Can I Keep It? and More Can I Keep It? - Simple applications explaining the art of choosing fish for a community aquarium. These are simple applications for introducing aquarists to the art of choosing fish for the community aquarium. Essentially it is an interactive version of the compatibility matrices seen in some aquarium books. Further information on how the application selects fish is given in the "How To Use" panel. The "Notes" panel includes some information about other fishkeeping applications I've written as well as notes about this program. Use When you click on the name of a fish, incompatible species are dimmed, indicating that they cannot be kept with the selected fish. A brief explanation of any problems specific to the fish are noted in the text box at the bottom of the application window. You can click on as many fish as you like, and each time the program will remove incompatible species, further refining the list of species that will work well in your community tank. For example, clicking on "Black Widow" removes any fish with trailing fins (such as guppies and bettas) because these tetras are notorious fin-nippers. But kribensis are compatible, since these fish stay close to the bottom and move too quickly to be much bothered by black widows. But if you click on the "Kribensis" button, you'll notice that some more fish are removed from the list, including red-tailed black sharks and convict cichlids. While these two fish aren't incompatible with the black widows, they are too territorial and aggressive to work well with kribensis in the average community tank. Click on "Polka-Dot Catfish" and yet more fish are removed from your list of available species, because these predatory catfish will make short work of small fish like neon tetras and danios that aren't otherwise incompatible with either black widow tetras or kribensis. When you're done, press the "Reset" button to start over. The Quick Pick Menu This is new to Version 1.2. The Quick Pick menu adds some shortcuts to useful selections of fish: species that tolerate brackish water, species that require soft water, species that do well in hard water, and species that are not aggressive, don't eat small fish, and won't nip at the fins of other fish in the aquarium. Choose these menu items and species that are not compatible with the chosen selection are removed from the list of available species. Choosing another Quick Pick changes this list, while the Reset menu item makes all the species available once more. About the fish Forty-eight species of fish are included, with examples drawn from the six most important groups of aquarium fish: the tetras (also known as characins); the carps (the minnows and barbs); the catfish; the livebearers; the gouramis (also known as anabantids or labyrinth fish); and the cichlids. The ones listed are the most widely traded and inexpensive species, which are inevitably the species that many newcomers to the hobby find most attractive. Development
Bugs I'm not aware of any, but if you find some, let me know!
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