Colorful
and Useful Transit and Progressed Listings:
Kepler can produce transit-to-natal, transit-to-transit,
progressed-to-natal, and progressed-to-progressed listings
in "time line format". An example
of this is shown below.
You can select from 1 to 12 months (unlike the "old" format of simply
listing aspects, you are limited to a maximum of a 12-month period to view
at a time). The time line format allows you to glance down the screen (or page,
if you have printed it) to see exactly what aspects are in effect and how strong
they are. You can, of course, include planet-to-midpoint, or midpoint-to-planet,
or minor aspects, and you can choose which planets you want to include in the
printout, just as you have always been able to do in Kepler.
Eclipse
Information and Declinations:
In the section of the transit-to-natal listing below
you see "(SE)" displayed
after one of the transiting Sun aspects. "(SE)" indicates a solar
eclipse. You have the option of detecting that a solar eclipse or lunar eclipse
is making an aspect to a natal planet. Kepler denotes this by print "(SE)" (solar
eclipse) or "(LE)" next to the transiting Sun to natal planet aspect.
You can also detect not only eclipses but all new moons and full moons as
well. These are designated by "(NM)" (new moon) and "(FM)" (full
moon).
Kepler
can also detect transiting and progressed declinations.
For example, in the printout below, the 4th aspect listed
is transiting Pluto contraparallel natal Saturn. Of course,
parallels are included only if you want them.
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