In where-vessels, click "Acquire"
-You will probably want to create a "vessel-notes" file to get the best
+You may well want to create a "vessel-notes" file to get the best
use out of where-vessels, see below.
If you don't have exactly one YPP client open and logged in then you
OPTIONS:
========
- --pirate PIRATE Treat vessels belonging to PIRATE as your own
- --ocean OCEAN Use map of OCEAN
+ --ocean OCEAN
+ Use map of OCEAN. Default is to guess by looking for an
+ open Puzzle Pirates client on the same display (logged on
+ as PIRATE, if --pirate was used).
+
+ --pirate PIRATE
+ Supplies the name of your pirate. If you also supply a notes
+ file (see below) where-vessels will treat ships belonging to
+ PIRATE as your own. An empty argument means do not care about
+ vessel ownership. Default is not to care about ownership without
+ notes; with notes, default is to look for a Puzzle Pirates client
+ on the same display (on OCEAN, if --ocean was used).
--notes SOURCE
- Use SOURCE as the vessel notes; default is "vessel-notes" in the
- current directory. See below. SOURCE may be of the following forms:
- SCHEME:... eg http:... URL, fetched with Tcl's http package
- |COMMAND ARG ARG command (Tcl list) whose output is the notes
- NOTES-FILE ordinary file
+ Use SOURCE as the vessel notes. See below.
+ SOURCE may be of the following forms:
+ empty argument No notes, this is the default
+ SCHEME:... eg http:... URL, fetched with Tcl's http package
+ |COMMAND ARG ARG command (Tcl list) whose output is the notes
+ NOTES-FILE ordinary file
--vessel-info-source RSYNC-SRC
Update information about vessels, subclasses, icons, etc. from