2009-08-17 Brian Gough * const.el: removed electromagnetic constants from cgs, now only in CGSM 2008-07-03 Brian Gough * Makefile.am (INCLUDES): use top_srcdir instead of top_builddir 2006-03-21 Brian Gough * test.c (main): added some extra tests 2006-03-17 Brian Gough * const.el (gsl-electrical-constants): added debye unit 2004-05-26 Brian Gough * test.c: added stdlib.h for exit() 2004-03-05 Brian Gough * const.el: added CGS and MKS systems back in, with CGSM electrical units excluded from CGS, for backwards compatibility 2003-11-27 Brian Gough * const.el (gsl-constants): added stefan-boltzmann constant and thomson cross section 2003-09-18 Brian Gough * test.c: added a test program * gsl_const.h: fixed to use new header files for MKSA and CGSM 2003-06-09 Brian Gough * calc-units-update.el: changed to use MKSA and CGSM units, so that electromagnetic constants are converted correctly Sat Jul 20 21:25:56 2002 Brian Gough * calc-units-update.el (math-additional-units): changed setvar to setq, otherwise the new values do not override the original values Wed May 29 22:41:31 2002 Brian Gough * calc-units-update.el (math-additional-units): updated unit values, in a backwards compatible way. Made mue an absolute value, and put Ryd in energy units. 2002-05-18 Jochen Küpper * calc-units-update.el (math-additional-units): Add this file to provide updated costants for Emacs calc. (These values are in the current development versions of GNU Emacs and Xemacs already.) Mon Apr 1 19:27:57 2002 Brian Gough * const.el (gsl-constants): Added newton, dyne, joule, erg and power-of-ten prefixes, Mega, Giga, Tera, etc. Tue Jan 8 21:48:56 2002 Brian Gough * const.el (gsl-constants): added bohr_radius and vacuum_permittivity Tue Sep 25 15:15:33 2001 Brian Gough * const.el (fn): make all output double precision to avoid possibility of unexpected integer division. (gsl-constants): fix definition of barn and btu (gsl-constants): added solar mass Tue Jan 23 16:19:50 2001 Brian Gough * const.el (gsl-constants): fixed definition of POINT (from pt to point, was previously measuring 'pints')