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Millennia Calendar 2.3.0 - Calendars and holidays of many countries and religions, astronomical events.
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Details |
Size: 2.57 MB
License: Shareware
OS: Win98,WinME,WinXP,WinNT 4.x,Windows2000,Windows Vista
Developer:3ok Software (» more programs)
View: Antivirus Report |
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New in this version: - The low limit of the admissible range of years is increased for 797 years to the past.
- Compatibility with Microsoft Vista.
- Latest revision of Daylight Saving Time laws for many countries.
Millennia Calendar checked and founded to be 100% clean:
Scan Results of MillenniaCalendarSetup.exe
MillenniaCalendarSetup.exe: OK
Known viruses: 78376
Scanned directories: 0
Scanned files: 1
Infected files: 0
Data scanned: 2.54 MB
Time: 2.177 sec (0 m 2 s)
Use the below code to display the award image on your website:
Publisher's Description:
Millennia Calendar displays date and time for any locations on the Earth; includes 12 traditional and modern calendars (Julian, Byzantine, Gregorian, Indian, Ancient Egyptian, Coptic, Ethiopian, Hebrew, Islamic, Khayam, Persian, Slavic-Aryan); spans over a period of 8.5 thousand years (7.5 thousand years into the past and 1 thousand years into the future); takes into account the fact that in some calendars (Hebrew, Islamic etc.) new date begins either at sunset or sunrise; displays holidays and memorial days of many countries and religions: Christianity (Orthodoxy and Catholicism), Judaism, Islam (Shia and Sunni) and Ingleaism; allows historical and astronomical years counting; displays time of rise, transit and set of the Sun, the Moon and Planets; displays dates of equinoxes and solstices; displays dates and types of solar and lunar eclipses; displays horizontal coordinates of the Sun, the Moon and Planets; allows to save calendar and the list of holidays to HTML document; allows to saves the list of astronomical events to HTML or CSV document. Most of the astronomical calculations use algorithms set forth in the book 'Astronomical Algorithms' by Jean Meeus. Accuracy of these calculations is sufficient for the demonstration of correlation of astronomic events and calendars.
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