableList>
455  <VarListEntry><Term>Open</Term>
456  <ListItem><Para>
457  Load file into Notepad
458  </Para></ListItem>
459  </VarListEntry>
460  <VarListEntry><Term>Sort by Error</Term>
461  <ListItem><Para>
462  Sort &err; file by the error in each traverse
463  </Para></ListItem>
464  </VarListEntry>
465  <VarListEntry><Term>Sort by Horizontal Error</Term>
466  <ListItem><Para>
467  Sort &err; file by the horizontal error in each traverse
468  </Para></ListItem>
469  </VarListEntry>
470  <VarListEntry><Term>Sort by Vertical Error</Term>
471  <ListItem><Para>
472  Sort &err; file by the vertical error in each traverse
473  </Para></ListItem>
474  </VarListEntry>
475  <VarListEntry><Term>Sort by Percentage Error</Term>
476  <ListItem><Para>
477  Sort &err; file by the percentage error in each traverse
478  </Para></ListItem>
479  </VarListEntry>
480  <VarListEntry><Term>Sort by Error per Leg</Term>
481  <ListItem><Para>
482  Sort &err; file by the error per leg in each traverse
483  </Para></ListItem>
484  </VarListEntry>
485  </VariableList>
486</ListItem>
487</VarListEntry>
488</VariableList>
489
490</Sect3>
491
492</Sect2>
493
494<Sect2><Title>Configuration</Title>
495
496<Sect3><Title>Selecting Your Preferred Language</Title>
497
498<Para>Survex has extensive internationalisation capabilities.  The
499language used for messages from Survex and most of the library calls
500it uses can be changed.  By default this is picked up from the
501language the operating system is set to use (from "Regional Settings"
502in Control Panel on Microsoft Windows, from the
503<systemitem>LANG</systemitem> environment variable on &unix;
504If no setting
505is found, or &survexsuite; hasn't been translated into the
506requested language, UK English is used.</Para>
507
508<Para>
509However you may want to override the language manually -
510for example if Survex isn't available in your native language
511you'll want to choose the supported language you understand best.
512</Para>
513
514<Para>
515To do this, you set the
516<systemitem>SURVEXLANG</systemitem> environment variable.  Here's a list
517of the codes currently supported:</Para>
518
519<informaltable frame="all">
520<tgroup cols="2">
521<thead>
522<row><entry/Code/<entry/Language/</row>
523</thead>
524<tbody>
525<row><entry/en/<entry/International English/</row>
526<row><entry/en_US/<entry/US English/</row>
527<row><entry/ca/<entry/Catalan/</row>
528<row><entry/de/<entry/German/</row>
529<row><entry/de_CH/<entry/Swiss German/</row>
530<row><entry/de_DE/<entry/German German/</row>
531<row><entry/es/<entry/Spanish/</row>
532<row><entry/fr/<entry/French/</row>
533<row><entry/it/<entry/Italian/</row>
534<row><entry/pt/<entry/Portuguese/</row>
535<row><entry/pt_BR/<entry/Brazillian Portuguese/</row>
536<row><entry/sk/<entry/Slovak/</row>
537</tbody>
538</tgroup>
539</informaltable>
540
541<Para>Here are examples of how to set this environment variable to give
542messages in French (language code fr):</Para>
543
544<VariableList>
545 <VarListEntry><Term>Microsoft Windows</Term>
546   <ListItem><Para>
547For MS Windows 95 and 98 (and probably ME), you'll need to add a line
548containing <command>SET SURVEXLANG=fr</command> to your
549<filename>AUTOEXEC.BAT</filename> script.  You need to
550reboot for the change to take effect.
551</Para>
552
553<Para>For MS Windows NT4, 2000, and XP, you should proceed as follows
554(this description is written from MS Windows 2000 - it should be similar on
555NT4 and XP): Open the Start Menu, navigate to the Settings sub-menu, and
556open Control Panel.  Open System (picture of a computer) and click on the
557Advanced tab.  Choose `Environmental Variables', and create a new one: name
558<systemitem>SURVEXLANG</systemitem>, value <systemitem>fr</systemitem>.
559Click OK and the new value should be effective immediately.
560   </Para></ListItem>
561 </VarListEntry>
562 <VarListEntry><Term>&unix; - csh/tcsh</Term>
563   <ListItem><Para><userinput>setenv SURVEXLANG fr</userinput></Para></ListItem>
564 </VarListEntry>
565 <VarListEntry><Term>&unix; - sh/bash</Term>
566   <ListItem><Para><userinput>SURVEXLANG=fr ; export SURVEXLANG</userinput></Para></ListItem>
567 </VarListEntry>
568</VariableList>
569
570<Para>If &survexsuite; isn't available in your language, you could
571help out by providing a translation.  The initial translation is
572likely to be about a day's work; after that translations for
573new or changed messages are occasionally required.  Contact us for details
574if you're interested.</Para>
575
576</Sect3>
577
578<Sect3><Title>Configuring the Printer Drivers</Title>
579
580<Para>
581Printing is now built into aven.
582The print.ini configuration file still exists, but is only
583useful if you want to configure the colours used if you
584have a colour printer.
585</Para>
586
587<refentry id="print.ini">
588&man.print.ini;
589</refentry>
590
591</Sect3>
592
593</Sect2>
594
595</Sect1>
596
597<!-- FIXME
598
599type in .svx file
600
601run cavern (through aven)
602
603run aven
604
605how to print/export etc
606
607-->
608
609<!-- FIXME perhaps move this after data files section? -->
610<Sect1><Title>Survex Programs</Title>
611<?dbhtml filename="cmdline.htm">
612
613<Sect2><Title>Standard Options</Title>
614
615<Para>All &survexsuite; programs respond to the following command line options:
616</Para>
617
618<VariableList>
619
620<VarListEntry><Term>--help</Term><listitem><Para>
621display option summary and exit
622</Para></listitem></VarListEntry>
623
624<VarListEntry><Term>--version</Term><listitem><Para>
625output version information and exit
626</Para></listitem></VarListEntry>
627
628</VariableList>
629
630</Sect2>
631
632<Sect2><Title>Short and Long Options</Title>
633
634<Para>
635Options have two forms: short (a dash followed by a single letter e.g.
636<command/cavern -p/) and long (two dashes followed by one or more words e.g.
637<command/cavern --percentage/).  The long form is generally easier to
638remember, while the short form is quicker to type.  Options are often
639available in both forms.
640</Para>
641
642<Note><Para>Command line options are case sensitive, so "-B" and "-b"
643are different (this didn't used to be the case before Survex 0.90).  Case
644sensitivity doubles the number of available short options (and is also the
645norm on &unix;).
646</Para></Note>
647</Sect2>
648
649<Sect2><Title>Filenames on the Command Line</Title>
650
651<Para>Filenames with spaces can be processed (provided your operating system
652supports them - &unix; does, and so do recent versions of Microsoft
653Windows).  You need to enclose the filename in quotes like so:
654<userinput>cavern "Spider Cave"</userinput>
655</Para>
656
657<Para>A file specified on the command line of any of the &survexsuite; suite
658of programs will be looked for as specified.  If it is not found, then the
659file is looked for with the appropriate extension appended.  So
660<userinput>cavern survey</userinput> will look first for
661<filename>survey</filename>, then for <filename>survey.svx</filename>.
662</Para>
663
664</Sect2>
665
666<Sect2><title>Command Reference</title>
667
668<refentry id="cavern">
669<?dbhtml filename="cavern.htm">
670&man.cavern;
671</refentry>
672<refentry id="svxedit">
673<?dbhtml filename="svxedit.htm">
674&man.svxedit;
675</refentry>
676<refentry id="aven">
677<?dbhtml filename="aven.htm">
678&man.aven;
679</refentry>
680<refentry id="x3dtopos">
681<?dbhtml filename="3dtopos.htm">
682&man.3dtopos;
683</refentry>
684<refentry id="cad3d">
685<?dbhtml filename="cad3d.htm">
686&man.cad3d;
687</refentry>
688<refentry id="diffpos">
689<?dbhtml filename="diffpos.htm">
690&man.diffpos;
691</refentry>
692<refentry id="extend">
693<?dbhtml filename="extend.htm">
694&man.extend;
695</refentry>
696<refentry id="sorterr">
697<?dbhtml filename="sorterr.htm">
698&man.sorterr;
699</refentry>
700
701</Sect2>
702
703</Sect1>
704
705<Sect1><Title>&survexsuite; data files</Title>
706<?dbhtml filename="datafile.htm">
707
708<Para>Survey data is entered in the form of text files. You can use any
709text editor you like for this, so long as it has the capability of
710writing a plain ASCII text file. The data format is very flexible;
711unlike some other cave surveying software, Survex does not require
712survey legs to be rearranged to suit the computer, and the ordering
713of instrument readings on each line is fully specifiable.  So you can enter
714your data much as it appears on the survey notes, which is important
715in reducing the opportunities for transcription errors.
716</Para>
717
718<Para>
719Also all the special characters are user-definable - for example,
720the separators can be spaces and tabs, or commas (e.g. when exporting from a
721spreadsheet), etc; the decimal point can be a slash (for clarity), a comma
722(as used in continental Europe), or anything else you care to choose.
723This flexibility
724means that it should be possible to read in data from almost any sort of
725survey data file without much work.
726</Para>
727
728<Para>&survexsuite; places no restrictions on you in terms of the ordering
729of survey legs. You can enter or process data in any order and &survexsuite; will
730read it all in before determining how it is connected. You can also use the
731hierarchical naming so that you do not need to worry about using the same
732station name twice.
733</Para>
734
735<!-- FIXME don't encourage separate processing -->
736<Para>The usual arrangement is to have one file which lists all the others
737that are included (e.g., <filename/161.svx/). Then
738<command/cavern 161/ will process all your data. To just process a
739section use the filename for that section, e.g. <command/cavern dtime/
740will process the dreamtime file/section of Kaninchenh&ouml;hle.  To
741help you out, if all legs in a survey are connected to one another
742but the survey has no fixed points, cavern
743will 'invent' a fixed point and print a warning message to this
744effect.
745</Para>
746
747<Para>
748It is up to you what data you put in which files.  You
749can have one file per trip, or per area of the cave, or just one
750file for the whole cave if you like.
751On a large survey project it makes sense to group related surveys in the
752same file or directory.
753</Para>
754<!-- FIXME: wook sez:
755
756 Point out in documentation that file structure and survey structure don't
757 have to be the same.  And in particular that folder/directory names can be
758 different.
759
760Which is partly covered above, though the last bit isn't...
761-->
762
763<!-- FIXME "Anatomy of a Survey" section -->
764<Sect2><Title>Readings</Title>
765
766<Para>Blank lines (i.e. lines consisting solely of BLANK characters)
767are ignored. The last line in the file need not be terminated by
768an end of line character. All fields on a line must be separated
769by at least one BLANK character. An OMIT character
770(default '-') indicates that a field is unused. If the field is
771not optional, then an error is given.
772</Para>
773
774</Sect2>
775
776<Sect2><Title>Survey Station Names</Title>
777
778<Para>&survexsuite; has a powerful system for naming stations.  It
779uses a hierarchy of survey names, similar to the nested folders
780your computer stores files in.
781So point 6 in the entrance survey of Kaninchenh&ouml;hle
782(cave number 161) is referred to as: 161.entrance.6
783</Para>
784
785<Para>This seems a natural way to refer to station names.  It also
786means that it is very easy to include more levels, for example if you
787want to plot all the caves in the area you just list them all in
788another file, specifying a new prefix.  So to group 3 nearby caves
789on the Loser Plateau you would use a file like
790this:
791</Para>
792
793<programlisting>
794*begin Loser
795*include 161
796*include 2YrGest
797*include 145
798*end Loser</programlisting>
799
800<Para>
801The entrance series point mentioned above would now be referred
802to as: Loser.161.entrance.6
803</Para>
804
805<!--
806<Para>This may seem a tad complex but is really very natural once you
807get the hang of it.
808</Para>
809-->
810<Para>You do not have to use this system at all, and can just give all
811stations unique identifiers if you like:
812</Para>
813
814<Para>1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ... 1381, 1382
815</Para>
816
817<Para>or
818</Para>
819
820<Para>AA06, AA07, P34, ZZ6, etc.
821</Para>
822
823<!-- FIXME:
824<Para>However you'll loose the ability to handle subsurveys if you do.
825</Para>
826-->
827
828<Para>Station and survey names may contain any alphanumeric characters and
829additionally any characters in NAMES (default `_' and `-'). Alphabetic
830characters may be forced to upper or lower case by using the *case
831command. Station names may be any length - if you want to only treat
832the first few characters as significant you can get cavern to truncate
833the names using the *truncate command.
834</Para>
835
836</Sect2>
837
838<Sect2><Title>Numeric fields</Title>
839
840<Para>[&lt;MINUS&gt;|&lt;PLUS&gt;] &lt;integer part&gt; [ &lt;DECIMAL&gt;
841[ &lt;decimal fraction&gt; ] ]
842</Para>
843
844<Para>
845or [&lt;MINUS&gt;|&lt;PLUS&gt;] &lt;DECIMAL&gt; &lt;dec fraction&gt;
846</Para>
847
848<Para><!-- FIXME: put informal description first -->
849i.e. optional PLUS or MINUS sign in front, with
850optional DECIMAL character (default '.'), which may be
851embedded, leading or trailing. No spaces are allowed between the
852various elements.
853</Para>
854
855<Para>
856All of these are valid examples: +47, 23, -22, +4.5, 1.3, -0.7, +.15, .4,
857-.05
858</Para>
859
860</Sect2>
861
862<Sect2><Title>Accuracy</Title>
863
864<Para>Accuracy assessments may be provided or defaulted for any survey
865leg. These determine the distribution of loop closure errors over the
866legs in the loop. See *SD for more information.
867</Para>
868
869</Sect2>
870
871<!--
872<Sect2><Title>Survey Coordinate Range</Title>
873
874<Para>
875If we store distances to nearest 10um (0.01mm) in 4 bytes, this
876gives a range of ~20 km. This method is currently not used, but
877has several advantages (data storage space [double uses 8 bytes
878- with my C compiler], speed (unless your FP chip works in parallel
879with your CPU [e.g. the new Acorn FPU for the ARM], and numerical
880accuracy [compared to using floats at least]) and so may be adopted
881in future). Nearest 0.1mm gives -200 km, which is enough for most
882people, but may mean rounding errors become significant.
883</Para>
884
885<Para>
886I will have to do some sums...
887</Para>
888
889</Sect2>
890
891-->
892
893<Sect2><Title>Cavern Commands</Title>
894
895<Para>Commands in &svx; files are introduced by an asterisk
896(by default - this can be changed using the <command/set/ command).
897</Para>
898
899<Para>The commands are documented in a common format:
900</Para>
901
902<!-- FIXME: make this a RefGroup (or whatever that's called) of RefEntry-s? -->
903<itemizedlist>
904<listitem><para>Command Name</para></listitem>
905<listitem><para>Syntax</para></listitem>
906<listitem><para>Example</para></listitem>
907<listitem><para>Validity</para></listitem>
908<!-- FIXME
909anywhere, in a block, at start of a block, after a begin (for *end)
910-->
911<listitem><para>Description</para></listitem>
912<listitem><para>Caveats</para></listitem>
913<listitem><para>See Also</para></listitem>
914<!-- FIXME
915"Usefulness" - or status maybe?
916deprecated, esoteric (*set), useful, vital
917-->
918</itemizedlist>
919
920<Sect3><Title>ALIAS</Title>
921
922<VariableList>
923
924<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
925
926<listitem><Para>*alias station &lt;alias&gt; [&lt;target&gt;]</Para></listitem>
927
928</VarListEntry>
929
930<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
931
932<listitem>
933<Para>
934<programlisting>
935*begin parsons_nose
936*alias station - ..
9371 2 12.21 073 -12
9382 -  4.33 011 +02
9392 -  1.64 180 +03
9402 3  6.77 098 -04
941*end parsons_nose</programlisting>
942</Para>
943</listitem>
944
945</VarListEntry>
946
947<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
948
949<listitem><Para>*alias allows you to map a station name which appears in
950the survey data to a different name internally.  At present, you can only
951create an alias of '-' to '..', which is intended to support the pocket topo
952style notation of '-' being a splay to an anonymous point on the cave wall.
953And you can unalias '-' with '*alias station -'.
954</Para>
955
956<Para>
957Aliases are scoped by *begin/*end blocks - when a *end is reached, the aliases
958in force at the corresponding begin are restored.
959</Para>
960
961<Para>
962*alias was added in Survex 1.2.7.
963</Para></listitem>
964
965</VarListEntry>
966
967<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
968
969<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
970
971<listitem><Para>*begin, *end</Para></listitem>
972
973</VarListEntry>
974
975</VariableList>
976
977</Sect3>
978
979<Sect3><Title>BEGIN</Title>
980
981<VariableList>
982
983<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
984
985<listitem><Para>*begin [&lt;survey&gt;]</Para></listitem>
986
987</VarListEntry>
988
989<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
990
991<listitem>
992<Para>
993<programlisting>
994*begin littlebit
9951 2 10.23 106 -02
9962 3  1.56 092 +10
997*end littlebit</programlisting>
998
999<programlisting>
1000; length of leg across shaft estimated
1001*begin
1002*sd tape 2 metres
10039 10 6.   031 -07
1004*end</programlisting>
1005</Para>
1006</listitem>
1007
1008</VarListEntry>
1009
1010<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1011
1012<listitem><Para>*begin stores the current values of the current settings
1013such as instrument calibration, data format, and so on.
1014These stored values are restored after the corresponding *end.
1015If a survey name is given, this is used inside the *begin/*end block,
1016and the corresponding *end should have the same survey name.
1017*begin/*end blocks may be nested to indefinite depth.
1018</Para></listitem>
1019
1020</VarListEntry>
1021
1022<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1023
1024<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1025
1026<listitem><Para>*end, *prefix</Para></listitem>
1027
1028</VarListEntry>
1029
1030</VariableList>
1031
1032</Sect3>
1033
1034<Sect3><Title>CALIBRATE</Title>
1035
1036<VariableList>
1037
1038<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1039
1040<listitem>
1041<Para>*calibrate &lt;quantity list&gt; &lt;zero error&gt; [&lt;scale&gt;]
1042</Para>
1043<Para>*calibrate default
1044</Para>
1045</listitem>
1046
1047</VarListEntry>
1048
1049<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1050
1051<listitem>
1052<Para>
1053<programlisting>
1054*calibrate tape +0.3
1055</programlisting>
1056</Para>
1057</listitem>
1058
1059</VarListEntry>
1060
1061<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1062
1063<listitem>
1064
1065<Para>
1066*calibrate is used to specify instrument calibrations.
1067</Para>
1068
1069<Para>
1070&lt;quantity&gt; is one of TAPE|COMPASS|CLINO|COUNTER|DEPTH|DECLINATION|X|Y|Z
1071</Para>
1072
1073<Para>
1074Several quantities can be given in &lt;quantity list&gt;
1075</Para>
1076
1077<Para>
1078Value = ( Reading - ZeroError ) * Scale    (Scale defaults to 1.0)
1079</Para>
1080
1081<Para>
1082You need to be careful about the sign of the ZeroError. The value of
1083ZeroError is what the the instrument would read when measuring a
1084reading which should be zero.  So for example, if your tape measure
1085has the end missing, and you are using the 30cm mark to take all
1086measurements from, then a zero distance would be measured as 30cm and
1087you would correct this with:
1088</Para>
1089
1090<programlisting>*CALIBRATE tape +0.3</programlisting>
1091
1092<Para>If you tape was too long, starting at -20cm (it does happen!)
1093then you can correct it with:
1094</Para>
1095
1096<programlisting>*CALIBRATE tape -0.2</programlisting>
1097
1098<Para>Note: ZeroError is irrelevant for Topofil counters and depth
1099gauges since pairs of readings are subtracted.
1100</Para>
1101
1102<Para>
1103The magnetic deviation varies from year to year and it is often
1104desirable to keep the compass zero error and the magnetic deviation
1105separate. cavern calculates the true bearing as follows:
1106</Para>
1107
1108<Para>
1109(magnetic bearing) = ((reading)-(compass zero err)) * (compass
1110scale factor)
1111</Para>
1112
1113<Para>
1114(true bearing) = ((bearing)-(declination zero err))
1115</Para>
1116
1117<Para>
1118The scale factor for DECLINATION must be 1.0, otherwise an error
1119is given. <!-- FIXME: practical example for declination -->
1120</Para>
1121
1122<Para>
1123The default is all quantities calibrated to scale factor 1.0,
1124zero error 0.0
1125</Para>
1126
1127</listitem>
1128
1129</VarListEntry>
1130
1131<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1132
1133<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1134
1135<listitem><Para>*units</Para></listitem>
1136
1137</VarListEntry>
1138
1139</VariableList>
1140
1141</Sect3>
1142
1143<Sect3><Title>CASE</Title>
1144
1145<VariableList>
1146
1147<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1148
1149<listitem><para>*case preserve|toupper|tolower</para></listitem>
1150
1151</VarListEntry>
1152
1153<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1154
1155<listitem>
1156<Para>
1157<programlisting>
1158*begin bobsbit
1159; Bob insists on using case sensitive station names
1160*case preserve
11611 2   10.23 106 -02
11622 2a   1.56 092 +10
11632 2A   3.12 034 +02
11642 3    8.64 239 -01
1165*end bobsbit</programlisting>
1166</Para>
1167</listitem>
1168
1169</VarListEntry>
1170
1171<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1172
1173<listitem><Para>*case determines how the case of letters in survey names is
1174handled.  By default all names are forced to lower case (which gives a case
1175insensitive match, but you can tell cavern to force to upper case, or leave
1176the case as is (in which case '2a' and '2A' will be regarded as different).
1177</Para></listitem>
1178
1179</VarListEntry>
1180
1181<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1182
1183<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1184
1185<listitem><Para>*end, *prefix</Para></listitem>
1186
1187</VarListEntry>
1188-->
1189
1190</VariableList>
1191
1192<!-- FIXME - work this text in here or elsewhere
1193
1194What I mean (though failed to express very well) is that a dataset without
1195this information isn't the same dataset (in general anyway).  For example:
1196
1197A1 a2 10.32 140 -05
1198a2 a3  4.91 041 -01
1199a1 a3  7.01 206  02
1200
1201is either a traverse of 3 legs or a (probably badly misclosed) loop.  If
1202these names are on the original survey notes, the surveyors ought to say
1203whether "A1" is the same as "a1" (although the usual case for using this
1204feature is probably for importing data from elsewhere).  Similarly for
1205truncation.  Whether a clino of +/-90 degrees (or +/-100 grad, etc) is
1206interpreted as a plumb is something that should have been noted in the cave
1207(unless it's implicit because it's standard practice for a survey project).
1208
1209It's a similar issue to calibration data in many ways.  You can argue it's
1210not part of "the survey", but without it the survey won't be the same shape,
1211and it's not useful to process the same survey with different settings for
1212compass calibration or name case sensitivity.
1213
1214>Clearly that is unhelpfully strict, but it is
1215>important to be semantically clear about what is 'data' and what is 'commands
1216>or meta-data' which describe what to do with/how to interpret that data.
1217
1218Think of the lines starting with a "*" as "command or meta-data".
1219
1220>The most-correct solution to this is (I believe) Martin Heller's idea about
1221>including 'rules' in the datastream, but that's too big a subject for right
1222>now.
1223>
1224>The reason '-C' was made into a command-line option, was that it made very
1225>little sense to change it part way though a dataset. What exactly happens if
1226>you suddenly tell cavern to become case-sensitive halfway through a run?
1227
1228-C has always had 3 settings - "leave case alone", "force to lower", and
1229"force to upper".  It doesn't really mean "case sensitivity" but rather
1230something like "case processing".  So you can usefully change it during a
1231run.  So if my dataset treats "NoTableChamber" (so named because it was
1232lacking in furniture) as different from "NotableChamber" (which was notable
1233for other reasons) I can process it with a dataset from someone else which
1234needs to be treated as case insensitive like so:
1235
1236*begin my_cave
1237*include my_dataset
1238*end my_cave
1239
1240*equate my_cave.NoTableChamber.14 your_cave.linkpassage.13
1241
1242*begin your_cave
1243*case tolower
1244*include your_dataset
1245*end your_cave
1246
1247You may be thinking of -U<n>, which used to mean "only compare the first n
1248characters of station names", but that doesn't allow arbitrary datasets to
1249be processed together.
1250
1251So we changed it to mean "truncate station names to n characters", and
1252allowed it to be changed at any point, rather than being set once for the
1253whole run.
1254
1255-->
1256
1257</Sect3>
1258
1259<Sect3><Title>COPYRIGHT</Title>
1260
1261<VariableList>
1262
1263<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1264
1265<listitem><Para>*copyright &lt;date&gt; &lt;text&gt;</Para></listitem>
1266
1267</VarListEntry>
1268
1269<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1270
1271<listitem>
1272<Para>
1273<programlisting>
1274*begin littlebit
1275*copyright 1983 CUCC
12761 2 10.23 106 -02
12772 3  1.56 092 +10
1278*end littlebit</programlisting>
1279</Para>
1280</listitem>
1281
1282</VarListEntry>
1283
1284<VarListEntry><Term>Validity</Term>
1285
1286<listitem><Para>valid at the start of a *begin/*end block.
1287</Para></listitem>
1288
1289</VarListEntry>
1290
1291<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1292
1293<listitem><Para>*copyright allow the copyright information to be
1294stored in a way that can be automatically collated.
1295</Para></listitem>
1296
1297</VarListEntry>
1298
1299<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1300
1301<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1302
1303<listitem><Para>*begin</Para></listitem>
1304
1305</VarListEntry>
1306
1307</VariableList>
1308
1309</Sect3>
1310
1311<Sect3><Title>CS</Title>
1312
1313<VariableList>
1314
1315<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1316
1317<listitem><Para>*cs [out] &lt;coordinate system&gt;</Para></listitem>
1318
1319</VarListEntry>
1320
1321<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1322
1323<listitem>
1324<Para>
1325<programlisting>
1326*cs UTM60S
1327*fix beehive 313800 5427953 20</programlisting>
1328</Para>
1329
1330<Para>
1331<programlisting>
1332; Output in the coordinate system used in the Totes Gebirge in Austria
1333*cs out custom "+proj=tmerc +lat_0=0 +lon_0=13d20 +k=1 +x_0=0 +y_0=-5200000 +ellps=bessel +towgs84=577.326,90.129,463.919,5.137,1.474,5.297,2.4232"</programlisting>
1334</Para>
1335</listitem>
1336
1337</VarListEntry>
1338
1339<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1340
1341<listitem><Para>*cs allows the coordinate systems used for fixed points and for
1342processed survey data to be specified.
1343</Para>
1344
1345<Para>
1346*cs was added in Survex 1.2.14.  The currently supported coordinate systems
1347are:
1348</Para>
1349
1350<Para>CUSTOM followed by a PROJ4 string (like in the example above).</Para>
1351
1352<Para>LONG-LAT for longitude/latitude.  The WGS84 datum is assumed.  Supported
1353since Survex 1.2.15.</Para>
1354
1355<Para>UTM followed by a zone number (1-60), optionally followed by "N" or "S"
1356(default is North).  The WGS84 datum is assumed.</Para>
1357
1358<Para>
1359By default, Survex works in an unspecified coordinate system (and this was the
1360only option before *cs was added).  However, it's useful for coordinate system
1361which the processed survey data is in to be specified if you want to use the
1362processed data in ways which required knowing the coordinate system (such as
1363exporting a list of entrances for use in a GPS).  You can now do this by using
1364"*cs out".
1365</Para>
1366
1367<Para>
1368It is also useful to be able to take coordinates for fixed points in whatever
1369coordinate system you receive them in and put them directly into Survex, rather
1370than having to convert with an external tool.  For example, you may have your
1371GPS set to show coordinates in UTM with the WGS84 datum, even though you want
1372the processed data to be in some local coordinate system.  And someone else
1373may provide GPS coordinates in yet another coordinate system.  You just need
1374to set the appropriate coordinate system with "*cs" before each group of "*fix"
1375commands in a particular coordinate system.
1376</Para>
1377
1378<Para>
1379If you're going to make use of "*cs", then the coordinate system must be
1380specified for everything, so a coordinate system must be in effect for all
1381"*fix" commands, and you must set the output coordinate system before any
1382points are fixed.
1383</Para>
1384
1385<Para>
1386Also, if "*cs" is in use, then you can't omit the coordinates in a "*fix"
1387command, and a fixed point won't be invented if none exists.
1388</Para>
1389
1390<Para>
1391If you use "*cs out" more than once, the second and subsequent commands are
1392silently ignored - this makes it possible to combine two datasets with
1393different "*cs out" settings without having to modify either of them.
1394</Para>
1395
1396<Para>
1397Something to be aware of with "*cs" is that altitudes are currently assumed to
1398be "height above the ellipsoid", whereas GPS units typically give you "height
1399above sea level", or more accurately "height above a particular geoid".  This
1400is something we're looking at how best to address, but you shouldn't need to
1401worry about it if your fixed points are in the same coordinate system as your
1402output, or if they all use the same ellipsoid.  For a more detailed discussion
1403of this, please see: http://expo.survex.com/handbook/survey/coord.htm
1404</Para>
1405</listitem>
1406
1407</VarListEntry>
1408
1409<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1410
1411<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1412
1413<listitem><Para>*fix</Para></listitem>
1414
1415</VarListEntry>
1416
1417</VariableList>
1418
1419</Sect3>
1420<Sect3><Title>DATA</Title>
1421
1422<VariableList>
1423
1424<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1425
1426<listitem><Para>*data &lt;style&gt; &lt;ordering&gt;</Para></listitem>
1427<!-- BACKCOMPASS BACKCLINO -->
1428</VarListEntry>
1429
1430<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1431
1432<listitem>
1433<Para>
1434<programlisting>
1435*data normal from to compass tape clino</programlisting>
1436</Para>
1437
1438<Para>
1439<programlisting>
1440*data normal station ignoreall newline compass tape clino</programlisting>
1441</Para>
1442</listitem>
1443
1444</VarListEntry>
1445
1446<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1447
1448<listitem><Para>
1449&lt;style&gt; = DEFAULT|NORMAL|DIVING|CARTESIAN|TOPOFIL|CYLPOLAR|NOSURVEY|PASSAGE
1450</Para>
1451
1452<Para>
1453&lt;ordering&gt; = ordered list of instruments - which are valid depends on the
1454style.
1455</Para>
1456
1457<Para>
1458In Survex 1.0.2 and later, TOPOFIL is simply a synonym for NORMAL, left in to
1459allow older data to be processed without modification.  Use the name NORMAL
1460by preference.
1461</Para>
1462
1463<Para>
1464There are two variants of each style - interleaved and non-interleaved.
1465Non-interleaved is "one line per leg", interleaved has a line for the data
1466shared between two legs (e.g. STATION=FROM/TO, DEPTH=FROMDEPTH/TODEPTH,
1467COUNT=FROMCOUNT/TOCOUNT).  Note that not all interleavable readings have to
1468be interleaved - for example:
1469
1470<programlisting>
1471*data diving station newline fromdepth compass tape todepth</programlisting>
1472
1473In addition, interleaved data can have a DIRECTION reading, which can be "F"
1474for a foresight or "B" for a backsight.
1475</Para>
1476
1477<Para>
1478In NORMAL, DIVING, and CYLPOLAR data styles, TAPE may be replaced by
1479FROMCOUNT/TOCOUNT (or COUNT in interleaved data) to allow processing of surveys
1480performed with a Topofil instead of a tape.
1481</Para>
1482
1483<VariableList>
1484
1485<VarListEntry><Term>DEFAULT</Term>
1486<listitem><Para>Select the default data style and ordering (NORMAL style, ordering: from to tape compass clino).</Para></listitem>
1487</VarListEntry>
1488
1489<VarListEntry><Term>NORMAL</Term>
1490<listitem><Para>The usual tape/compass/clino centreline survey.
1491For non-interleaved data the allowed readings are:
1492FROM TO TAPE COMPASS CLINO BACKCOMPASS BACKCLINO;
1493for interleaved data the allowed readings are:
1494STATION DIRECTION TAPE COMPASS CLINO BACKCOMPASS BACKCLINO.
1495The CLINO/BACKCLINO reading is not required - if it's not given, the vertical
1496standard deviation is taken to be proportional to the tape measurement.
1497Alternatively, individual clino readings can be given as OMIT (default "-")
1498which allows for data where only some clino readings are missing.
1499E.g.:
1500
1501<programlisting>
1502*data normal from to compass clino tape
15031 2 172 -03 12.61</programlisting>
1504
1505<programlisting>
1506*data normal station newline direction tape compass clino
15071
1508 F 12.61 172 -03
15092</programlisting>
1510
1511<programlisting>
1512*data normal from to compass clino fromcount tocount
15131 2 172 -03 11532 11873</programlisting>
1514
1515<programlisting>
1516*data normal station count newline direction compass clino
15171 11532
1518 F 172 -03
15192 11873</programlisting>
1520 
1521</Para></listitem>
1522</VarListEntry>
1523
1524<VarListEntry><Term>DIVING</Term>
1525<listitem><Para>
1526An underwater survey where the vertical information is from a diver's depth
1527gauge.  This style can also be also used for an above-water survey where the
1528altitude is measured with an altimeter.  DEPTH is defined as the altitude (Z)
1529so increases upwards by default.  So for a diver's depth gauge, you'll need to
1530use *CALIBRATE with a negative scale factor (e.g. *calibrate depth 0 -1).
1531</Para>
1532
1533<Para>For non-interleaved data the allowed readings are:
1534FROM TO TAPE COMPASS BACKCOMPASS FROMDEPTH TODEPTH DEPTHCHANGE (the vertical
1535can be given as readings at each station, (FROMDEPTH/TODEPTH) or as a change
1536along the leg (DEPTHCHANGE)).</Para>
1537
1538<Para>For interleaved data the allowed readings are:
1539STATION DIRECTION TAPE COMPASS BACKCOMPASS DEPTH DEPTHCHANGE.
1540(the vertical change can be given as a reading at the station (DEPTH) or as a change along the leg (DEPTHCHANGE)).
1541
1542<programlisting>
1543*data diving from to tape compass fromdepth todepth
15441 2 14.7 250 -20.7 -22.4</programlisting>
1545
1546<programlisting>
1547*data diving station depth newline tape compass
15481 -20.7
1549 14.7 250
15502 -22.4</programlisting>
1551
1552<programlisting>
1553*data diving from to tape compass depthchange
15541 2 14.7 250 -1.7</programlisting>
1555</Para>
1556</listitem>
1557</VarListEntry>
1558
1559<VarListEntry><Term>CARTESIAN</Term>
1560<listitem><Para>
1561Cartesian data style allows you to specify the (x,y,z) changes between
1562stations.  It's useful for digitising surveys where the original survey
1563data has been lost and all that's available is a drawn up version.
1564
1565<programlisting>
1566*data cartesian from to northing easting altitude
15671 2 16.1 20.4 8.7</programlisting>
1568
1569<programlisting>
1570*data cartesian station newline northing easting altitude
15711
1572 16.1 20.4 8.7
15732</programlisting>
1574
1575<!--FIXME: dx dy dz-->
1576</Para>
1577
1578<Note><Para>
1579Cartesian data are relative to <emphasis>true</emphasis> North not
1580<emphasis>magnetic</emphasis> North (i.e. they are unaffected by
1581<command>*calibrate declination</command>).
1582</Para></Note>
1583</VarListEntry>
1584
1585<VarListEntry><Term>CYLPOLAR</Term>
1586<listitem><Para>
1587A CYLPOLAR style survey is very similar to a diving survey, except that the tape
1588is always measured horizontally rather than along the slope of the leg.
1589
1590<programlisting>
1591*data cypolar from to tape compass fromdepth todepth
15921 2 9.45 311 -13.3 -19.0</programlisting>
1593
1594<programlisting>
1595*data cylpolar station depth newline tape compass
15961 -13.3
1597 9.45 311
15982 -19.0</programlisting>
1599
1600<programlisting>
1601*data cylpolar from to tape compass depthchange
16021 2 9.45 311 -5.7</programlisting>
1603</Para></listitem>
1604</VarListEntry>
1605
1606<VarListEntry><Term>NOSURVEY</Term>
1607<listitem><Para>
1608A NOSURVEY survey doesn't have any measurements - it merely indicates that
1609there is line of sight between the pairs of stations.
1610
1611<programlisting>
1612*data nosurvey from to
16131 7
16145 7
16159 11</programlisting>
1616
1617<programlisting>
1618*data nosurvey station
16191
16207
16215
1622
1623*data nosurvey station
16249
162511</programlisting>
1626</Para></listitem>
1627</VarListEntry>
1628
1629<VarListEntry><Term>PASSAGE</Term>
1630<listitem><Para>
1631This survey style defines a 3D "tube" modelling a passage in the cave.
1632The tube uses the survey stations listed in the order listed.  It's
1633permitted to use survey stations which aren't directly linked by
1634the centre-line survey.  This can be useful - sometimes the centreline
1635will step sideways or up/down to allow a better sight for the next
1636leg and you can ignore the extra station.  You can also define tubes
1637along unsurveyed passages, akin to "nosurvey" legs in the centreline
1638data.</Para>
1639
1640<Para>This means that you need to split off side passages into seperate
1641tubes, and hence separate sections of passage data, starting with
1642a new *data command.</Para>
1643
1644<Para>
1645Simple example of how to use this data style (note the use of ignoreall
1646to allow a free-form text description to be given):
1647
1648<programlisting>
1649*data passage station left right up down ignoreall
16501  0.1 2.3 8.0 1.4  Sticking out point on left wall
16512  0.0 1.9 9.0 0.5  Point on left wall
16523  1.0 0.7 9.0 0.8  Highest point of boulder
1653</programlisting>
1654</Para>
1655</VarListEntry>
1656</VariableList>
1657
1658<Para>
1659IGNORE skips a field (it may be used any number of times),
1660and IGNOREALL may be used last to ignore the rest of the data line.
1661</Para>
1662
1663<Para>
1664LENGTH is a synonym for TAPE; BEARING for COMPASS; GRADIENT for CLINO; COUNT for COUNTER.<!--FIXME : others?-->
1665</Para>
1666
1667<Para>
1668The units of each quantity may be set with the UNITS command.
1669</Para>
1670
1671<!-- FIXME: plumbed diving legs -->
1672
1673<!--FIXME:
1674<Para>
1675Uses for CYLPOLAR:
1676Perhaps a Grade 3 survey, or when surveying with a level and stick (?)
1677[note - UBSS use it for the old County Clare data]
1678</Para>
1679-->
1680
1681</listitem>
1682
1683</VarListEntry>
1684
1685</VariableList>
1686
1687</Sect3>
1688
1689<Sect3><Title>DATE</Title>
1690<VariableList>
1691
1692<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1693
1694<listitem><Para>*date &lt;year&gt;[.&lt;month&gt;[.&lt;day&gt;]][-&lt;year&gt;[.&lt;month&gt;[.&lt;day&gt;]]]</Para></listitem>
1695
1696</VarListEntry>
1697
1698<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1699
1700<listitem>
1701<Para>
1702<programlisting>
1703*date 2001</programlisting>
1704
1705<programlisting>
1706*date 2000.10</programlisting>
1707
1708<programlisting>
1709*date 1987.07.27</programlisting>
1710
1711<programlisting>
1712*date 1985.08.12-1985.08.13</programlisting>
1713</Para>
1714</listitem>
1715
1716</VarListEntry>
1717
1718<VarListEntry><Term>Validity</Term>
1719
1720<listitem><Para>valid at the start of a *begin/*end block.
1721</Para></listitem>
1722
1723</VarListEntry>
1724
1725<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1726
1727<listitem><Para>
1728*date specifies the date that the survey was done.  A range of dates
1729can be specified (useful for overnight or multi-day surveying trips).
1730</Para></listitem>
1731
1732</VarListEntry>
1733
1734<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1735
1736<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1737
1738<listitem><Para>*begin, *instrument, *team</Para></listitem>
1739
1740</VarListEntry>
1741
1742</VariableList>
1743
1744</Sect3>
1745
1746<Sect3><Title>DEFAULT</Title>
1747
1748<VariableList>
1749
1750<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1751
1752<listitem><Para>*default &lt;settings list&gt;|all</Para></listitem>
1753
1754</VarListEntry>
1755
1756<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1757
1758<listitem><Para>
1759The valid settings are CALIBRATE, DATA, and UNITS.
1760</Para>
1761
1762<Para>
1763*default restores defaults for given settings.  This command is deprecated -
1764you should instead use: *calibrate default, *data default, *units default.
1765</Para></listitem>
1766
1767</VarListEntry>
1768
1769<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1770
1771<listitem><Para>*calibrate, *data, *units</Para></listitem>
1772
1773</VarListEntry>
1774
1775</VariableList>
1776
1777</Sect3>
1778
1779<Sect3><Title>END</Title>
1780
1781<VariableList>
1782
1783<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1784
1785<listitem><Para>*end [&lt;survey&gt;]</Para></listitem>
1786
1787</VarListEntry>
1788
1789<VarListEntry><Term>Validity</Term>
1790
1791<listitem><Para>valid for closing a block started by *begin in the same file.
1792</Para></listitem>
1793
1794</VarListEntry>
1795
1796<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1797
1798<listitem><Para>
1799Closes a block started by *begin.
1800</Para></listitem>
1801
1802</VarListEntry>
1803
1804<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1805
1806<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1807
1808<listitem><Para>*begin</Para></listitem>
1809
1810</VarListEntry>
1811
1812</VariableList>
1813
1814</Sect3>
1815
1816<Sect3><Title>ENTRANCE</Title>
1817
1818<VariableList>
1819
1820<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1821
1822<listitem><Para>*entrance &lt;station&gt;</Para></listitem>
1823
1824</VarListEntry>
1825
1826<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1827
1828<listitem>
1829<Para>
1830<programlisting>
1831*entrance P163</programlisting>
1832</Para>
1833</listitem>
1834
1835</VarListEntry>
1836
1837<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1838
1839<listitem><Para>
1840*entrance sets the <emphasis>entrance</emphasis> flag for a station.
1841This information is used by aven to allow entrances to be highlighted.
1842</Para>
1843
1844<!-- FIXME:
1845(could be inferred from surface/ug join, but better to specify because
1846of caves with no surf svy (or no underground survey)
1847and also situations in which multiple surveys leave through an entrance)
1848-->
1849</listitem>
1850
1851</VarListEntry>
1852
1853<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1854
1855<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1856
1857<listitem><Para></Para></listitem>
1858
1859</VarListEntry>
1860-->
1861
1862</VariableList>
1863
1864</Sect3>
1865
1866<Sect3><Title>EQUATE</Title>
1867
1868<VariableList>
1869
1870<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1871
1872<listitem><Para>*equate &lt;station&gt; &lt;station&gt;...</Para></listitem>
1873
1874</VarListEntry>
1875
1876<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1877
1878<listitem>
1879<Para>
1880<programlisting>
1881*equate chosspot.1 triassic.27</programlisting>
1882</Para>
1883</listitem>
1884
1885</VarListEntry>
1886
1887<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1888
1889<listitem><Para>
1890*equate specifies that the station names in the list refer to the
1891same physical survey station. An error is given if there is only one station
1892listed.
1893</Para>
1894
1895<!-- FIXME:
1896<Para>
1897I think this is preferable to using:
1898</Para>
1899
1900<programlisting> a b 0.00   0   0</programlisting>
1901
1902<Para>
1903as EQUATE does not add in an extra position error. It is also clearer than
1904substituting in the original name wherever passages are linked. If you
1905disagree, you can always use one of the other methods!
1906</Para>
1907-->
1908</listitem>
1909
1910</VarListEntry>
1911
1912<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1913
1914<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1915
1916<listitem><Para>*infer equates</Para></listitem>
1917
1918</VarListEntry>
1919
1920</VariableList>
1921
1922</Sect3>
1923
1924<Sect3><Title>EXPORT</Title>
1925
1926<VariableList>
1927
1928<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1929
1930<listitem><Para>*export &lt;station&gt;...</Para></listitem>
1931
1932</VarListEntry>
1933
1934<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
1935
1936<!-- FIXME better example -->
1937<listitem>
1938<Para>
1939<programlisting>
1940*export 1 6 17</programlisting>
1941</Para>
1942</listitem>
1943
1944</VarListEntry>
1945
1946<VarListEntry><Term>Validity</Term>
1947
1948<listitem><Para>valid at the start of a *begin/*end block.
1949</Para></listitem>
1950
1951</VarListEntry>
1952
1953<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
1954
1955<listitem><Para>
1956*export marks the stations named as referable to from the enclosing
1957survey.  To be able to refer to a station from a survey several levels
1958above, it must be exported from each enclosing survey.
1959</Para>
1960
1961<!-- FIXME:
1962<Para>
1963I think this is preferable to using:
1964</Para>
1965
1966<programlisting> a b 0.00   0   0</programlisting>
1967
1968<Para>
1969as EQUATE does not add in an extra position error. It is also clearer than
1970substituting in the original name wherever passages are linked. If you
1971disagree, you can always use one of the other methods!
1972</Para>
1973-->
1974</listitem>
1975
1976</VarListEntry>
1977
1978<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
1979
1980<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
1981
1982<listitem><Para>*begin, *infer exports</Para></listitem>
1983
1984</VarListEntry>
1985
1986</VariableList>
1987
1988</Sect3>
1989
1990<Sect3><Title>FIX</Title>
1991
1992<VariableList>
1993
1994<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
1995
1996<listitem><Para>*fix &lt;station&gt; [reference]
1997 [ &lt;x&gt; &lt;y&gt; &lt;z&gt;
1998   [ &lt;x std err&gt; &lt;y std err&gt; &lt;z std err&gt;
1999     [ &lt;cov(x,y)&gt; &lt;cov(y,z)&gt; &lt;cov(z,x)&gt; ] ] ]
2000</Para></listitem>
2001
2002</VarListEntry>
2003
2004<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2005
2006<listitem>
2007<Para>
2008<programlisting>
2009*fix entrance.0 32768 86723 1760</programlisting>
2010
2011<programlisting>
2012*fix KT114_96 reference 36670.37 83317.43 1903.97</programlisting>
2013</Para>
2014</listitem>
2015
2016</VarListEntry>
2017
2018<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2019
2020<listitem>
2021<Para>
2022*fix fixes the position of &lt;station&gt; at the given coordinates.
2023If you haven't specified the coordinate system with "*cs", you can
2024omit the position and it will default to (0,0,0).  The standard errors default
2025to zero (fix station exactly).  cavern will give an error if you attempt to fix
2026the same survey station twice at different coordinates, or a warning if you fix
2027it twice with matching coordinates.
2028</Para>
2029
2030<Para>
2031You can also specify just one standard error (in which case it is assumed
2032equal in X, Y, and Z) or two (in which case the first is taken as the
2033standard error in X and Y, and the second as the standard error in Z).
2034</Para>
2035
2036<Para>
2037If you have covariances for the fix, you can also specify these - the
2038order is cov(x,y) cov(y,z) cov(z,x).
2039</Para>
2040
2041<Para>
2042You can fix as many stations as you like - just use a *fix command for each
2043one.  Cavern will check that all stations are connected to
2044at least one fixed point so that co-ordinates can be calculated for all
2045stations.
2046</Para>
2047
2048<Para>
2049By default cavern will warn about stations which have been FIX-ed but
2050not used otherwise.  This is unhelpful if you want to include a
2051standard file of benchmarks, some of which won't be used.
2052In this sort of situation, specify "REFERENCE" after the station name
2053in the FIX command to suppress this warning for a particular station.
2054</Para>
2055
2056<Note><Para>
2057X is Easting, Y is Northing, and Z is altitude.  This convention was chosen
2058since on a map, the horizontal (X) axis is usually East, and the vertical
2059axis (Y) North.  The choice of altitude (rather than depth) for Z is taken
2060from surface maps, and makes for less confusion when dealing with cave
2061systems with more than one entrance.  It also gives a right-handed
2062set of axes.
2063</Para></Note>
2064
2065</VarListEntry>
2066
2067<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
2068
2069<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2070
2071<listitem><Para></Para></listitem>
2072
2073</VarListEntry>
2074-->
2075
2076</VariableList>
2077
2078</Sect3>
2079
2080<!--
2081<Sect3><Title></Title>
2082
2083<VariableList>
2084
2085<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2086
2087<listitem><Para>*</Para></listitem>
2088
2089</VarListEntry>
2090
2091<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2092
2093<listitem>
2094<Para>
2095<programlisting>
2096*</programlisting>
2097</Para>
2098</listitem>
2099
2100</VarListEntry>
2101
2102<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2103
2104<listitem><Para>
2105</Para></listitem>
2106
2107</VarListEntry>
2108
2109<VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry>
2110
2111<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2112
2113<listitem><Para></Para></listitem>
2114
2115</VarListEntry>
2116
2117</VariableList>
2118
2119</Sect3>
2120-->
2121
2122<Sect3><Title>FLAGS</Title>
2123
2124<VariableList>
2125
2126<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2127
2128<listitem><Para>*flags &lt;flags&gt;</Para></listitem>
2129
2130</VarListEntry>
2131
2132<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2133
2134<listitem>
2135<Para>
2136<programlisting>
2137*flags duplicate not surface</programlisting>
2138</Para>
2139</listitem>
2140
2141</VarListEntry>
2142
2143<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2144
2145<listitem><Para>
2146*flags updates the current flag settings.
2147Flags not mentioned retain their previous state.  Valid flags
2148are DUPLICATE, SPLAY, and SURFACE, and a flag may be preceded with NOT to
2149turn it off.
2150</Para>
2151
2152<Para>
2153Survey legs marked SURFACE are hidden from plots by default, and not
2154included in cave survey length calculations.  Survey legs marked as
2155DUPLICATE or SPLAY are also not included in cave survey length
2156calculations; legs marked SPLAY are ignored by the extend program.
2157DUPLICATE is intended for the case when if you have two different
2158surveys along the same section of passage (for example to tie two
2159surveys into a permanent survey station); SPLAY is intended for
2160cases such as radial legs in a large chamber.
2161</Para>
2162</listitem>
2163
2164</VarListEntry>
2165
2166<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2167
2168<listitem><Para>*begin</Para></listitem>
2169
2170</VarListEntry>
2171
2172</VariableList>
2173
2174</Sect3>
2175
2176<Sect3><Title>INCLUDE</Title>
2177
2178<VariableList>
2179
2180<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2181
2182<listitem><Para>*include &lt;filename&gt;</Para></listitem>
2183
2184</VarListEntry>
2185
2186<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2187
2188<listitem>
2189<Para>
2190<programlisting>
2191*include mission</programlisting>
2192
2193<programlisting>
2194*include "the pits"</programlisting>
2195</Para>
2196</listitem>
2197
2198</VarListEntry>
2199
2200<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2201
2202<listitem><Para>
2203*include processes &lt;filename&gt; as if it were inserted at this
2204place in the current file. (i.e. The current settings are carried
2205into &lt;filename&gt;, and any alterations to settings in &lt;filename&gt;
2206will be carried back again).  There's one exception to this (for
2207obscure historical reasons) which is that the survey prefix is
2208restored upon return to the original file.  Since *begin and *end
2209nesting cannot cross files, this can only make a difference if you
2210use the deprecated *prefix command.
2211</Para>
2212
2213<Para>If &lt;filename&gt; contains spaces, it must be enclosed in quotes.
2214</Para>
2215
2216<Para>An included file which does not have a complete path
2217is resolved relative to the directory which the parent file is in
2218(just as relative HTML links do).  Cavern will try adding a &svx;
2219extension, and will also try translating "\" to "/".
2220And as a last
2221resort, it will try a lower case version of the filename (so if you
2222use Unix and someone sends you a DOS/Windows dataset with mismatched
2223case, unzip it with "unzip -L" and unix cavern will process it).
2224</Para>
2225
2226<Para>
2227The depth to which you can nest
2228include files may be limited by the operating system
2229you use.  Usually the limit is fairly high (>30), but if you want to be able to
2230process your dataset with &survexsuite; on any supported platform, it
2231would be prudent not to go overboard with nested include files.
2232</Para>
2233</listitem>
2234</VarListEntry>
2235
2236</VariableList>
2237
2238</Sect3>
2239
2240<Sect3><Title>INFER</Title>
2241
2242<VariableList>
2243
2244<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2245
2246<listitem>
2247<Para>*infer plumbs on|off</Para>
2248
2249<Para>*infer equates on|off</Para>
2250
2251<Para>*infer exports on|off</Para>
2252</listitem>
2253
2254</VarListEntry>
2255
2256<!--
2257<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2258
2259<listitem>
2260<programlisting>
2261</programlisting>
2262
2263</listitem>
2264
2265</VarListEntry>
2266-->
2267
2268<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2269
2270<listitem>
2271<Para>"*infer plumbs on" tells cavern to interpret gradients of +/- 90
2272degrees as UP/DOWN (so it
2273will not apply the clino correction to them). This is useful when
2274the data has not been converted to have UP and DOWN in it.
2275</Para>
2276
2277<para>"*infer equates on" tells cavern to interpret a leg with
2278a tape reading of zero as a *equate.  this prevents tape corrections
2279being applied to them.
2280</para>
2281
2282<para>"*infer exports on" is necessary when you have a dataset which is
2283partly annotated with *export.  It tells cavern not to complain about
2284missing *export commands in part of the dataset.  Also stations which
2285were used to join surveys are marked as exported in the 3d file.
2286</para>
2287</listitem>
2288
2289</VarListEntry>
2290
2291<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
2292
2293<!--
2294<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2295
2296<listitem><Para>*end, *prefix</Para></listitem>
2297
2298</VarListEntry>
2299-->
2300
2301</VariableList>
2302
2303</Sect3>
2304
2305<Sect3><Title>INSTRUMENT</Title>
2306
2307<VariableList>
2308
2309<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2310
2311<listitem><Para>*instrument &lt;instrument&gt; &lt;identifier&gt;</Para></listitem>
2312
2313</VarListEntry>
2314
2315<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2316
2317<listitem>
2318<Para>
2319<programlisting>
2320*instrument compass "CUCC 2"
2321*instrument clino "CUCC 2"
2322*instrument tape "CUCC Fisco Ranger open reel"</programlisting>
2323</Para>
2324</listitem>
2325
2326</VarListEntry>
2327
2328<VarListEntry><Term>Validity</Term>
2329
2330<listitem><Para>valid at the start of a *begin/*end block.
2331</Para></listitem>
2332
2333</VarListEntry>
2334
2335<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2336
2337<listitem><Para>
2338*instrument specifies the particular instruments used to perform a
2339survey.
2340</Para></listitem>
2341
2342</VarListEntry>
2343
2344<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
2345
2346<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2347
2348<listitem><Para>*begin, *date, *team</Para></listitem>
2349
2350</VarListEntry>
2351
2352</VariableList>
2353
2354</Sect3>
2355
2356<Sect3><Title>PREFIX</Title>
2357
2358<VariableList>
2359
2360<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2361
2362<listitem><Para>*prefix &lt;survey&gt;</Para></listitem>
2363
2364</VarListEntry>
2365
2366<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2367
2368<listitem>
2369<Para>
2370<programlisting>
2371*prefix flapjack</programlisting>
2372</Para>
2373</listitem>
2374
2375</VarListEntry>
2376
2377<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2378
2379<listitem><Para>
2380*prefix sets the current survey.
2381</Para></listitem>
2382
2383</VarListEntry>
2384
2385<VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term>
2386
2387<listitem><Para>*prefix is deprecated - you should use *begin and *end
2388instead.</Para></listitem>
2389
2390</VarListEntry>
2391
2392<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2393
2394<listitem><Para>*begin, *end</Para></listitem>
2395
2396</VarListEntry>
2397
2398</VariableList>
2399
2400</Sect3>
2401
2402<Sect3><Title>REQUIRE</Title>
2403
2404<VariableList>
2405
2406<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2407
2408<listitem><Para>*require &lt;version&gt;</Para></listitem>
2409
2410</VarListEntry>
2411
2412<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2413
2414<listitem>
2415<Para>
2416<programlisting>
2417*require 0.98</programlisting>
2418</Para>
2419</listitem>
2420
2421</VarListEntry>
2422
2423<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2424
2425<listitem><Para>
2426*require checks that the version of cavern in use is at least
2427&lt;version&gt; and stops with an error if not.
2428So if your dataset requires a feature
2429introduced in a particular version, you can add a *require command and
2430users will know what version they need to upgrade to, rather than
2431getting an error message and having to guess what the real problem is.
2432</Para></listitem>
2433
2434</VarListEntry>
2435
2436</VariableList>
2437
2438</Sect3>
2439
2440<Sect3><Title>SD</Title>
2441
2442<VariableList>
2443
2444<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2445
2446<listitem><Para>*sd &lt;quantity list&gt; &lt;standard deviation&gt;
2447</Para></listitem>
2448
2449</VarListEntry>
2450
2451<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2452
2453<listitem>
2454<Para>
2455<programlisting>
2456*sd tape 0.15 metres</programlisting>
2457</Para>
2458</listitem>
2459
2460</VarListEntry>
2461
2462<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2463
2464<listitem><Para>
2465*sd sets the standard deviation of a measurement.
2466</Para>
2467
2468<Para>
2469&lt;quantity&gt; is one of
2470TAPE|COMPASS|CLINO|COUNTER|DEPTH|DECLINATION|DX|DY|DZ <!-- FIXME:
2471check this list -->
2472</Para>
2473
2474<Para>
2475&lt;standard deviation&gt; must include units and thus is typically
2476"0.05 metres", or "0.02 degrees". See *units below for full list
2477of valid units.
2478</Para>
2479
2480<!-- FIXME mention central limit theorem -->
2481<Para>
2482To utilise this command fully you need to understand what a
2483<emphasis>standard deviation</emphasis> is.
2484It gives a value to the 'spread' of the errors
2485in a measurement. Assuming that these are normally distributed
2486we can say that 95.44% of the actual lengths will fall within two
2487standard deviations of the measured length. i.e. a tape SD of
24880.25 metres means that the actual length of a tape measurement
2489is within + or - 0.5 metres of the recorded value 95.44% of the time.
2490So if the measurement is 7.34m then the actual length is very
2491likely to be between 6.84m and 7.84m. This example corresponds
2492to BCRA grade 3. Note that this is just one interpretation of
2493the BCRA standard, taking the permitted error values as 2SD 95.44%
2494confidence limits. If you want to take the readings as being some
2495other limit (e.g. 1SD = 68.26%) then you will need to change the BCRA3
2496and BCRA5 files accordingly. This issue is explored in more
2497detail in various surveying articles.
2498<!--
24992.565 sd 99%
25002.5   sd 98.76%
25012     sd 95.44%
25021     sd 68.26%
2503.97   sd 66.67%
25041.15  sd 75%
2505-->
2506</Para></listitem>
2507
2508</VarListEntry>
2509
2510<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2511
2512<listitem><Para>*units</Para></listitem>
2513
2514</VarListEntry>
2515
2516</VariableList>
2517
2518</Sect3>
2519
2520<Sect3><Title>SET</Title>
2521
2522<VariableList>
2523
2524<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2525
2526<listitem><Para>*set &lt;item&gt; &lt;character list&gt;</Para></listitem>
2527
2528</VarListEntry>
2529
2530<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2531
2532<listitem>
2533<Para>
2534<programlisting>
2535*set blank x09x20
2536*set decimal ,</programlisting>
2537
2538Note that you need to eliminate comma from being a blank before setting it as
2539a decimal - otherwise the comma in "*set decimal ," is parsed as a blank, and
2540you set decimal to not have any characters representing it.
2541</Para>
2542</listitem>
2543
2544</VarListEntry>
2545
2546<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2547
2548<listitem><Para>
2549*set sets the specified &lt;item&gt; to the character or characters
2550given in &lt;character list&gt;. The example sets the decimal
2551separator to be a comma.
2552</Para>
2553
2554<Para>
2555xAB means the character with hex value AB. Eg x20 is a space.
2556</Para>
2557
2558<Para>
2559The complete list of items that can be set, the defaults (in
2560brackets), and the meaning of the item, is:
2561</Para>
2562
2563<ItemizedList>
2564
2565<ListItem><Para>
2566BLANK (x09x20,) Separates fields
2567</Para></ListItem>
2568
2569<ListItem><Para>
2570COMMENT (;) Introduces comments
2571</Para></ListItem>
2572
2573<ListItem><Para>
2574DECIMAL (.) Decimal point character
2575</Para></ListItem>
2576
2577<ListItem><Para>
2578EOL (x0Ax0D) End of line character
2579</Para></ListItem>
2580
2581<ListItem><Para>
2582KEYWORD (*) Introduces keywords
2583</Para></ListItem>
2584
2585<ListItem><Para>
2586MINUS (-) Indicates negative number
2587</Para></ListItem>
2588
2589<ListItem><Para>
2590NAMES (_-) Non-alphanumeric chars permitted in station
2591names (letters and numbers are always permitted).
2592</Para></ListItem>
2593
2594<ListItem><Para>
2595OMIT (-) Contents of field omitted (e.g. in plumbed legs)
2596</Para></ListItem>
2597
2598<ListItem><Para>
2599PLUS (+) Indicates positive number
2600</Para></ListItem>
2601
2602<ListItem><Para>
2603ROOT (\) Prefix in force at start of current file (use of ROOT is deprecated)
2604</Para></ListItem>
2605
2606<ListItem><Para>
2607SEPARATOR (.) Level separator in prefix hierarchy
2608</Para></ListItem>
2609
2610<!-- FIXME OPEN ({) and CLOSE (}) -->
2611</ItemizedList>
2612
2613<Para>
2614The special characters may not be alphanumeric.
2615</Para>
2616
2617</listitem>
2618
2619</VarListEntry>
2620
2621</VariableList>
2622
2623</Sect3>
2624
2625<Sect3><Title>SOLVE</Title>
2626
2627<VariableList>
2628
2629<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2630
2631<listitem><Para>*solve</Para></listitem>
2632
2633</VarListEntry>
2634
2635<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2636
2637<listitem>
2638<Para>
2639<programlisting>
2640*include 1997data
2641*solve
2642*include 1998data
2643</programlisting>
2644</Para>
2645</listitem>
2646
2647</VarListEntry>
2648
2649<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2650
2651<listitem><Para>
2652Distributes misclosures around any loops in the survey and fixes
2653the positions of all existing stations.  This command is intended
2654for situations where you have some new surveys adding extensions
2655to an already drawn-up survey which you wish to avoid completely
2656redrawing. You can read in the old data, use *SOLVE to fix it, and then
2657read in the new data.  Then old stations will be in the same
2658positions as they are in the existing drawn up survey, even if new loops
2659have been formed by the extensions.
2660</Para></listitem>
2661
2662</VarListEntry>
2663
2664</VariableList>
2665
2666</Sect3>
2667
2668<Sect3><Title>TEAM</Title>
2669
2670<VariableList>
2671
2672<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2673
2674<listitem><Para>*team &lt;person&gt; &lt;role&gt;...</Para></listitem>
2675
2676</VarListEntry>
2677
2678<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2679
2680<listitem>
2681<Para>
2682<programlisting>
2683*team "Nick Proctor" compass clino tape
2684*team "Anthony Day" notes pictures tape
2685</programlisting>
2686</Para>
2687</listitem>
2688
2689</VarListEntry>
2690
2691<VarListEntry><Term>Validity</Term>
2692
2693<listitem><Para>valid at the start of a *begin/*end block.
2694</Para></listitem>
2695<!-- FIXME valid roles are? -->
2696
2697</VarListEntry>
2698
2699<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2700
2701<listitem><Para>
2702*team specifies the people involved in a survey and what role they
2703filled during that trip.
2704</Para></listitem>
2705
2706</VarListEntry>
2707
2708<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
2709
2710<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2711
2712<listitem><Para>*begin, *date, *instrument</Para></listitem>
2713
2714</VarListEntry>
2715
2716</VariableList>
2717
2718</Sect3>
2719
2720<Sect3><Title>TITLE</Title>
2721
2722<VariableList>
2723
2724<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2725
2726<listitem><Para>*title &lt;title&gt;</Para></listitem>
2727
2728</VarListEntry>
2729
2730<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2731
2732<listitem>
2733<programlisting>
2734*title Dreamtime</programlisting>
2735
2736<programlisting>
2737*title "Mission Impossible"</programlisting>
2738</listitem>
2739
2740</VarListEntry>
2741
2742<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2743
2744<listitem><Para>*title allows you to set the descriptive title for a survey.
2745If the title contains spaces, you need to enclose it in quotes ("").
2746If there is no *title command, the title defaults to the survey name
2747given in the *begin command.
2748</Para>
2749</listitem>
2750
2751</VarListEntry>
2752
2753<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
2754
2755<!--
2756<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2757
2758<listitem><Para>*end, *prefix</Para></listitem>
2759
2760</VarListEntry>
2761-->
2762
2763</VariableList>
2764
2765</Sect3>
2766
2767<Sect3><Title>TRUNCATE</Title>
2768
2769<VariableList>
2770
2771<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2772
2773<listitem><Para>*truncate &lt;length&gt;|off</Para></listitem>
2774
2775</VarListEntry>
2776
2777<!-- FIXME:
2778<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2779
2780<listitem>
2781<programlisting>
2782</programlisting>
2783
2784</listitem>
2785
2786</VarListEntry>
2787-->
2788
2789<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2790
2791<listitem><Para>Station names may be of any length in &survexsuite;, but some
2792other (mostly older) cave surveying software only regard the first few
2793characters of a name as significant (e.g. "entran" and "entrance"
2794might be treated as the same).  To facilitate using data imported from
2795such a package &survexsuite; allows you to truncate names to whatever
2796length you want (but by default truncation is off).
2797</Para>
2798
2799<Para>Figures for the number of characters which are significant in various
2800software packages: Compass currently has a limit of 12,
2801CMAP has a limit of 6,
2802Smaps 4 had a limit of 8,
2803<!-- FIXME any limits for other software, winkarst for example? -->
2804Surveyor87/8 used 8.
2805&survexsuite; itself used 8 per prefix
2806level up to version 0.41, and 12 per prefix level up to 0.73 (more recent
2807versions removed this rather archaic restriction).
2808</Para>
2809</listitem>
2810
2811</VarListEntry>
2812
2813<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
2814
2815<!--
2816<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2817
2818<listitem><Para>*end, *prefix</Para></listitem>
2819
2820</VarListEntry>
2821-->
2822
2823</VariableList>
2824
2825</Sect3>
2826
2827<Sect3><Title>UNITS</Title>
2828
2829<VariableList>
2830
2831<VarListEntry><Term>Syntax</Term>
2832
2833<listitem><Para>
2834*units &lt;quantity list&gt; [&lt;factor&gt;] &lt;unit&gt;
2835</Para>
2836<Para>
2837*units default
2838</Para></listitem>
2839
2840</VarListEntry>
2841
2842<VarListEntry><Term>Example</Term>
2843
2844<listitem>
2845<Para>
2846<programlisting>
2847*units tape metres</programlisting>
2848
2849<programlisting>
2850*units compass backcompass clino backclino grads</programlisting>
2851
2852<programlisting>
2853*units dx dy dz 1000 metres ; data given as kilometres</programlisting>
2854
2855<programlisting>
2856*units left right up down feet</programlisting>
2857</Para>
2858</listitem>
2859
2860</VarListEntry>
2861
2862<VarListEntry><Term>Description</Term>
2863
2864<listitem><Para>
2865&lt;quantity&gt; is one of the following (grouped entries are just alternative names for the same thing):
2866TAPE/LENGTH, COMPASS/BEARING, BACKCOMPASS/BACKBEARING, CLINO/GRADIENT, BACKCLINO/BACKGRADIENT, COUNTER/COUNT, DEPTH, DECLINATION, DX/EASTING, DY/NORTHING, DZ/ALTITUDE, LEFT, RIGHT, UP/CEILING, DOWN/FLOOR
2867</Para>
2868
2869<Para>Changes current units of all the quantities listed to [&lt;factor&gt;]
2870&lt;unit&gt;. Note that quantities can be expressed either as
2871the instrument (e.g. COMPASS) or the measurement (e.g. BEARING).
2872</Para>
2873
2874<Para>&lt;factor&gt; allows you to easy specify situations such as measuring
2875distance with a diving line knotted every 10cm (*units distance 0.1 metres).
2876If &lt;factor&gt; is omitted it defaults to 1.0.  If specified, it must be
2877non-zero.
2878</Para>
2879
2880<Para>Valid units for listed quantities are:
2881</Para>
2882
2883<Para>TAPE/LENGTH, COUNTER/COUNT, DEPTH, DX/EASTING, DY/NORTHING, DZ/ALTITUDE
2884in YARDS|FEET|METRIC|METRES|METERS (default: METRES)
2885</Para>
2886
2887<Para>CLINO/GRADIENT, BACKCLINO/BACKGRADIENT
2888in DEG|DEGREES|GRADS|MILS|PERCENT|PERCENTAGE (default: DEGREES)
2889</Para>
2890
2891<Para>COMPASS/BEARING, BACKCOMPASS/BACKBEARING, DECLINATION
2892in DEG|DEGREES|GRADS|MILS|MINUTES (default: DEGREES)
2893</Para>
2894
2895<Para>(360 degrees = 400 grads (also known as Mils))
2896</Para>
2897</listitem>
2898
2899</VarListEntry>
2900
2901<!-- <VarListEntry><Term>Caveats </Term> </VarListEntry> -->
2902
2903<VarListEntry><Term>See Also</Term>
2904
2905<listitem><Para>*calibrate</Para></listitem>
2906
2907</VarListEntry>
2908
2909</VariableList>
2910
2911</Sect3>
2912
2913</Sect2>
2914
2915</Sect1>
2916
2917<!-- FIXME rename to "Cookbook"? -->
2918<Sect1><Title>Contents of &svx; files: How do I?</Title>
2919<?dbhtml filename="svxhowto.htm">
2920
2921<Para>
2922Here is some example &survexsuite; data (a very small cave numbered 1623/163):
2923</Para>
2924
2925<programlisting>
29262 1 26.60 222  17.5
29272 3 10.85 014   7
29282 4  7.89 254 -11
29294 5  2.98  - DOWN
29305 6  9.29 271 -28.5</programlisting>
2931
2932<Para>
2933You can vary the data ordering.  The default is:
2934</Para>
2935
2936<Para>
2937from-station to-station tape compass clino
2938</Para>
2939
2940<Para>
2941This data demonstrates a number of useful features of &survexsuite;:
2942</Para>
2943
2944<Para>
2945Legs can be measured either way round, which allows the use of
2946techniques like "leap-frogging" (which is where legs
2947alternate forwards and backwards).
2948</Para>
2949
2950<Para>
2951Also notice that there is a spur in the survey (2 to 3).  You
2952do not need to specify this specially.
2953</Para>
2954
2955<Para>
2956&survexsuite; places few restrictions on station naming (see "Survey
2957Station Names" in the previous section), so you can number the stations
2958as they were in the original survey notes.  Although not apparent from
2959this example, there is no requirement for each leg to connect to an
2960existing station.  &survexsuite; can accept data in any order, and will
2961check for connectedness once all the data has been read in.
2962</Para>
2963
2964<Para>
2965Each survey is also likely to have other information associated
2966with it, such as instrument calibrations, etc.  This has been
2967omitted from this example to keep things simple.
2968</Para>
2969
2970<Para>
2971Most caves will take more than just one survey trip to map.  Commonly
2972the numbering in each survey will begin at 1, so we need to be
2973able to tell apart stations with the same number in different
2974surveys.
2975</Para>
2976
2977<Para>
2978To accomplish this, &survexsuite; has a very flexible system of hierarchical
2979prefixes.  All you need do is give each survey a unique name or
2980number, and enter the data like so:
2981</Para>
2982
2983<programlisting>
2984*begin 163
2985*export 1
29862 1 26.60 222  17.5
29872 3 10.85 014   7
29882 4  7.89 254 -11
29894 5  2.98  - DOWN
29905 6  9.29 271 -28.5
2991*end 163</programlisting>
2992
2993<Para>&survexsuite; will name the stations by attaching the current prefix.
2994In this case, the stations will be named 163.1, 163.2, etc.
2995</Para>
2996
2997<Para>We have a convention with the CUCC Austria data that the entrance survey
2998station of a cave is named P&lt;cave number&gt;, P163 in this case. We
2999can accomplish this like so:
3000</Para>
3001
3002<programlisting>
3003*equate P163 163.1
3004*entrance P163
3005*begin 163
3006*export 1
30072 1 26.60 222  17.5
30082 3 10.85 014   7
30092 4  7.89 254 -11
30104 5  2.98  - DOWN
30115 6  9.29 271 -28.5
3012*end 163</programlisting>
3013
3014<Sect2><Title>Specify surface survey data</Title>
3015
3016<Para>
3017Say you have 2 underground surveys and 2 surface ones with 2 fixed reference
3018points.  You want to mark the surface surveys so that their length isn't
3019included in length statistics, and so that Aven knows to display them
3020differently.  To do this you mark surface data with the "surface" flag
3021- this is set with "*flags surface" like so:
3022<Para>
3023
3024<programlisting>
3025; fixed reference points
3026*fix fix_a 12345 56789 1234
3027*fix fix_b 23456 67890 1111                                                     
3028                                                                               
3029; surface data (enclosed in *begin ... *end to stop the *flags command
3030; from "leaking" out)
3031*begin
3032*flags surface
3033*include surface1
3034*include surface2
3035*end                                                                           
3036                                                                               
3037; underground data
3038*include cave1
3039*include cave2</programlisting>
3040
3041<Para>
3042You might also have a survey which starts on the surface and heads into a
3043cave.  This can be easily handled too - here's an example which goes in
3044one entrance, through the cave, and out of another entrance:
3045</Para>
3046
3047<programlisting>
3048*begin BtoC
3049*title "161b to 161c"
3050*date 1990.08.06 ; trip 1990-161c-3 in 1990 logbook
3051
3052*begin
3053*flags surface
305402    01      3.09   249    -08.5
305502    03      4.13   252.5  -26
3056*end
3057
305804    03      6.00   020    +37
305904    05      3.07   329    -31
306006    05      2.67   203    -40.5
306106    07      2.20   014    +04
306207    08      2.98   032    +04
306308    09      2.73   063.5  +21
306409    10     12.35   059    +15
3065
3066*begin
3067*flags surface
306811    10      4.20   221.5  -11.5
306911    12      5.05   215    +03.5
307011    13      6.14   205    +12.5
307113    14     15.40   221    -14
3072*end
3073
3074*end BtoC</programlisting>
3075
3076<Para>
3077Note that to avoid needless complication, Survex regards each leg as
3078being either "surface" or "not surface" - if a leg spans the boundary you'll
3079have to call it one or the other.  It's good surveying practice to
3080deliberately put a station at the surface/underground interface
3081(typically the highest closed contour or drip line) so this generally
3082isn't an onerous restriction.
3083</Para>
3084
3085</Sect2>
3086
3087<Sect2><Title>Specify the ordering and type of data</Title>
3088
3089<Para>The *DATA command is used to specify the data style, and the
3090order in which the readings are given.</Para>
3091
3092</Sect2>
3093
3094<Sect2><Title>Deal with Plumbs or Legs Across Static Water</Title>
3095
3096<!-- FIXME
3097<Para>
3098They can be given
3099as +90, or -90, but as they are not usually measured with the
3100clino, but with a plumb of some sort, then it is useful to distinguish
3101them in this way so that any clino adjustment is not applied to
3102these values.
3103</Para>
3104
3105FIXME: paste in section from mail to list
3106
3107<Para>
3108Note that a similar effect can be achieved by using the "*infer plumbs" command
3109to stop clino corrections being applied to -90 and +90 clino readings.
3110</Para>
3111-->
3112
3113<Para>
3114Plumbed legs should be given using 'UP' or 'DOWN' in place of the
3115clino reading and a dash (or a different specified 'OMIT' character)
3116in place of the compass reading.  This distinguishes
3117them from legs measured with a compass and clino.  Here's an example:
3118</Para>
3119
3120<programlisting>
31211 2 21.54 - UP
31223 2 7.36 017 +17
31233 4 1.62 091 +08
31245 4 10.38 - DOWN</programlisting>
3125
3126<Para>
3127U/D or +V/-V may be used instead of UP/DOWN; the check is not case
3128sensitive.
3129</Para>
3130
3131<Para>
3132Legs surveyed across the surface of a static body of water where no
3133clino reading is taken (since the surface of the water can be assumed
3134to be flat) can be indicated by using LEVEL in place of a clino reading.
3135This prevents the clino correction being applied.  Here's an example:
3136</Para>
3137
3138<programlisting>
31391 2 11.37 190 -12
31403 2  7.36 017 LEVEL
31413 4  1.62 091 LEVEL</programlisting>
3142
3143</Sect2>
3144
3145<Sect2><Title>Specify a BCRA grade</Title>
3146
3147<Para>The *SD command can be used to specify the standard deviations of the
3148various measurements (tape, compass, clino, etc).  Examples files are
3149supplied which define BCRA Grade 3 and BCRA Grade 5 using a number of *sd
3150commands. You can use these by simply including them at the relevant point,
3151as follows:
3152</Para>
3153
3154<programlisting>
3155*begin somewhere
3156; This survey is only grade 3
3157*include grade3
31582 1 26.60 222  17.5
31592 3 10.85 014   7
3160; etc
3161*end somewhere</programlisting>
3162
3163<Para>The default values for the standard deviations are those for
3164BCRA grade 5. Note that it is good practice to keep the *include
3165Grade3 within *Begin and *End commands otherwise it will apply
3166to following survey data, which may not be what you intended.
3167</Para>
3168
3169</Sect2>
3170
3171<Sect2><Title>Specify different accuracy for a leg</Title>
3172
3173<Para>For example, suppose the tape on the plumbed leg in this survey
3174is suspected of being less accurate than the rest of the survey because
3175the length was obtained by measuring the length of the rope used to rig
3176the pitch.  We can set a higher sd for this one measurement and use a
3177*begin/*end block to make sure this setting only applies to the one
3178leg:
3179</Para>
3180
3181<programlisting>
31822 1 26.60 222  17.5
31832 3 10.85 014   7
31842 4  7.89 254 -11
3185*begin
3186; tape measurement was taken from the rope length
3187*sd tape 0.5 metres
31884 5  34.50 - DOWN
3189*end
31905 6  9.29 271 -28.5</programlisting>
3191
3192<!-- FIXME also *calibrate and *instrument? Except rope is measure with the
3193tape... -->
3194</Sect2>
3195
3196<Sect2><Title>Enter Radiolocation Data</Title>
3197
3198<!-- FIXME comments from David Gibson here -->
3199<Para>This is done by using the *SD command to specify the appropriate
3200errors for the radiolocation `survey leg' so that the loop closure
3201algorithm knows how to distribute errors if it forms part of a loop.
3202</Para>
3203
3204<Para>The best approach for a radiolocation where the underground station
3205is vertically below the surface station is to represent it as a
3206plumbed leg, giving suitable SDs for the length and plumb angle. The
3207horizontal positioning of this is generally quite accurate, but the
3208vertical positioning may be much less well known. E.g: we have a
3209radiolocation of about 50m depth +/- 20m and horizontal accuracy of
3210+/- 8m. Over 50m the +/-8m is equivalent to an angle of 9 degrees, so
3211that is the expected plumb error. 20m is the expected error in the
3212length. To get the equivalent SD we assume that 99.74% of readings will
3213be within 3 standard deviations of the error value. Thus we divide the
3214expected errors by 3 to get the SD we should specify:
3215</Para> <!-- 3 SD? or same as BCRA3.SVX, etc -->
3216
3217<programlisting>
3218*begin
3219*sd length 6.67 metres
3220*sd plumb 3 degrees
3221surface underground 50 - down
3222*end</programlisting>
3223
3224<Para>
3225We wrap the radiolocation leg in a *begin/*end block to make
3226sure that the special *sd settings only apply to this one leg.
3227</Para>
3228
3229<Para>For more information on the expected errors from radiolocations
3230see Compass Points Issue 10, available online at
3231<ulink url="http://www.chaos.org.uk/survex/cp/CP10/CPoint10.htm">http://www.chaos.org.uk/survex/cp/CP10/CPoint10.htm</ulink>
3232</Para>
3233
3234</Sect2>
3235
3236<Sect2><Title>Enter Diving Data</Title>
3237
3238<Para>Surveys made underwater using a diver's depth gauge can be
3239processed - use the *Data command to specify that the following data
3240is of this type.
3241</Para>
3242
3243</Sect2>
3244
3245<Sect2><Title>Enter Theodolite data</Title>
3246
3247<Para>
3248Theodolite data with turned angles is not yet explicitly catered
3249for, so for now you will need to convert it into equivalent legs in
3250another style - normal or cylpolar are likely to be the best choices.
3251</Para>
3252
3253<Para>
3254If there is no vertical info in your theodolite data then you should
3255use the cylpolar style and use *sd command to specify very low
3256accuracy (high SD) in the depth so that the points will move in the
3257vertical plane as required if the end points are fixed or the survey
3258is part of a loop.
3259</Para>
3260
3261</Sect2>
3262
3263</Sect1>
3264
3265<Sect1><Title>General: How do I?</Title>
3266<?dbhtml filename="genhowto.htm">
3267
3268<Sect2><Title>Create a new survey</Title>
3269
3270<Para>You simply create a text file containing the relevant survey data,
3271using a text editor, and save it with a suitable name with a &svx;
3272extension. The
3273easiest way is to look at some of the example data and use that
3274as a template. Nearly all surveys will need a bit of basic info
3275as well as the survey data itself: e.g. the date (*date), comments
3276about where, what cave, a name for the survey (using *begin and *end),
3277instrument error corrections etc. Here is a typical survey file:
3278</Para>
3279
3280<Para>All the lines starting with ';' are comments, which are ignored
3281by &survexsuite;. You can also see the use of 'DOWN' for plumbs, and
3282*calibrate tape for dealing with a tape length error (in this case
3283the end of the tape had fallen off so measurements were made from the
328420cm point).</Para>
3285
3286<programlisting>
3287*equate chaos.1 triassic.pt3.8
3288*equate chaos.2 triassic.pt3.9
3289
3290*begin chaos
3291*title "Bottomless Pit of Eternal Chaos to Redemption pitch"
3292*date 1996.07.11
3293*team "Nick Proctor" compass clino tape
3294*team "Anthony Day" notes pictures tape
3295*instrument compass "CUCC 2"
3296*instrument clino "CUCC 2"
3297;Calibration: Cairn-Rock 071 072 071,  -22 -22 -22
3298;       Rock-Cairn 252 251 252,  +21 +21 +21
3299;Calibration at 161d entrance from cairn nr entrance to
3300;prominent rock edge lower down. This is different from
3301;calibration used for thighs survey of 5 July 1996
3302
3303*export 1 2
3304
3305;Tape is 20cm too short
3306*calibrate tape +0.2
3307
33081 2 9.48 208 +08
33092 3 9.30 179 -23
33103 4 2.17 057 +09
33115 4 10.13 263 +78
33125 6 2.10 171 -73
33137 6 7.93 291 +75
3314*begin
3315*calibrate tape 0
33168 7 35.64 262 +86 ;true length measured for this leg
3317*end
33188 9 24.90 - DOWN
331910 9 8.61 031 -43
332010 11 2.53 008 -34
332111 12 2.70 286 -20
332213 12 5.36 135 +23
332314 13 1.52 119 -12
332415 14 2.00 036 +13
332516 15 2.10 103 +12
332617 16 1.40 068 -07
332717 18 1.53 285 -42
332819 18 5.20 057 -36
332919 20 2.41 161 -67
333020 21 27.47 - DOWN
333121 22 9.30 192 -29
3332*end chaos</programlisting>
3333
3334</Sect2>
3335
3336<Sect2><Title>Join surveys together</Title>
3337
3338<Para>Once you have more than one survey you need to specify how they
3339link together. To do this use *export to make the stations to be
3340joined accessible in the enclosing survey, then *equate in the
3341enclosing survey to join them together.
3342<!-- FIXME example -->
3343</Para>
3344
3345</Sect2>
3346
3347<Sect2><Title>Organise my surveys</Title>
3348
3349<Para>This is actually a large subject. There are many ways you can
3350organise your data using &survexsuite;. Take a look at the example dataset
3351for some ideas of ways to go about it.
3352</Para>
3353
3354<Sect3><Title>Fixed Points (Control Points)</Title>
3355
3356<Para>The *fix command is used to specify fixed points (also know as control
3357points).  See the description of this command in the "Cavern Commands"
3358section of this manual.
3359</Para>
3360
3361</Sect3>
3362
3363<Sect3><Title>More than one survey per trip</Title>
3364
3365<Para>Suppose you have two separate bits of surveying which were done on the
3366same trip.  So the calibration details, etc. are the same for both.  But you
3367want to give a different survey name to the two sections.  This is easily
3368achieved like so:
3369</Para>
3370
3371<programlisting>
3372*begin
3373*calibrate compass 1.0
3374*calibrate clino 0.5
3375*begin altroute
3376; first survey
3377*end altroute
3378*begin faraway
3379; second survey
3380*end faraway
3381*end</programlisting>
3382
3383</Sect3>
3384
3385</Sect2>
3386
3387<Sect2><Title>Add surface topography</Title>
3388
3389<!-- FIXME put DEM support in aven -->
3390<Para>We intend to allow import of terrain data in DEM format, and also any
3391other formats in common use.  But at present the simplest approach is to
3392generate a &svx; file with the surface mesh in and display it with the
3393survey data.
3394</Para>
3395
3396<Para>
3397It is possible to generate
3398a mesh or contours overlaying your area by various means.  In the USA,
3399usable resolution data can be obtained for free.  In other countries,
3400it's harder to come by.  Reading heights from the
3401contours on a map is one approach.  It's laborious, but feasible for
3402a small area.
3403</Para>
3404
3405<Para>
3406Details of several methods are given in the BCRA Cave Surveying
3407Group magazine Compass Points issue 11, available online at
3408<ulink url="http://www.chaos.org.uk/survex/cp/CP11/CPoint11.htm#Art_5">http://www.chaos.org.uk/survex/cp/CP11/CPoint11.htm#Art_5</ulink>
3409</Para>
3410
3411<Para>If you're using another program to generate a &svx; file for the surface
3412mesh, it's best to use the NOSURVEY data style.
3413Simply fix all the grid intersections at the correct
3414coordinates and height, and put legs between them using the NOSURVEY style.
3415Here's a grid of 4 squares and 9 intersections:
3416</Para>
3417
3418<programlisting>
3419*fix 00 000 000 1070
3420*fix 01 000 100 1089
3421*fix 02 000 200 1093
3422
3423*fix 10 100 000 1062
3424*fix 11 100 100 1080
3425*fix 12 100 200 1089
3426
3427*fix 20 200 000 1050
3428*fix 21 200 100 1065
3429*fix 22 200 200 1077
3430
3431*data nosurvey station
3432
343300
343401
343502
3436
343710
343811
343912
3440
344120
344221
344322
3444
344500
344610
344720
3448
344901
345011
345121
3452
345302
345412
345522</programlisting>
3456
3457<Para>
3458This is far simpler than trying to create fake tape/compass/clino legs of
3459the right length for each line in the mesh.  It's also very fast to process
3460with cavern.
3461</Para>
3462
3463<Para>SpeleoGen can also help with this process if you want
3464final output in DXF form.  See the 'Related Tools' section of the
3465Survex website for download links.
3466</Para>
3467
3468</Sect2>
3469
3470<Sect2><Title>Overlay a grid</Title>
3471
3472<Para>Aven is able to display a grid, but this functionality isn't currently
3473available in printouts.
3474You can achieve a similar effect for now by creating a &svx; file
3475where the survey legs form a grid.
3476</Para>
3477
3478</Sect2>
3479
3480<Sect2><Title>Import data from other programs</Title>
3481
3482<Para>&survexsuite; supports a number of features to help with importing
3483existing data. You can specify the ordering of items on a line using *Data
3484(see &survexsuite; Keywords above), and you can specify the characters used
3485to mean different things using *Set (see &survexsuite; Keywords above).
3486</Para>
3487
3488<Para>The Ignore and Ignoreall options to the *Data command are often
3489particularly useful, e.g. if you have a dataset with LRUD info or comments
3490on the ends of lines.
3491</Para>
3492
3493<Sect3><Title>Changing Meanings of Characters</Title>
3494
3495<Para>e.g. if you have some data with station names containing the
3496characters '?' and '+' (which are not permitted in a name by default)
3497then the command:
3498</Para>
3499
3500<programlisting>
3501*SET NAMES ?+</programlisting>
3502
3503<Para>
3504specifies that question marks and plus signs are permitted in station names.
3505A-Z, a-z, and 0-9 are always permitted. '_' and '-' are also permitted by
3506default, but aren't in this example.
3507</Para>
3508
3509<Para>If your data uses a comma ',' instead of a decimal point, then
3510you use
3511</Para>
3512
3513<programlisting>
3514*SET DECIMAL ,</programlisting>
3515
3516<Para>to specify that ',' is now the decimal separator instead of '.'.
3517</Para>
3518
3519<!-- FIXME
3520<Para>Note that there are plenty of ways you can use this facility to
3521completely confuse the software, as it may not be able to work out what is
3522going on, or it may simply be ambiguous. It can cope with some ambiguity (e.g.
3523the '-' character is used both for 'MINUS' and for 'OMIT'), but there are
3524limits. If you have a dataset that you can not make &survexsuite;
3525understand, then send it to us, and we will see what can be done.
3526</Para>
3527-->
3528
3529</Sect3>
3530
3531<!--
3532 Nobody seems to have the CfH convertor...
3533 but it's probably no longer useful anyway
3534
3535<Sect3><Title>Other Converters</Title>
3536
3537<Para>We have an Excel 5 macro for converting The Lotus 123 spreadsheets
3538used by the German survey software Cad F&uuml;r H&ouml;hlen into
3539&survexsuite; data files. Other converters may also come to be available.
3540These will normally be available via the
3541<ulink url="&survexwebsite;">&survexsuite; Web pages</ulink>.
3542</Para>
3543
3544</Sect3>
3545-->
3546
3547</Sect2>
3548
3549<Sect2><Title>Export data from &survexsuite;</Title>
3550
3551<Para>See Rosetta Stal in the Related Tools section of the Survex web
3552site.  This is a utility written by Taco van Ieperen and Gary Petrie.
3553Note though that this only supports a subset of the svx format,
3554and only work on Microsoft Windows.  The Survex support is limited
3555and doesn't understand the more recently added commands.</Para>
3556
3557</Sect2>
3558
3559<Sect2><Title>See errors and warnings that have gone off the screen</Title>
3560
3561<Para>When you run &survexsuite; it will process the specified survey data
3562files in order, reporting any warnings and errors.  If there are no
3563errors, the output files are written and various statistics about the
3564survey are displayed. If there are a lot of warnings or errors, they can
3565scroll off the screen and it's not always possible to scroll back to
3566read them.
3567</Para>
3568
3569<Para>The easiest way to see all the text is to use <command>cavern
3570--log</command> to redirect output to a <filename>.log</filename> file,
3571which you can then inspect with a text editor.
3572</Para>
3573
3574<!-- <command/cavern cavename &gt; tmpfile/ -->
3575
3576</Sect2>
3577
3578<Sect2><Title>Create an Extended Elevation</Title>
3579
3580<Para>Use the Extend program. This takes &x3d; files and
3581'flattens' them.  See 'Extend' for details.
3582</Para>
3583
3584</Sect2>
3585
3586</Sect1>
3587
3588<!--
3589<Sect1><Title>Appendices</Title>
3590<?dbhtml filename="appendix.htm">
3591
3592<Para>Files provided
3593</Para>
3594
3595<Para>Command specification
3596</Para>
3597
3598</Sect1>
3599-->
3600<Sect1><Title>Working with Larry Fish's Compass</Title>
3601<?dbhtml filename="compass.htm">
3602
3603<Para>
3604Survex can read Compass survey data - both raw data (.DAT and .MAK
3605files) and processed survey data (.PLT and .PLF files).  You can even
3606use <command>*include compassfile.dat</command> in a &svx; file and
3607it'll work!
3608</Para>
3609
3610<Para>
3611One point to note (this tripped us up!): station names in DAT files are
3612case sensitive and so Survex reads DAT files with the equivalent of
3613<command>*case preserve</command>.  The default in SVX files is
3614<command>*case lower</command>.  So this won't work:
3615
3616<programlisting>
3617*fix CE1 0 0 0
3618*include datfilewhichusesCE1.dat</programlisting>
3619
3620Because the CE1 in the *fix is actually interpreted as ce1.  This is
3621what you have to do:
3622
3623<programlisting>
3624*begin
3625*case preserve
3626*fix CE1 0 0 0
3627*include datfilewhichusesCE1.dat
3628*end</programlisting>
3629</Para>
3630
3631</Sect1>
3632
3633<Sect1><Title>Mailing List</Title>
3634<?dbhtml filename="maillist.htm">
3635
3636<Para>The best way to contact the authors and other Survex users is the
3637Survex mailing list - for details visit:
3638<ulink url="http://survex.com/maillist.html">http://survex.com/maillist.html</ulink>
3639</Para>
3640
3641<Para>We'd be delighted to hear how you get on with &survexsuite; and
3642welcome comments and suggestions for improvements.</Para>
3643
3644<Para>
3645And we'd love you to contribute your skills to help make &survexsuite; even
3646better.  Point out areas of the documentation which could be made clearer, or
3647sections which are missing entirely.  Download test releases, try them out, and
3648let us know if you find problems or have suggestions for improvements.
3649If there's no translation to your language, you could provide one.
3650Or if your a developer, <emphasis>"Say it with code"</emphasis>.  There's
3651plenty to do, so feel free to join in.
3652</Para>
3653
3654</Sect1>
3655
3656<Sect1><Title>Future Developments</Title>
3657<?dbhtml filename="future.htm">
3658
3659<Para>
3660Now that &survexsuite; has reached version 1.0, we are continuing progress
3661towards version 2, in a series of steps, evolving out of
3662Survex 1.0.  The GUI framework is being based on aven, with
3663the printer drivers and other utility programs being pulled in
3664and integrated into the menus.</Para>
3665
3666<Para>Aven is built on &wxwidgets;, which means that it can easily support
3667Unix, Microsoft Windows, and Mac OS X.</Para>
3668
3669<Para>More information on our plans is on the <ulink
3670url="&survexwebsite;">web site</ulink>.
3671</Para>
3672
3673</Sect1>
3674
3675</article>
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