/uconv

A flexible command-line unit converter

Primary LanguageCGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

uconv -- a general unit converter for the command line

Version 0.0.4, June 2023

What is this?

uconv is a general-purpose unit converter for use on the command line. It is primarily intended for domestic and general scientific applications, supporting conversions for length, area, volume, mass, force, energy, radiation dose, fuel economy, temperature, pressure, velocity, acceleration, data capacity, and many others. For non-metric units, uconv favours UK variants over US ones, but the US versions are also available.

Why another unit converter?

There are many (perhaps too many) unit converter programs available; most have graphical interfaces. uconv is intended to be sufficiently flexible in its unit specification that it is faster to use than a graphical program.

An example of command line usage might be:

$ uconv 60 cuft m3
60 cubic feet = 1.69901 cubic metres

A more complex example:

$ uconv 200 m/sec2/g ft/min2/lb
200 metres/square second/gramme = 1.07148E+09 feet/square minute/pound

The number and the first unit can be written together:

$ uconv 2gib/sec mb/sec
2 gibibytes/second = 2147.48 megabytes/second

uconv recognizes a hundred or so basic units, but the potential conversions are very much more extensive than this, as units can be combined. The program recognizes combined units in a variety of formats: m/sec, m/sec^2, m/sec2, m/sec/sec, etc.

In fact, uconv will convert between any pair of units that are dimensionally consistent. For example, you can convert joules per second per kilogram to calories per minute per pound, if you wish. The program won't attempt to convert, for example, minutes to metres -- these are not dimensionally consistent units. However, any pair of measurements that can be reduced to the same basic set of core units (metre, gramme, second, newton, ampere, byte) should be convertible. uconv will even convert units that are complementary, that is, having dimensions that are the inverse of one another. So it can convert, for example, minutes per mile into miles per hour.

uconv attempts to be very flexible in the way units are interpreted, so the user doesn't have to spend too much time studying a manual to find the proper format. So square meters, for example, can be entered as 'sq m', 'square meter', 'sq metres', 'm2', 'sqm', among many others. The usual SI prefixes -- kilo, micro, etc -- are recognized, both in full and as abbreviations.

As of version 0.0.4, uconv includes data capacity among its basic unit, and can convert quantities involving both metric and IEC capacity units. That is, it can convert quanities involving (IEC) gibibytes and the like, to quanitities involving (metric) megabytes and the like. uconv is written in ANSI-standard C, and will compile on more-or-less any platform with a C compiler.

Although there are many unit conversion applications around, I wrote uconv because I needed something that would work on the command line, on all the platforms I use, including Android. This means, essentially, a plain C program. The GNU 'units' utility almost fits the bill -- units is hugely flexible but, for me, way too clunky in its use of the command line. In addition, its bloated database of obscure units makes it hard to find things when you're not sure of the name or abbreviation.

Please note: uconv is not related in any way to the Unicode converter with the same name.

Building and installation

To build from source, unpack the source bundle and run make, followed by make install. uconv has no unusual dependencies, and should build on most POSIX-like platforms.

Further information

See the uconv man page.

Legal and copying

uconv is maintained by Kevin Boone with substantial contributions from other authors. It is copyright (c)2013-2023, distributed under the terms of the GNU Public Licence, version 3.0. There is no warranty of any kind.