morse man page on DragonFly

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MORSE(6)		       BSD Games Manual			      MORSE(6)

NAME
     morse — reformat input as morse code

SYNOPSIS
     morse [-o] [-p] [-P dspdevice] [-d device] [-e] [-w speed] [-W speed]
	   [-f frequency] [-s] [string ...]

DESCRIPTION
     The command morse read the given input and reformat it in the form of
     morse code.  Acceptable input are command line arguments or the standard
     input.

     Available options:

     -s	   The -s option produces dots and dashes rather than words.

     -o	   Write 16bit signed, 44.1kHz native endian sound data to the file
	   specified by -P, or, if not specified, to standard out.

     -p	   Send morse the real way. This only works if your system has
	   sound(4) support.

     -P dspdevice
	   Select a different dsp device from the default /dev/dsp.

     -w speed
	   Set the sending speed in words per minute. If not specified the
	   default speed of 20 WPM is used.

     -W speed
	   Enable Farnsworth keying.  The argument to -w will set the charac‐
	   ter keying speed and the argument to -W will set the spacing
	   between character and words.

     -f frequency
	   Set the sidetone frequency to something other than the default 600
	   Hz.

     -d device
	   Similar to -p, but use the RTS line of device (which must by a tty
	   device) in order to emit the morse code.

     -e	   echo each character before it is sent, used together with either -p
	   or -d.

     The -w, -W, and -f flags only work in conjunction with either the -p or
     the -d flag.

     Not all prosigns have corresponding characters. Use angle brackets to
     create a ligature, like ‘<KA>’.  The more common prosigns are ‘=’ for BT,
     ‘(’ for KN and ‘+’ for AR.

     Using flag -d device it is possible to key an external device, like a
     sidetone generator with a headset for training purposes, or even your ham
     radio transceiver.	 For the latter, simply connect an NPN transistor to
     the serial port device, emitter connected to ground, base connected
     through a resistor (few kiloohms) to RTS, collector to the key line of
     your transceiver (assuming the transceiver has a positive key supply
     voltage and is keyed by grounding the key input line).  A capacitor (some
     nanofarads) between base and ground is advisable to keep stray RF away,
     and to suppress the minor glitch that is generated during program
     startup.

ENVIRONMENT
     If your LC_CTYPE locale codeset is ‘KOI8-R’, characters with the high-
     order bit set are interpreted as Cyrillic characters.  If your LC_CTYPE
     locale codeset is ‘ISO8859-1’ compatible, they are interpreted as belong‐
     ing to the ‘ISO-8859-1’ character set.

SEE ALSO
     sound(4)

HISTORY
     Sound support for morse added by Lyndon Nerenberg (VE7TCP/VE6BBM)
     ⟨lyndon@orthanc.com⟩ and later converted to use sound(4) by Simon
     'corecode' Schubert ⟨corecode@fs.ei.tum.de⟩.

     Ability to key an external device added by Jörg Wunsch (DL8DTL).

BUGS
     Only understands a few European characters (German and French), no Asian
     characters, and no continental landline code.

     Sends a bit slower than it should due to system overhead. Some people
     would call this a feature.

BSD				 May 30, 2008				   BSD
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