The files should wind up in your heather directory.   Type in ? at the 
keyboard,  scroll down to the end of the command line help info and there 
should be a line that says "put heather.cfg in directory ...."   The actual 
directory depends upon the operating system and how Heather was started.

The dumps should wind up there.   A single scheduled screen dump should be 
named "tbdump.gif " and for dumps at an interval should be "tbyyyy-mm-dd-#.gif" 
where # is a sequence number.  

Dumps commanded from the keyboard "\" command go to tbolt.gif   Version 5 uses 
a file name like tbolt.gif, ublox.gif, sirf.gif based upon the receiver type.  

For scheduled dumps and alarms the time you specify should be in your currently 
set local time zone... what is shown on the clock displays.  In version 5,  you 
can set the time zone to show the time in one of the supported astronomical 
time scales.  The dumps are always done based upon your local time zone, not 
necessarily what is displayed.  There is an obscure flag you can set to do them 
based on the displayed time (astronomical or local).

When Heather is doing a precision survey it writes the file "lla.lla" with all 
the fix info in it, intermediate results, and the final result.  You could read 
that and feed it to a plotting program.

In versions before 5.0,  the lat/lon scattergram is rather crude and rigid.  It 
did not re-scale if you changed the screen size and tended to be cleared and 
reset when the screen configuration was altered.  Version 5 can re-scale the 
plot and zoom it to full-(ish) screen.

---------------------

> For Windows 10, what is the file name for the Lady Heather dump 
screen command?  What folder is it in?

For the specified time (/nd=hh:mm:ss), is it GPS time or system 
time?
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