The three tabs
The app is organised into three top-level tabs, each addressing a different kind of question.Individual Chart
Cast a natal chart and explore it through panels — daśā timelines, transits, annual charts, strength tables, and benefic-point maps.
Couple Compatibility
Score two charts against the eight Ashtakūṭa factors, check Mangal dosha, and compare marriage houses in both the D1 and D9 charts.
Panchāng
Browse the daily almanac for any place — tithi, nakṣatra, yoga, karaṇa, sunrise and sunset, festival markers, and auspicious windows.
Who it’s for
The app is built to be genuinely useful at two very different levels of experience. If you are curious but new to Vedic astrology, enter your details, read the plain-language explanations of your Moon sign and rising sign, and follow the Quick Start without needing to know any Sanskrit. The Concepts section is written to bring you up to speed gradually, one building block at a time. If you are an experienced reader or student, the app does not soften or hide the technical layers. It exposes the choice of ayanāṁśa, displays Shadbala in virūpas and rūpas alongside the classical minimum-strength thresholds, lets you switch between reading schools (Raman vs. classical BPHS), and renders all sixteen divisional charts of the Shoḍaśavarga. Every number is there to be cross-checked against the source texts.What it is not
The app is a calculation and reading tool — not a prediction engine or a life-advice oracle. It does not forecast specific events, generate horoscope prose, or tell you what decisions to make. It gives you an accurate sidereal chart and the full suite of classical measurements derived from it. The art of weighing those measurements against each other and against a lived life remains entirely yours.This app computes and presents — it does not interpret on your behalf. Think of it as a precise astronomical instrument paired with a classical reference library: the chart and the numbers it produces are as accurate as the birth data you supply; reading them with wisdom is the practitioner’s work.
