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This is groff.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.8 from groff.texi.

This manual documents GNU 'troff' version 1.22.4.

   Copyright © 1994-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

     Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
     document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
     Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
     Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts
     being "A GNU Manual," and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a)
     below.  A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
     "GNU Free Documentation License."

     (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: "You have the freedom to copy and
     modify this GNU manual.  Buying copies from the FSF supports it in
     developing GNU and promoting software freedom."
INFO-DIR-SECTION Typesetting
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Groff: (groff).               The GNU troff document formatting system.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY


File: groff.info,  Node: Top,  Next: Introduction,  Prev: (dir),  Up: (dir)

GNU troff
*********

* Menu:

* Introduction::
* Invoking groff::
* Tutorial for Macro Users::
* Macro Packages::
* gtroff Reference::
* Preprocessors::
* Output Devices::
* File formats::
* Installation::
* Copying This Manual::
* Request Index::
* Escape Index::
* Operator Index::
* Register Index::
* Macro Index::
* String Index::
* Glyph Name Index::
* Font File Keyword Index::
* Program and File Index::
* Concept Index::

This manual documents GNU 'troff' version 1.22.4.

   Copyright © 1994-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

     Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
     document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
     Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
     Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts
     being "A GNU Manual," and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a)
     below.  A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
     "GNU Free Documentation License."

     (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: "You have the freedom to copy and
     modify this GNU manual.  Buying copies from the FSF supports it in
     developing GNU and promoting software freedom."


File: groff.info,  Node: Introduction,  Next: Invoking groff,  Prev: Top,  Up: Top

1 Introduction
**************

GNU 'troff' (or 'groff') is a system for typesetting documents.  'troff'
is very flexible and has been used extensively for some thirty years.
It is well entrenched in the Unix community.

* Menu:

* What Is groff?::
* History::
* groff Capabilities::
* Macro Package Intro::
* Preprocessor Intro::
* Output device intro::
* Credits::


File: groff.info,  Node: What Is groff?,  Next: History,  Prev: Introduction,  Up: Introduction

1.1 What Is 'groff'?
====================

'groff' belongs to an older generation of document preparation systems,
which operate more like compilers than the more recent interactive
WYSIWYG(1) (*note What Is groff?-Footnote-1::) systems.  'groff' and its
contemporary counterpart, TeX, both work using a "batch" paradigm: The
input (or "source") files are normal text files with embedded formatting
commands.  These files can then be processed by 'groff' to produce a
typeset document on a variety of devices.

   'groff' should not be confused with a "word processor", an integrated
system of editor and text formatter.  Also, many word processors follow
the WYSIWYG paradigm discussed earlier.

   Although WYSIWYG systems may be easier to use, they have a number of
disadvantages compared to 'troff':

   * They must be used on a graphics display to work on a document.

   * Most of the WYSIWYG systems are either non-free or are not very
     portable.

   * 'troff' is firmly entrenched in all Unix systems.

   * It is difficult to have a wide range of capabilities within the
     confines of a GUI/window system.

   * It is more difficult to make global changes to a document.

     "GUIs normally make it simple to accomplish simple actions and
     impossible to accomplish complex actions."  -Doug Gwyn (22/Jun/91
     in 'comp.unix.wizards')


File: groff.info,  Node: What Is groff?-Footnotes,  Up: What Is groff?

   (1) What You See Is What You Get


File: groff.info,  Node: History,  Next: groff Capabilities,  Prev: What Is groff?,  Up: Introduction

1.2 History
===========

'troff' can trace its origins back to a formatting program called
'RUNOFF', written by Jerry Saltzer, which ran on the CTSS (_Compatible
Time Sharing System_, a project of MIT, the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology) in the mid-sixties.(1)  (*note History-Footnote-1::) The
name came from the use of the phrase "run off a document", meaning to
print it out.  Bob Morris ported it to the 635 architecture and called
the program 'roff' (an abbreviation of 'runoff').  It was rewritten as
'rf' for the PDP-7 (before having Unix), and at the same time (1969),
Doug McIlroy rewrote an extended and simplified version of 'roff' in the
BCPL programming language.

   In 1971, the Unix developers wanted to get a PDP-11, and to justify
the cost, proposed the development of a document formatting system for
the AT&T patents division.  This first formatting program was a
reimplementation of McIlroy's 'roff', written by J. F. Ossanna.

   When they needed a more flexible language, a new version of 'roff'
called 'nroff' ("Newer 'roff'") was written.  It had a much more
complicated syntax, but provided the basis for all future versions.
When they got a Graphic Systems CAT Phototypesetter, Ossanna wrote a
version of 'nroff' that would drive it.  It was dubbed 'troff', for
"typesetter 'roff'", although many people have speculated that it
actually means "Times 'roff'" because of the use of the Times font
family in 'troff' by default.  As such, the name 'troff' is pronounced
't-roff' rather than 'trough'.

   With 'troff' came 'nroff' (they were actually the same program except
for some '#ifdef's), which was for producing output for line printers
and character terminals.  It understood everything 'troff' did, and
ignored the commands that were not applicable (e.g. font changes).

   Since there are several things that cannot be done easily in 'troff',
work on several preprocessors began.  These programs would transform
certain parts of a document into 'troff', which made a very natural use
of pipes in Unix.

   The 'eqn' preprocessor allowed mathematical formulae to be specified
in a much simpler and more intuitive manner.  'tbl' is a preprocessor
for formatting tables.  The 'refer' preprocessor (and the similar
program, 'bib') processes citations in a document according to a
bibliographic database.

   Unfortunately, Ossanna's 'troff' was written in PDP-11 assembly
language and produced output specifically for the CAT phototypesetter.
He rewrote it in C, although it was now 7000 lines of uncommented code
and still dependent on the CAT.  As the CAT became less common, and was
no longer supported by the manufacturer, the need to make it support
other devices became a priority.  However, before this could be done,
Ossanna died by a severe heart attack in a hospital while recovering
from a previous one.

   So, Brian Kernighan took on the task of rewriting 'troff'.  The newly
rewritten version produced device independent code that was very easy
for postprocessors to read and translate to the appropriate printer
codes.  Also, this new version of 'troff' (called 'ditroff' for "device
independent 'troff'") had several extensions, which included drawing
functions.

   Due to the additional abilities of the new version of 'troff',
several new preprocessors appeared.  The 'pic' preprocessor provides a
wide range of drawing functions.  Likewise the 'ideal' preprocessor did
the same, although via a much different paradigm.  The 'grap'
preprocessor took specifications for graphs, but, unlike other
preprocessors, produced 'pic' code.

   James Clark began work on a GNU implementation of 'ditroff' in
early 1989.  The first version, 'groff' 0.3.1, was released June 1990.
'groff' included:

   * A replacement for 'ditroff' with many extensions.

   * The 'soelim', 'pic', 'tbl', and 'eqn' preprocessors.

   * Postprocessors for character devices, POSTSCRIPT, TeX DVI, and
     X Windows.  GNU 'troff' also eliminated the need for a separate
     'nroff' program with a postprocessor that would produce ASCII
     output.

   * A version of the 'me' macros and an implementation of the 'man'
     macros.

   Also, a front-end was included that could construct the, sometimes
painfully long, pipelines required for all the post- and preprocessors.

   Development of GNU 'troff' progressed rapidly, and saw the additions
of a replacement for 'refer', an implementation of the 'ms' and 'mm'
macros, and a program to deduce how to format a document ('grog').

   It was declared a stable (i.e. non-beta) package with the release of
version 1.04 around November 1991.

   Beginning in 1999, 'groff' has new maintainers (the package was an
orphan for a few years).  As a result, new features and programs like
'grn', a preprocessor for gremlin images, and an output device to
produce HTML and XHTML have been added.


File: groff.info,  Node: History-Footnotes,  Up: History

   (1) Jerome H. Saltzer, a grad student then, later a Professor of
Electrical Engineering, now retired.  Saltzer's PhD thesis was the first
application for 'RUNOFF' and is available from the MIT Libraries.


File: groff.info,  Node: groff Capabilities,  Next: Macro Package Intro,  Prev: History,  Up: Introduction

1.3 'groff' Capabilities
========================

So what exactly is 'groff' capable of doing?  'groff' provides a wide
range of low-level text formatting operations.  Using these, it is
possible to perform a wide range of formatting tasks, such as footnotes,
table of contents, multiple columns, etc.  Here's a list of the most
important operations supported by 'groff':

   * text filling, adjusting, and centering

   * hyphenation

   * page control

   * font and glyph size control

   * vertical spacing (e.g. double-spacing)

   * line length and indenting

   * macros, strings, diversions, and traps

   * number registers

   * tabs, leaders, and fields

   * input and output conventions and character translation

   * overstrike, bracket, line drawing, and zero-width functions

   * local horizontal and vertical motions and the width function

   * three-part titles

   * output line numbering

   * conditional acceptance of input

   * environment switching

   * insertions from the standard input

   * input/output file switching

   * output and error messages


File: groff.info,  Node: Macro Package Intro,  Next: Preprocessor Intro,  Prev: groff Capabilities,  Up: Introduction

1.4 Macro Packages
==================

Since 'groff' provides such low-level facilities, it can be quite
difficult to use by itself.  However, 'groff' provides a "macro"
facility to specify how certain routine operations (e.g. starting
paragraphs, printing headers and footers, etc.) should be done.  These
macros can be collected together into a "macro package".  There are a
number of macro packages available; the most common (and the ones
described in this manual) are 'man', 'mdoc', 'me', 'ms', and 'mm'.


File: groff.info,  Node: Preprocessor Intro,  Next: Output device intro,  Prev: Macro Package Intro,  Up: Introduction

1.5 Preprocessors
=================

Although 'groff' provides most functions needed to format a document,
some operations would be unwieldy (e.g. to draw pictures).  Therefore,
programs called "preprocessors" were written that understand their own
language and produce the necessary 'groff' operations.  These
preprocessors are able to differentiate their own input from the rest of
the document via markers.

   To use a preprocessor, Unix pipes are used to feed the output from
the preprocessor into 'groff'.  Any number of preprocessors may be used
on a given document; in this case, the preprocessors are linked together
into one pipeline.  However, with 'groff', the user does not need to
construct the pipe, but only tell 'groff' what preprocessors to use.

   'groff' currently has preprocessors for producing tables ('tbl'),
typesetting equations ('eqn'), drawing pictures ('pic' and 'grn'),
processing bibliographies ('refer'), and drawing chemical structures
('chem').  An associated program that is useful when dealing with
preprocessors is 'soelim'.

   A free implementation of 'grap', a preprocessor for drawing graphs,
can be obtained as an extra package; 'groff' can use 'grap' also.

   Unique to 'groff' is the 'preconv' preprocessor that enables 'groff'
to handle documents in various input encodings.

   There are other preprocessors in existence, but, unfortunately, no
free implementations are available.  Among them is a preprocessor for
drawing mathematical pictures ('ideal').


File: groff.info,  Node: Output device intro,  Next: Credits,  Prev: Preprocessor Intro,  Up: Introduction

1.6 Output Devices
==================

'groff' actually produces device independent code that may be fed into a
postprocessor to produce output for a particular device.  Currently,
'groff' has postprocessors for POSTSCRIPT devices, character terminals,
X Windows (for previewing), TeX DVI format, HP LaserJet 4 and Canon LBP
printers (which use CAPSL), HTML, XHTML, and PDF.


File: groff.info,  Node: Credits,  Prev: Output device intro,  Up: Introduction

1.7 Credits
===========

Large portions of this manual were taken from existing documents, most
notably, the manual pages for the 'groff' package by James Clark, and
Eric Allman's papers on the 'me' macro package.

   The section on the 'man' macro package is partly based on Susan G.
Kleinmann's 'groff_man' manual page written for the Debian GNU/Linux
system.

   Larry Kollar contributed the section on the 'ms' macro package.


File: groff.info,  Node: Invoking groff,  Next: Tutorial for Macro Users,  Prev: Introduction,  Up: Top

2 Invoking 'groff'
******************

This section focuses on how to invoke the 'groff' front end.  This front
end takes care of the details of constructing the pipeline among the
preprocessors, 'gtroff' and the postprocessor.

   It has become a tradition that GNU programs get the prefix 'g' to
distinguish it from its original counterparts provided by the host (see
*note Environment::, for more details).  Thus, for example, 'geqn' is
GNU 'eqn'.  On operating systems like GNU/Linux or the Hurd, which don't
contain proprietary versions of 'troff', and on MS-DOS/MS-Windows, where
'troff' and associated programs are not available at all, this prefix is
omitted since GNU 'troff' is the only used incarnation of 'troff'.
Exception: 'groff' is never replaced by 'roff'.

   In this document, we consequently say 'gtroff' when talking about the
GNU 'troff' program.  All other implementations of 'troff' are called
AT&T 'troff', which is the common origin of all 'troff' derivates (with
more or less compatible changes).  Similarly, we say 'gpic', 'geqn',
etc.

* Menu:

* Groff Options::
* Environment::
* Macro Directories::
* Font Directories::
* Paper Size::
* Invocation Examples::


File: groff.info,  Node: Groff Options,  Next: Environment,  Prev: Invoking groff,  Up: Invoking groff

2.1 Options
===========

'groff' normally runs the 'gtroff' program and a postprocessor
appropriate for the selected device.  The default device is 'ps' (but it
can be changed when 'groff' is configured and built).  It can optionally
preprocess with any of 'gpic', 'geqn', 'gtbl', 'ggrn', 'grap', 'gchem',
'grefer', 'gsoelim', or 'preconv'.

   This section only documents options to the 'groff' front end.  Many
of the arguments to 'groff' are passed on to 'gtroff', therefore those
are also included.  Arguments to pre- or postprocessors can be found in
*note Invoking gpic::, *note Invoking geqn::, *note Invoking gtbl::,
*note Invoking ggrn::, *note Invoking grefer::, *note Invoking gchem::,
*note Invoking gsoelim::, *note Invoking preconv::, *note Invoking
grotty::, *note Invoking grops::, *note Invoking gropdf::, *note
Invoking grohtml::, *note Invoking grodvi::, *note Invoking grolj4::,
*note Invoking grolbp::, and *note Invoking gxditview::.

   The command-line format for 'groff' is:

     groff [ -abceghijklpstvzCEGNRSUVXZ ] [ -dCS ] [ -DARG ]
           [ -fFAM ] [ -FDIR ] [ -IDIR ] [ -KARG ]
           [ -LARG ] [ -mNAME ] [ -MDIR ] [ -nNUM ]
           [ -oLIST ] [ -PARG ] [ -rCN ] [ -TDEV ]
           [ -wNAME ] [ -WNAME ] [ FILES... ]

   The command-line format for 'gtroff' is as follows.

     gtroff [ -abcivzCERU ] [ -dCS ] [ -fFAM ] [ -FDIR ]
            [ -mNAME ] [ -MDIR ] [ -nNUM ] [ -oLIST ]
            [ -rCN ] [ -TNAME ] [ -wNAME ] [ -WNAME ]
            [ FILES... ]

Obviously, many of the options to 'groff' are actually passed on to
'gtroff'.

   Options without an argument can be grouped behind a single '-'.  A
filename of '-' denotes the standard input.  It is possible to have
whitespace between an option and its parameter.

   The 'grog' command can be used to guess the correct 'groff' command
to format a file.

   Here's the description of the command-line options:

'-a'
     Generate an ASCII approximation of the typeset output.  The
     read-only register '.A' is then set to 1.  *Note Built-in
     Registers::.  A typical example is

          groff -a -man -Tdvi troff.man | less

     which shows how lines are broken for the DVI device.  Note that
     this option is rather useless today since graphic output devices
     are available virtually everywhere.

'-b'
     Print a backtrace with each warning or error message.  This
     backtrace should help track down the cause of the error.  The line
     numbers given in the backtrace may not always be correct: 'gtroff'
     can get confused by 'as' or 'am' requests while counting line
     numbers.

'-c'
     Suppress color output.

'-C'
     Enable compatibility mode.  *Note Implementation Differences::, for
     the list of incompatibilities between 'groff' and AT&T 'troff'.

'-dCS'
'-dNAME=S'
     Define C or NAME to be a string S.  C must be a one-letter name;
     NAME can be of arbitrary length.  All string assignments happen
     before loading any macro file (including the start-up file).

'-DARG'
     Set default input encoding used by 'preconv' to ARG.  Implies '-k'.

'-e'
     Preprocess with 'geqn'.

'-E'
     Inhibit all error messages.

'-fFAM'
     Use FAM as the default font family.  *Note Font Families::.

'-FDIR'
     Search 'DIR' for subdirectories 'devNAME' (NAME is the name of the
     device), for the 'DESC' file, and for font files before looking in
     the standard directories (*note Font Directories::).  This option
     is passed to all pre- and postprocessors using the
     'GROFF_FONT_PATH' environment variable.

'-g'
     Preprocess with 'ggrn'.

'-G'
     Preprocess with 'grap'.  Implies '-p'.

'-h'
     Print a help message.

'-i'
     Read the standard input after all the named input files have been
     processed.

'-IDIR'
     This option may be used to specify a directory to search for files.
     It is passed to the following programs:

        * 'gsoelim' (see *note gsoelim:: for more details); it also
          implies 'groff''s '-s' option.

        * 'gtroff'; it is used to search files named in the 'psbb' and
          'so' requests.

        * 'grops'; it is used to search files named in the
          '\X'ps: import' and '\X'ps: file' escapes.

     The current directory is always searched first.  This option may be
     specified more than once; the directories are searched in the order
     specified.  No directory search is performed for files specified
     using an absolute path.

'-j'
     Preprocess with 'gchem'.  Implies '-p'.

'-k'
     Preprocess with 'preconv'.  This is run before any other
     preprocessor.  Please refer to 'preconv''s manual page for its
     behaviour if no '-K' (or '-D') option is specified.

'-KARG'
     Set input encoding used by preconv to ARG.  Implies '-k'.

'-l'
     Send the output to a spooler for printing.  The command used for
     this is specified by the 'print' command in the device description
     file (see *note Font Files::, for more info).  If not present, '-l'
     is ignored.

'-LARG'
     Pass ARG to the spooler.  Each argument should be passed with a
     separate '-L' option.  Note that 'groff' does not prepend a '-' to
     ARG before passing it to the postprocessor.  If the 'print' keyword
     in the device description file is missing, '-L' is ignored.

'-mNAME'
     Read in the file 'NAME.tmac'.  Normally 'groff' searches for this
     in its macro directories.  If it isn't found, it tries 'tmac.NAME'
     (searching in the same directories).

'-MDIR'
     Search directory 'DIR' for macro files before the standard
     directories (*note Macro Directories::).

'-nNUM'
     Number the first page NUM.

'-N'
     Don't allow newlines with 'eqn' delimiters.  This is the same as
     the '-N' option in 'geqn'.

'-oLIST'
     Output only pages in LIST, which is a comma-separated list of page
     ranges; 'N' means print page N, 'M-N' means print every page
     between M and N, '-N' means print every page up to N, 'N-' means
     print every page beginning with N.  'gtroff' exits after printing
     the last page in the list.  All the ranges are inclusive on both
     ends.

     Within 'gtroff', this information can be extracted with the '.P'
     register.  *Note Built-in Registers::.

     If your document restarts page numbering at the beginning of each
     chapter, then 'gtroff' prints the specified page range for each
     chapter.

'-p'
     Preprocess with 'gpic'.

'-PARG'
     Pass ARG to the postprocessor.  Each argument should be passed with
     a separate '-P' option.  Note that 'groff' does not prepend '-' to
     ARG before passing it to the postprocessor.

'-rCN'
'-rNAME=N'
     Set number register C or NAME to the value N.  C must be a
     one-letter name; NAME can be of arbitrary length.  N can be any
     'gtroff' numeric expression.  All register assignments happen
     before loading any macro file (including the start-up file).

'-R'
     Preprocess with 'grefer'.  No mechanism is provided for passing
     arguments to 'grefer' because most 'grefer' options have equivalent
     commands that can be included in the file.  *Note grefer::, for
     more details.

     Note that 'gtroff' also accepts a '-R' option, which is not
     accessible via 'groff'.  This option prevents the loading of the
     'troffrc' and 'troffrc-end' files.

'-s'
     Preprocess with 'gsoelim'.

'-S'
     Safer mode.  Pass the '-S' option to 'gpic' and disable the 'open',
     'opena', 'pso', 'sy', and 'pi' requests.  For security reasons,
     this is enabled by default.

'-t'
     Preprocess with 'gtbl'.

'-TDEV'
     Prepare output for device DEV.  The default device is 'ps', unless
     changed when 'groff' was configured and built.  The following are
     the output devices currently available:

     'ps'
          For POSTSCRIPT printers and previewers.

     'pdf'
          For PDF viewers or printers.

     'dvi'
          For TeX DVI format.

     'X75'
          For a 75dpi X11 previewer.

     'X75-12'
          For a 75dpi X11 previewer with a 12pt base font in the
          document.

     'X100'
          For a 100dpi X11 previewer.

     'X100-12'
          For a 100dpi X11 previewer with a 12pt base font in the
          document.

     'ascii'
          For typewriter-like devices using the (7-bit) ASCII character
          set.

     'latin1'
          For typewriter-like devices that support the Latin-1
          (ISO 8859-1) character set.

     'utf8'
          For typewriter-like devices that use the Unicode (ISO 10646)
          character set with UTF-8 encoding.

     'cp1047'
          For typewriter-like devices that use the EBCDIC encoding IBM
          cp1047.

     'lj4'
          For HP LaserJet4-compatible (or other PCL5-compatible)
          printers.

     'lbp'
          For Canon CAPSL printers (LBP-4 and LBP-8 series laser
          printers).

     'html'
     'xhtml'
          To produce HTML and XHTML output, respectively.  Note that
          this driver consists of two parts, a preprocessor
          ('pre-grohtml') and a postprocessor ('post-grohtml').

     The predefined 'gtroff' string register '.T' contains the current
     output device; the read-only number register '.T' is set to 1 if
     this option is used (which is always true if 'groff' is used to
     call 'gtroff').  *Note Built-in Registers::.

     The postprocessor to be used for a device is specified by the
     'postpro' command in the device description file.  (*Note Font
     Files::, for more info.)  This can be overridden with the '-X'
     option.

'-U'
     Unsafe mode.  This enables the 'open', 'opena', 'pso', 'sy', and
     'pi' requests.

'-wNAME'
     Enable warning NAME.  Available warnings are described in *note
     Debugging::.  Multiple '-w' options are allowed.

'-WNAME'
     Inhibit warning NAME.  Multiple '-W' options are allowed.

'-v'
     Make programs run by 'groff' print out their version number.

'-V'
     Print the pipeline on 'stdout' instead of executing it.  If
     specified more than once, print the pipeline on 'stderr' and
     execute it.

'-X'
     Preview with 'gxditview' instead of using the usual postprocessor.
     This is unlikely to produce good results except with '-Tps'.

     Note that this is not the same as using '-TX75' or '-TX100' to view
     a document with 'gxditview': The former uses the metrics of the
     specified device, whereas the latter uses X-specific fonts and
     metrics.

'-z'
     Suppress output from 'gtroff'.  Only error messages are printed.

'-Z'
     Do not postprocess the output of 'gtroff'.  Normally 'groff'
     automatically runs the appropriate postprocessor.


File: groff.info,  Node: Environment,  Next: Macro Directories,  Prev: Groff Options,  Up: Invoking groff

2.2 Environment
===============

There are also several environment variables (of the operating system,
not within 'gtroff') that can modify the behavior of 'groff'.

'GROFF_BIN_PATH'
     This search path, followed by 'PATH', is used for commands executed
     by 'groff'.

'GROFF_COMMAND_PREFIX'
     If this is set to X, then 'groff' runs 'Xtroff' instead of
     'gtroff'.  This also applies to 'tbl', 'pic', 'eqn', 'grn', 'chem',
     'refer', and 'soelim'.  It does not apply to 'grops', 'grodvi',
     'grotty', 'pre-grohtml', 'post-grohtml', 'preconv', 'grolj4',
     'gropdf', and 'gxditview'.

     The default command prefix is determined during the installation
     process.  If a non-GNU troff system is found, prefix 'g' is used,
     none otherwise.

'GROFF_ENCODING'
     The value of this environment value is passed to the 'preconv'
     preprocessor to select the encoding of input files.  Setting this
     option implies 'groff''s command-line option '-k' (that is, 'groff'
     actually always calls 'preconv').  If set without a value, 'groff'
     calls 'preconv' without arguments.  An explicit '-K' command-line
     option overrides the value of 'GROFF_ENCODING'.  See the manual
     page of 'preconv' for details.

'GROFF_FONT_PATH'
     A colon-separated list of directories in which to search for the
     'dev'NAME directory (before the default directories are tried).
     *Note Font Directories::.

'GROFF_TMAC_PATH'
     A colon-separated list of directories in which to search for macro
     files (before the default directories are tried).  *Note Macro
     Directories::.

'GROFF_TMPDIR'
     The directory in which 'groff' creates temporary files.  If this is
     not set and 'TMPDIR' is set, temporary files are created in that
     directory.  Otherwise temporary files are created in a
     system-dependent default directory (on Unix and GNU/Linux systems,
     this is usually '/tmp').  'grops', 'grefer', 'pre-grohtml', and
     'post-grohtml' can create temporary files in this directory.

'GROFF_TYPESETTER'
     The default output device.

'SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH'
     A timestamp (expressed as seconds since the Unix epoch) to use in
     place of the current time when initializing time-based built-in
     registers such as '\n[seconds]'.

   Note that MS-DOS and MS-Windows ports of 'groff' use semi-colons,
rather than colons, to separate the directories in the lists described
above.


File: groff.info,  Node: Macro Directories,  Next: Font Directories,  Prev: Environment,  Up: Invoking groff

2.3 Macro Directories
=====================

All macro file names must be named 'NAME.tmac' or 'tmac.NAME' to make
the '-mNAME' command-line option work.  The 'mso' request doesn't have
this restriction; any file name can be used, and 'gtroff' won't try to
append or prepend the 'tmac' string.

   Macro files are kept in the "tmac directories", all of which
constitute the "tmac path".  The elements of the search path for macro
files are (in that order):

   * The directories specified with 'gtroff''s or 'groff''s '-M'
     command-line option.

   * The directories given in the 'GROFF_TMAC_PATH' environment
     variable.

   * The current directory (only if in unsafe mode using the '-U'
     command-line switch).

   * The home directory.

   * A platform-dependent directory, a site-specific
     (platform-independent) directory, and the main tmac directory; the
     default locations are

          /usr/local/lib/groff/site-tmac
          /usr/local/share/groff/site-tmac
          /usr/local/share/groff/1.22.3/tmac

     assuming that the version of 'groff' is 1.22.3, and the
     installation prefix was '/usr/local'.  It is possible to fine-tune
     those directories during the installation process.


File: groff.info,  Node: Font Directories,  Next: Paper Size,  Prev: Macro Directories,  Up: Invoking groff

2.4 Font Directories
====================

Basically, there is no restriction how font files for 'groff' are named
and how long font names are; however, to make the font family mechanism
work (*note Font Families::), fonts within a family should start with
the family name, followed by the shape.  For example, the Times family
uses 'T' for the family name and 'R', 'B', 'I', and 'BI' to indicate the
shapes 'roman', 'bold', 'italic', and 'bold italic', respectively.  Thus
the final font names are 'TR', 'TB', 'TI', and 'TBI'.

   All font files are kept in the "font directories", which constitute
the "font path".  The file search functions always append the directory
'dev'NAME, where NAME is the name of the output device.  Assuming, say,
DVI output, and '/foo/bar' as a font directory, the font files for
'grodvi' must be in '/foo/bar/devdvi'.

   The elements of the search path for font files are (in that order):

   * The directories specified with 'gtroff''s or 'groff''s '-F'
     command-line option.  All device drivers and some preprocessors
     also have this option.

   * The directories given in the 'GROFF_FONT_PATH' environment
     variable.

   * A site-specific directory and the main font directory; the default
     locations are

          /usr/local/share/groff/site-font
          /usr/local/share/groff/1.22.3/font

     assuming that the version of 'groff' is 1.22.3, and the
     installation prefix was '/usr/local'.  It is possible to fine-tune
     those directories during the installation process.


File: groff.info,  Node: Paper Size,  Next: Invocation Examples,  Prev: Font Directories,  Up: Invoking groff

2.5 Paper Size
==============

In groff, the page size for 'gtroff' and for output devices are handled
separately.  *Note Page Layout::, for vertical manipulation of the page
size.  *Note Line Layout::, for horizontal changes.

   A default paper size can be set in the device's 'DESC' file.  Most
output devices also have a command-line option '-p' to override the
default paper size and option '-l' to use landscape orientation.  *Note
DESC File Format::, for a description of the 'papersize' keyword, which
takes the same argument as '-p'.

   A convenient shorthand to set a particular paper size for 'gtroff' is
command-line option '-dpaper=SIZE'.  This defines string 'paper', which
is processed in file 'papersize.tmac' (loaded in the start-up file
'troffrc' by default).  Possible values for SIZE are the same as the
predefined values for the 'papersize' keyword (but only in lowercase)
except 'a7'-'d7'.  An appended 'l' (ell) character denotes landscape
orientation.

   For example, use the following for PS output on A4 paper in landscape
orientation:

     groff -Tps -dpaper=a4l -P-pa4 -P-l -ms foo.ms > foo.ps

   Note that it is up to the particular macro package to respect default
page dimensions set in this way (most do).


File: groff.info,  Node: Invocation Examples,  Prev: Paper Size,  Up: Invoking groff

2.6 Invocation Examples
=======================

This section lists several common uses of 'groff' and the corresponding
command lines.

     groff file

This command processes 'file' without a macro package or a preprocessor.
The output device is the default, 'ps', and the output is sent to
'stdout'.

     groff -t -mandoc -Tascii file | less

This is basically what a call to the 'man' program does.  'gtroff'
processes the manual page 'file' with the 'mandoc' macro file (which in
turn either calls the 'man' or the 'mdoc' macro package), using the
'tbl' preprocessor and the ASCII output device.  Finally, the 'less'
pager displays the result.

     groff -X -m me file

Preview 'file' with 'gxditview', using the 'me' macro package.  Since no
'-T' option is specified, use the default device ('ps').  Note that you
can either say '-m me' or '-me'; the latter is an anachronism from the
early days of Unix.(1)  (*note Invocation Examples-Footnote-1::)

     groff -man -rD1 -z file

Check 'file' with the 'man' macro package, forcing double-sided printing
- don't produce any output.

* Menu:

* grog::


File: groff.info,  Node: Invocation Examples-Footnotes,  Up: Invocation Examples

   (1) The same is true for the other main macro packages that come with
'groff': 'man', 'mdoc', 'ms', 'mm', and 'mandoc'.  This won't work in
general; for example, to load 'trace.tmac', either '-mtrace' or
'-m trace' must be used.


File: groff.info,  Node: grog,  Prev: Invocation Examples,  Up: Invocation Examples

2.6.1 'grog'
------------

'grog' reads files, guesses which of the 'groff' preprocessors and/or
macro packages are required for formatting them, and prints the 'groff'
command including those options on the standard output.  It generates
one or more of the options '-e', '-man', '-me', '-mm', '-mom', '-ms',
'-mdoc', '-mdoc-old', '-p', '-R', '-g', '-G', '-s', and '-t'.

   A special file name '-' refers to the standard input.  Specifying no
files also means to read the standard input.  Any specified options are
included in the printed command.  No space is allowed between options
and their arguments.  The only options recognized are '-C' (which is
also passed on) to enable compatibility mode, and '-v' to print the
version number and exit.

   For example,

     grog -Tdvi paper.ms

guesses the appropriate command to print 'paper.ms' and then prints it
to the command line after adding the '-Tdvi' option.  For direct
execution, enclose the call to 'grog' in backquotes at the Unix shell
prompt:

     `grog -Tdvi paper.ms` > paper.dvi

As seen in the example, it is still necessary to redirect the output to
something meaningful (i.e. either a file or a pager program like
'less').


File: groff.info,  Node: Tutorial for Macro Users,  Next: Macro Packages,  Prev: Invoking groff,  Up: Top

3 Tutorial for Macro Users
**************************

Most users tend to use a macro package to format their papers.  This
means that the whole breadth of 'groff' is not necessary for most
people.  This chapter covers the material needed to efficiently use a
macro package.

* Menu:

* Basics::
* Common Features::


File: groff.info,  Node: Basics,  Next: Common Features,  Prev: Tutorial for Macro Users,  Up: Tutorial for Macro Users

3.1 Basics
==========

This section covers some of the basic concepts necessary to understand
how to use a macro package.(1)  (*note Basics-Footnote-1::) References
are made throughout to more detailed information, if desired.

   'gtroff' reads an input file prepared by the user and outputs a
formatted document suitable for publication or framing.  The input
consists of text, or words to be printed, and embedded commands
("requests" and "escapes"), which tell 'gtroff' how to format the
output.  For more detail on this, see *note Embedded Commands::.

   The word "argument" is used in this chapter to mean a word or number
that appears on the same line as a request, and which modifies the
meaning of that request.  For example, the request

     .sp

spaces one line, but

     .sp 4

spaces four lines.  The number 4 is an argument to the 'sp' request,
which says to space four lines instead of one.  Arguments are separated
from the request and from each other by spaces (_no_ tabs).  More
details on this can be found in *note Request and Macro Arguments::.

   The primary function of 'gtroff' is to collect words from input
lines, fill output lines with those words, justify the right-hand margin
by inserting extra spaces in the line, and output the result.  For
example, the input:

     Now is the time
     for all good men
     to come to the aid
     of their party.
     Four score and seven
     years ago, etc.

is read, packed onto output lines, and justified to produce:

     Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their party.
     Four score and seven years ago, etc.

   Sometimes a new output line should be started even though the current
line is not yet full; for example, at the end of a paragraph.  To do
this it is possible to cause a "break", which starts a new output line.
Some requests cause a break automatically, as normally do blank input
lines and input lines beginning with a space.

   Not all input lines are text to be formatted.  Some input lines are
requests that describe how to format the text.  Requests always have a
period ('.') or an apostrophe (''') as the first character of the input
line.

   The text formatter also does more complex things, such as
automatically numbering pages, skipping over page boundaries, putting
footnotes in the correct place, and so forth.

   Here are a few hints for preparing text for input to 'gtroff'.

   * First, keep the input lines short.  Short input lines are easier to
     edit, and 'gtroff' packs words onto longer lines anyhow.

   * In keeping with this, it is helpful to begin a new line after every
     comma or phrase, since common corrections are to add or delete
     sentences or phrases.

   * End each sentence with two spaces - or better, start each sentence
     on a new line.  'gtroff' recognizes characters that usually end a
     sentence, and inserts sentence space accordingly.

   * Do not hyphenate words at the end of lines - 'gtroff' is smart
     enough to hyphenate words as needed, but is not smart enough to
     take hyphens out and join a word back together.  Also, words such
     as "mother-in-law" should not be broken over a line, since then a
     space can occur where not wanted, such as "mother- in-law".

   'gtroff' double-spaces output text automatically if you use the
request '.ls 2'.  Reactivate single-spaced mode by typing '.ls 1'.(2)
(*note Basics-Footnote-2::)

   A number of requests allow to change the way the output looks,
sometimes called the "layout" of the output page.  Most of these
requests adjust the placing of "whitespace" (blank lines or spaces).

   The 'bp' request starts a new page, causing a line break.

   The request '.sp N' leaves N lines of blank space.  N can be omitted
(meaning skip a single line) or can be of the form Ni (for N inches) or
Nc (for N centimeters).  For example, the input:

     .sp 1.5i
     My thoughts on the subject
     .sp

leaves one and a half inches of space, followed by the line "My thoughts
on the subject", followed by a single blank line (more measurement units
are available, see *note Measurements::).

   Text lines can be centered by using the 'ce' request.  The line after
'ce' is centered (horizontally) on the page.  To center more than one
line, use '.ce N' (where N is the number of lines to center), followed
by the N lines.  To center many lines without counting them, type:

     .ce 1000
     lines to center
     .ce 0

The '.ce 0' request tells 'groff' to center zero more lines, in other
words, stop centering.

   All of these requests cause a break; that is, they always start a new
line.  To start a new line without performing any other action, use
'br'.


File: groff.info,  Node: Basics-Footnotes,  Up: Basics

   (1) This section is derived from 'Writing Papers with nroff using
-me' by Eric P. Allman.

   (2) If you need finer granularity of the vertical space, use the
'pvs' request (*note Changing Type Sizes::).


File: groff.info,  Node: Common Features,  Prev: Basics,  Up: Tutorial for Macro Users

3.2 Common Features
===================

'gtroff' provides very low-level operations for formatting a document.
There are many common routine operations that are done in all documents.
These common operations are written into "macros" and collected into a
"macro package".

   All macro packages provide certain common capabilities that fall into
the following categories.

* Menu:

* Paragraphs::
* Sections and Chapters::
* Headers and Footers::
* Page Layout Adjustment::
* Displays::
* Footnotes and Annotations::
* Table of Contents::
* Indices::
* Paper Formats::
* Multiple Columns::
* Font and Size Changes::
* Predefined Strings::
* Preprocessor Support::
* Configuration and Customization::


File: groff.info,  Node: Paragraphs,  Next: Sections and Chapters,  Prev: Common Features,  Up: Common Features

3.2.1 Paragraphs
----------------

One of the most common and most used capability is starting a paragraph.
There are a number of different types of paragraphs, any of which can be
initiated with macros supplied by the macro package.  Normally,
paragraphs start with a blank line and the first line indented, like the
text in this manual.  There are also block style paragraphs, which omit
the indentation:

     Some   men  look   at  constitutions   with  sanctimonious
     reverence, and deem them like the ark of the covenant, too
     sacred to be touched.

And there are also indented paragraphs, which begin with a tag or label
at the margin and the remaining text indented.

     one   This is  the first paragraph.  Notice  how the first
           line of  the resulting  paragraph lines up  with the
           other lines in the paragraph.

     longlabel
           This  paragraph   had  a  long   label.   The  first
           character of text on the first line does not line up
           with  the  text  on  second  and  subsequent  lines,
           although they line up with each other.

   A variation of this is a bulleted list.

     .     Bulleted lists start with a bullet.   It is possible
           to use other glyphs instead of the bullet.  In nroff
           mode using the ASCII character set for output, a dot
           is used instead of a real bullet.


File: groff.info,  Node: Sections and Chapters,  Next: Headers and Footers,  Prev: Paragraphs,  Up: Common Features

3.2.2 Sections and Chapters
---------------------------

Most macro packages supply some form of section headers.  The simplest
kind is simply the heading on a line by itself in bold type.  Others
supply automatically numbered section heading or different heading
styles at different levels.  Some, more sophisticated, macro packages
supply macros for starting chapters and appendices.


File: groff.info,  Node: Headers and Footers,  Next: Page Layout Adjustment,  Prev: Sections and Chapters,  Up: Common Features

3.2.3 Headers and Footers
-------------------------

Every macro package gives some way to manipulate the "headers" and
"footers" (also called "titles") on each page.  This is text put at the
top and bottom of each page, respectively, which contain data like the
current page number, the current chapter title, and so on.  Its
appearance is not affected by the running text.  Some packages allow for
different ones on the even and odd pages (for material printed in a book
form).

   The titles are called "three-part titles", that is, there is a
left-justified part, a centered part, and a right-justified part.  An
automatically generated page number may be put in any of these fields
with the '%' character (see *note Page Layout::, for more details).


File: groff.info,  Node: Page Layout Adjustment,  Next: Displays,  Prev: Headers and Footers,  Up: Common Features

3.2.4 Page Layout
-----------------

Most macro packages let the user specify top and bottom margins and
other details about the appearance of the printed pages.


File: groff.info,  Node: Displays,  Next: Footnotes and Annotations,  Prev: Page Layout Adjustment,  Up: Common Features

3.2.5 Displays
--------------

"Displays" are sections of text to be set off from the body of the
paper.  Major quotes, tables, and figures are types of displays, as are
all the examples used in this document.

   "Major quotes" are quotes that are several lines long, and hence are
set in from the rest of the text without quote marks around them.

   A "list" is an indented, single-spaced, unfilled display.  Lists
should be used when the material to be printed should not be filled and
justified like normal text, such as columns of figures or the examples
used in this paper.

   A "keep" is a display of lines that are kept on a single page if
possible.  An example for a keep might be a diagram.  Keeps differ from
lists in that lists may be broken over a page boundary whereas keeps are
not.

   "Floating keeps" move relative to the text.  Hence, they are good for
things that are referred to by name, such as "See figure 3".  A floating
keep appears at the bottom of the current page if it fits; otherwise, it
appears at the top of the next page.  Meanwhile, the surrounding text
'flows' around the keep, thus leaving no blank areas.


File: groff.info,  Node: Footnotes and Annotations,  Next: Table of Contents,  Prev: Displays,  Up: Common Features

3.2.6 Footnotes and Annotations
-------------------------------

There are a number of requests to save text for later printing.

   "Footnotes" are printed at the bottom of the current page.

   "Delayed text" is very similar to a footnote except that it is
printed when called for explicitly.  This allows a list of references to
appear (for example) at the end of each chapter, as is the convention in
some disciplines.

   Most macro packages that supply this functionality also supply a
means of automatically numbering either type of annotation.


File: groff.info,  Node: Table of Contents,  Next: Indices,  Prev: Footnotes and Annotations,  Up: Common Features

3.2.7 Table of Contents
-----------------------

"Tables of contents" are a type of delayed text having a tag (usually
the page number) attached to each entry after a row of dots.  The table
accumulates throughout the paper until printed, usually after the paper
has ended.  Many macro packages provide the ability to have several
tables of contents (e.g. a standard table of contents, a list of tables,
etc).


File: groff.info,  Node: Indices,  Next: Paper Formats,  Prev: Table of Contents,  Up: Common Features

3.2.8 Indices
-------------

While some macro packages use the term "index", none actually provide
that functionality.  The facilities they call indices are actually more
appropriate for tables of contents.

   To produce a real index in a document, external tools like the
'makeindex' program are necessary.


File: groff.info,  Node: Paper Formats,  Next: Multiple Columns,  Prev: Indices,  Up: Common Features

3.2.9 Paper Formats
-------------------

Some macro packages provide stock formats for various kinds of
documents.  Many of them provide a common format for the title and
opening pages of a technical paper.  The 'mm' macros in particular
provide formats for letters and memoranda.


File: groff.info,  Node: Multiple Columns,  Next: Font and Size Changes,  Prev: Paper Formats,  Up: Common Features

3.2.10 Multiple Columns
-----------------------

Some macro packages (but not 'man') provide the ability to have two or
more columns on a page.


File: groff.info,  Node: Font and Size Changes,  Next: Predefined Strings,  Prev: Multiple Columns,  Up: Common Features

3.2.11 Font and Size Changes
----------------------------

The built-in font and size functions are not always intuitive, so all
macro packages provide macros to make these operations simpler.


File: groff.info,  Node: Predefined Strings,  Next: Preprocessor Support,  Prev: Font and Size Changes,  Up: Common Features

3.2.12 Predefined Strings
-------------------------

Most macro packages provide various predefined strings for a variety of
uses; examples are sub- and superscripts, printable dates, quotes and
various special characters.


File: groff.info,  Node: Preprocessor Support,  Next: Configuration and Customization,  Prev: Predefined Strings,  Up: Common Features

3.2.13 Preprocessor Support
---------------------------

All macro packages provide support for various preprocessors and may
extend their functionality.

   For example, all macro packages mark tables (which are processed with
'gtbl') by placing them between 'TS' and 'TE' macros.  The 'ms' macro
package has an option, '.TS H', that prints a caption at the top of a
new page (when the table is too long to fit on a single page).


File: groff.info,  Node: Configuration and Customization,  Prev: Preprocessor Support,  Up: Common Features

3.2.14 Configuration and Customization
--------------------------------------

Some macro packages provide means of customizing many of the details of
how the package behaves.  This ranges from setting the default type size
to changing the appearance of section headers.


File: groff.info,  Node: Macro Packages,  Next: gtroff Reference,  Prev: Tutorial for Macro Users,  Up: Top

4 Macro Packages
****************

This chapter documents the main macro packages that come with 'groff'.

   Different main macro packages can't be used at the same time; for
example

     groff -m man foo.man -m ms bar.doc

doesn't work.  Note that option arguments are processed before
non-option arguments; the above (failing) sample is thus reordered to

     groff -m man -m ms foo.man bar.doc

* Menu:

* man::
* mdoc::
* ms::
* me::
* mm::
* mom::


File: groff.info,  Node: man,  Next: mdoc,  Prev: Macro Packages,  Up: Macro Packages

4.1 'man'
=========

This is the most popular and probably the most important macro package
of 'groff'.  It is easy to use, and a vast majority of manual pages are
based on it.

* Menu:

* Man options::
* Man usage::
* Man font macros::
* Miscellaneous man macros::
* Predefined man strings::
* Preprocessors in man pages::
* Optional man extensions::


File: groff.info,  Node: Man options,  Next: Man usage,  Prev: man,  Up: man

4.1.1 Options
-------------

The command-line format for using the 'man' macros with 'groff' is:

     groff -m man [ -rLL=LENGTH ] [ -rLT=LENGTH ] [ -rFT=DIST ]
           [ -rcR=1 ] [ -rC1 ] [ -rD1 ] [-rHY=FLAGS ]
           [ -rPNNN ] [ -rSXX ] [ -rXNNN ]
           [ -rIN=LENGTH ] [ -rSN=LENGTH ] [ FILES... ]

It is possible to use '-man' instead of '-m man'.

'-rcR=1'
     This option (the default if a TTY output device is used) creates a
     single, very long page instead of multiple pages.  Use '-rcR=0' to
     disable it.

'-rC1'
     If more than one manual page is given on the command line, number
     the pages continuously, rather than starting each at 1.

'-rD1'
     Double-sided printing.  Footers for even and odd pages are
     formatted differently.

'-rFT=DIST'
     Set the position of the footer text to DIST.  If positive, the
     distance is measured relative to the top of the page, otherwise it
     is relative to the bottom.  The default is -0.5i.

'-rHY=FLAGS'
     Set hyphenation flags.  Possible values are 1 to hyphenate without
     restrictions, 2 to not hyphenate the last word on a page, 4 to not
     hyphenate the last two characters of a word, and 8 to not hyphenate
     the first two characters of a word.  These values are additive; the
     default is 8.

'-rIN=LENGTH'
     Set the body text indentation to LENGTH.  If not specified, the
     indentation defaults to 7n (7 characters) in nroff mode and 7.2n
     otherwise.  For nroff, this value should always be an integer
     multiple of unit 'n' to get consistent indentation.

'-rLL=LENGTH'
     Set line length to LENGTH.  If not specified, the line length is
     set to respect any value set by a prior 'll' request (which _must_
     be in effect when the 'TH' macro is invoked), if this differs from
     the built-in default for the formatter; otherwise it defaults to
     78n in nroff mode (this is 78 characters per line) and 6.5i in
     troff mode.(1)  (*note Man options-Footnote-1::)

'-rLT=LENGTH'
     Set title length to LENGTH.  If not specified, the title length
     defaults to the line length.

'-rPNNN'
     Page numbering starts with NNN rather than with 1.

'-rSXX'
     Use XX (which can be 10, 11, or 12pt) as the base document font
     size instead of the default value of 10pt.

'-rSN=LENGTH'
     Set the indentation for sub-subheadings to LENGTH.  If not
     specified, the indentation defaults to 3n.

'-rXNNN'
     After page NNN, number pages as NNNa, NNNb, NNNc, etc.  For
     example, the option '-rX2' produces the following page numbers: 1,
     2, 2a, 2b, 2c, etc.


File: groff.info,  Node: Man options-Footnotes,  Up: Man options

   (1) Note that the use of a '.ll LENGTH' request to initialize the
line length, prior to use of the 'TH' macro, is supported for backward
compatibility with some versions of the 'man' program.  _Always_ use the
'-rLL=LENGTH' option, or an equivalent '.nr LL LENGTH' request, in
preference to such a '.ll LENGTH' request.  In particular, note that in
nroff mode, the request '.ll 65n', (with any LENGTH expression that
evaluates equal to 65n, i.e., the formatter's default line length in
nroff mode), does _not_ set the line length to 65n (it is adjusted to
the 'man' macro package's default setting of 78n), whereas the use of
the '-rLL=65n' option, or the '.nr LL 65n' request _does_ establish a
line length of 65n.


File: groff.info,  Node: Man usage,  Next: Man font macros,  Prev: Man options,  Up: man

4.1.2 Usage
-----------

This section describes the available macros for manual pages.  For
further customization, put additional macros and requests into the file
'man.local', which is loaded immediately after the 'man' package.

 -- Macro: .TH title section [extra1 [extra2 [extra3]]]
     Set the title of the man page to TITLE and the section to SECTION,
     which must have a value between 1 and 8.  The value of SECTION may
     also have a string appended, e.g. '.pm', to indicate a specific
     subsection of the man pages.

     Both TITLE and SECTION are positioned at the left and right in the
     header line (with SECTION in parentheses immediately appended to
     TITLE.  EXTRA1 is positioned in the middle of the footer line.
     EXTRA2 is positioned at the left in the footer line (or at the left
     on even pages and at the right on odd pages if double-sided
     printing is active).  EXTRA3 is centered in the header line.

     For HTML and XHTML output, headers and footers are completely
     suppressed.

     Additionally, this macro starts a new page; the new line number
     is 1 again (except if the '-rC1' option is given on the command
     line) - this feature is intended only for formatting multiple man
     pages; a single man page should contain exactly one 'TH' macro at
     the beginning of the file.

 -- Macro: .SH [heading]
     Set up an unnumbered section heading sticking out to the left.
     Prints out all the text following 'SH' up to the end of the line
     (or the text in the next line if there is no argument to 'SH') in
     bold face (or the font specified by the string 'HF'), one size
     larger than the base document size.  Additionally, the left margin
     and the indentation for the following text is reset to its default
     value.

 -- Macro: .SS [heading]
     Set up an unnumbered (sub)section heading.  Prints out all the text
     following 'SS' up to the end of the line (or the text in the next
     line if there is no argument to 'SS') in bold face (or the font
     specified by the string 'HF'), at the same size as the base
     document size.  Additionally, the left margin and the indentation
     for the following text is reset to its default value.

 -- Macro: .TP [nnn]
     Set up an indented paragraph with label.  The indentation is set to
     NNN if that argument is supplied (the default unit is 'n' if
     omitted), otherwise it is set to the previous indentation value
     specified with 'TP', 'IP', or 'HP' (or to the default value if none
     of them have been used yet).

     The first line of text following this macro is interpreted as a
     string to be printed flush-left, as it is appropriate for a label.
     It is not interpreted as part of a paragraph, so there is no
     attempt to fill the first line with text from the following input
     lines.  Nevertheless, if the label is not as wide as the
     indentation the paragraph starts at the same line (but indented),
     continuing on the following lines.  If the label is wider than the
     indentation the descriptive part of the paragraph begins on the
     line following the label, entirely indented.  Note that neither
     font shape nor font size of the label is set to a default value; on
     the other hand, the rest of the text has default font settings.

 -- Macro: .LP
 -- Macro: .PP
 -- Macro: .P
     These macros are mutual aliases.  Any of them causes a line break
     at the current position, followed by a vertical space downwards by
     the amount specified by the 'PD' macro.  The font size and shape
     are reset to the default value (10pt roman if no '-rS' option is
     given on the command line).  Finally, the current left margin and
     the indentation is restored.

 -- Macro: .IP [designator [nnn]]
     Set up an indented paragraph, using DESIGNATOR as a tag to mark its
     beginning.  The indentation is set to NNN if that argument is
     supplied (default unit is 'n'), otherwise it is set to the previous
     indentation value specified with 'TP', 'IP', or 'HP' (or the
     default value if none of them have been used yet).  Font size and
     face of the paragraph (but not the designator) are reset to their
     default values.

     To start an indented paragraph with a particular indentation but
     without a designator, use '""' (two double quotes) as the first
     argument of 'IP'.

     For example, to start a paragraph with bullets as the designator
     and 4 en indentation, write

          .IP \(bu 4

 -- Macro: .HP [nnn]
     Set up a paragraph with hanging left indentation.  The indentation
     is set to NNN if that argument is supplied (default unit is 'n'),
     otherwise it is set to the previous indentation value specified
     with 'TP', 'IP', or 'HP' (or the default value if non of them have
     been used yet).  Font size and face are reset to their default
     values.

 -- Macro: .RS [nnn]
     Move the left margin to the right by the value NNN if specified
     (default unit is 'n'); otherwise it is set to the previous
     indentation value specified with 'TP', 'IP', or 'HP' (or to the
     default value if none of them have been used yet).  The indentation
     value is then set to the default.

     Calls to the 'RS' macro can be nested.

 -- Macro: .RE [nnn]
     Move the left margin back to level NNN, restoring the previous left
     margin.  If no argument is given, it moves one level back.  The
     first level (i.e., no call to 'RS' yet) has number 1, and each call
     to 'RS' increases the level by 1.

   To summarize, the following macros cause a line break with the
insertion of vertical space (which amount can be changed with the 'PD'
macro): 'SH', 'SS', 'TP', 'LP' ('PP', 'P'), 'IP', and 'HP'.

   The macros 'RS' and 'RE' also cause a break but do not insert
vertical space.

   Finally, the macros 'SH', 'SS', 'LP' ('PP', 'P'), and 'RS' reset the
indentation to its default value.


File: groff.info,  Node: Man font macros,  Next: Miscellaneous man macros,  Prev: Man usage,  Up: man

4.1.3 Macros to set fonts
-------------------------

The standard font is roman; the default text size is 10 points.  If
command-line option '-rS=N' is given, use N points as the default text
size.

 -- Macro: .SM [text]
     Set the text on the same line or the text on the next line in a
     font that is one point size smaller than the default font.

 -- Macro: .SB [text]
     Set the text on the same line or the text on the next line in bold
     face font, one point size smaller than the default font.

 -- Macro: .BI text
     Set its arguments alternately in bold face and italic, without a
     space between the arguments.  Thus,

          .BI this "word and" that

     produces "thisword andthat" with "this" and "that" in bold face,
     and "word and" in italics.

 -- Macro: .IB text
     Set its arguments alternately in italic and bold face, without a
     space between the arguments.

 -- Macro: .RI text
     Set its arguments alternately in roman and italic, without a space
     between the arguments.

 -- Macro: .IR text
     Set its arguments alternately in italic and roman, without a space
     between the arguments.

 -- Macro: .BR text
     Set its arguments alternately in bold face and roman, without a
     space between the arguments.

 -- Macro: .RB text
     Set its arguments alternately in roman and bold face, without a
     space between the arguments.

 -- Macro: .B [text]
     Set TEXT in bold face.  If no text is present on the line where the
     macro is called, then the text of the next line appears in bold
     face.

 -- Macro: .I [text]
     Set TEXT in italic.  If no text is present on the line where the
     macro is called, then the text of the next line appears in italic.


File: groff.info,  Node: Miscellaneous man macros,  Next: Predefined man strings,  Prev: Man font macros,  Up: man

4.1.4 Miscellaneous macros
--------------------------

The default indentation is 7.2n in troff mode and 7n in nroff mode
except for 'grohtml', which ignores indentation.

 -- Macro: .DT
     Set tabs every 0.5 inches.  Since this macro is always executed
     during a call to the 'TH' macro, it makes sense to call it only if
     the tab positions have been changed.

 -- Macro: .PD [nnn]
     Adjust the empty space before a new paragraph (or section).  The
     optional argument gives the amount of space (default unit is 'v');
     without parameter, the value is reset to its default value (1 line
     in nroff mode, 0.4v otherwise).

     This affects the macros 'SH', 'SS', 'TP', 'LP' (as well as 'PP' and
     'P'), 'IP', and 'HP'.

   The following two macros are included for BSD compatibility.

 -- Macro: .AT [system [release]]
     Alter the footer for use with AT&T manpages.  This command exists
     only for compatibility; don't use it.  The first argument SYSTEM
     can be:

     '3'
          7th Edition (the default)

     '4'
          System III

     '5'
          System V

     An optional second argument RELEASE to 'AT' specifies the release
     number (such as "System V Release 3").

 -- Macro: .UC [version]
     Alters the footer for use with BSD manpages.  This command exists
     only for compatibility; don't use it.  The argument can be:

     '3'
          3rd Berkeley Distribution (the default)

     '4'
          4th Berkeley Distribution

     '5'
          4.2 Berkeley Distribution

     '6'
          4.3 Berkeley Distribution

     '7'
          4.4 Berkeley Distribution


File: groff.info,  Node: Predefined man strings,  Next: Preprocessors in man pages,  Prev: Miscellaneous man macros,  Up: man

4.1.5 Predefined strings
------------------------

The following strings are defined:

 -- String: \*[S]
     Switch back to the default font size.

 -- String: \*[HF]
     The typeface used for headings.  The default is 'B'.

 -- String: \*[R]
     The 'registered' sign.

 -- String: \*[Tm]
     The 'trademark' sign.

 -- String: \*[lq]
 -- String: \*[rq]
     Left and right quote.  This is equal to '\(lq' and '\(rq',
     respectively.


File: groff.info,  Node: Preprocessors in man pages,  Next: Optional man extensions,  Prev: Predefined man strings,  Up: man

4.1.6 Preprocessors in 'man' pages
----------------------------------

If a preprocessor like 'gtbl' or 'geqn' is needed, it has become common
usage to make the first line of the man page look like this:

     '\" WORD

Note the single space character after the double quote.  WORD consists
of letters for the needed preprocessors: 'e' for 'geqn', 'r' for
'grefer', 't' for 'gtbl'.  Modern implementations of the 'man' program
read this first line and automatically call the right preprocessor(s).


File: groff.info,  Node: Optional man extensions,  Prev: Preprocessors in man pages,  Up: man

4.1.7 Optional 'man' extensions
-------------------------------

Use the file 'man.local' for local extensions to the 'man' macros or for
style changes.

Custom headers and footers
..........................

In groff versions 1.18.2 and later, you can specify custom headers and
footers by redefining the following macros in 'man.local'.

 -- Macro: .PT
     Control the content of the headers.  Normally, the header prints
     the command name and section number on either side, and the
     optional fifth argument to 'TH' in the center.

 -- Macro: .BT
     Control the content of the footers.  Normally, the footer prints
     the page number and the third and fourth arguments to 'TH'.

     Use the 'FT' number register to specify the footer position.  The
     default is -0.5i.

Ultrix-specific man macros
..........................

The 'groff' source distribution includes a file named 'man.ultrix',
containing macros compatible with the Ultrix variant of 'man'.  Copy
this file into 'man.local' (or use the 'mso' request to load it) to
enable the following macros.

 -- Macro: .CT key
     Print '<CTRL/KEY>'.

 -- Macro: .CW
     Print subsequent text using the constant width (Courier) typeface.

 -- Macro: .Ds
     Begin a non-filled display.

 -- Macro: .De
     End a non-filled display started with 'Ds'.

 -- Macro: .EX [indent]
     Begin a non-filled display using the constant width (Courier)
     typeface.  Use the optional INDENT argument to indent the display.

 -- Macro: .EE
     End a non-filled display started with 'EX'.

 -- Macro: .G [text]
     Set TEXT in Helvetica.  If no text is present on the line where the
     macro is called, then the text of the next line appears in
     Helvetica.

 -- Macro: .GL [text]
     Set TEXT in Helvetica Oblique.  If no text is present on the line
     where the macro is called, then the text of the next line appears
     in Helvetica Oblique.

 -- Macro: .HB [text]
     Set TEXT in Helvetica Bold.  If no text is present on the line
     where the macro is called, then all text up to the next 'HB'
     appears in Helvetica Bold.

 -- Macro: .TB [text]
     Identical to 'HB'.

 -- Macro: .MS title sect [punct]
     Set a manpage reference in Ultrix format.  The TITLE is in Courier
     instead of italic.  Optional punctuation follows the section number
     without an intervening space.

 -- Macro: .NT [C] [title]
     Begin a note.  Print the optional title, or the word "Note",
     centered on the page.  Text following the macro makes up the body
     of the note, and is indented on both sides.  If the first argument
     is 'C', the body of the note is printed centered (the second
     argument replaces the word "Note" if specified).

 -- Macro: .NE
     End a note begun with 'NT'.

 -- Macro: .PN path [punct]
     Set the path name in constant width (Courier), followed by optional
     punctuation.

 -- Macro: .Pn [punct] path [punct]
     If called with two arguments, identical to 'PN'.  If called with
     three arguments, set the second argument in constant width
     (Courier), bracketed by the first and third arguments in the
     current font.

 -- Macro: .R
     Switch to roman font and turn off any underlining in effect.

 -- Macro: .RN
     Print the string '<RETURN>'.

 -- Macro: .VS [4]
     Start printing a change bar in the margin if the number '4' is
     specified.  Otherwise, this macro does nothing.

 -- Macro: .VE
     End printing the change bar begun by 'VS'.

Simple example
..............

The following example 'man.local' file alters the 'SH' macro to add some
extra vertical space before printing the heading.  Headings are printed
in Helvetica Bold.

     .\" Make the heading fonts Helvetica
     .ds HF HB
     .
     .\" Put more whitespace in front of headings.
     .rn SH SH-orig
     .de SH
     .  if t .sp (u;\\n[PD]*2)
     .  SH-orig \\$*
     ..


File: groff.info,  Node: mdoc,  Next: ms,  Prev: man,  Up: Macro Packages

4.2 'mdoc'
==========

See the 'groff_mdoc(7)' man page (type 'man groff_mdoc' at the command
line).


File: groff.info,  Node: ms,  Next: me,  Prev: mdoc,  Up: Macro Packages

4.3 'ms'
========

The '-ms' macros are suitable for reports, letters, books, user manuals,
and so forth.  The package provides macros for cover pages, section
headings, paragraphs, lists, footnotes, pagination, and a table of
contents.

* Menu:

* ms Intro::
* General ms Structure::
* ms Document Control Registers::
* ms Cover Page Macros::
* ms Body Text::
* ms Page Layout::
* Differences from AT&T ms::
* Naming Conventions::


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Intro,  Next: General ms Structure,  Prev: ms,  Up: ms

4.3.1 Introduction to 'ms'
--------------------------

The original '-ms' macros were included with AT&T 'troff' as well as the
'man' macros.  While the 'man' package is intended for brief documents
that can be read on-line as well as printed, the 'ms' macros are
suitable for longer documents that are meant to be printed rather than
read on-line.

   The 'ms' macro package included with 'groff' is a complete, bottom-up
re-implementation.  Several macros (specific to AT&T or Berkeley) are
not included, while several new commands are.  *Note Differences from
AT&T ms::, for more information.


File: groff.info,  Node: General ms Structure,  Next: ms Document Control Registers,  Prev: ms Intro,  Up: ms

4.3.2 General structure of an 'ms' document
-------------------------------------------

The 'ms' macro package expects a certain amount of structure, but not as
much as packages such as 'man' or 'mdoc'.

   The simplest documents can begin with a paragraph macro (such as 'LP'
or 'PP'), and consist of text separated by paragraph macros or even
blank lines.  Longer documents have a structure as follows:

*Document type*
     If you invoke the 'RP' (report) macro on the first line of the
     document, 'groff' prints the cover page information on its own
     page; otherwise it prints the information on the first page with
     your document text immediately following.  Other document formats
     found in AT&T 'troff' are specific to AT&T or Berkeley, and are not
     supported in 'groff'.

*Format and layout*
     By setting number registers, you can change your document's type
     (font and size), margins, spacing, headers and footers, and
     footnotes.  *Note ms Document Control Registers::, for more
     details.

*Cover page*
     A cover page consists of a title, the author's name and
     institution, an abstract, and the date.(1)  (*note General ms
     Structure-Footnote-1::) *Note ms Cover Page Macros::, for more
     details.

*Body*
     Following the cover page is your document.  You can use the 'ms'
     macros to write reports, letters, books, and so forth.  The package
     is designed for structured documents, consisting of paragraphs
     interspersed with headings and augmented by lists, footnotes,
     tables, and other common constructs.  *Note ms Body Text::, for
     more details.

*Table of contents*
     Longer documents usually include a table of contents, which you can
     invoke by placing the 'TC' macro at the end of your document.  The
     'ms' macros have minimal indexing facilities, consisting of the
     'IX' macro, which prints an entry on standard error.  Printing the
     table of contents at the end is necessary since 'groff' is a
     single-pass text formatter, thus it cannot determine the page
     number of each section until that section has actually been set and
     printed.  Since 'ms' output is intended for hardcopy, you can
     manually relocate the pages containing the table of contents
     between the cover page and the body text after printing.


File: groff.info,  Node: General ms Structure-Footnotes,  Up: General ms Structure

   (1) Actually, only the title is required.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Document Control Registers,  Next: ms Cover Page Macros,  Prev: General ms Structure,  Up: ms

4.3.3 Document control registers
--------------------------------

The following is a list of document control number registers.  For the
sake of consistency, set registers related to margins at the beginning
of your document, or just after the 'RP' macro.  You can set other
registers later in your document, but you should keep them together at
the beginning to make them easy to find and edit as necessary.

Margin Settings
...............

 -- Register: \n[PO]
     Defines the page offset (i.e., the left margin).  There is no
     explicit right margin setting; the combination of the 'PO' and 'LL'
     registers implicitly define the right margin width.

     Effective: next page.

     Default value: 1i.

 -- Register: \n[LL]
     Defines the line length (i.e., the width of the body text).

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 6i.

 -- Register: \n[LT]
     Defines the title length (i.e., the header and footer width).  This
     is usually the same as 'LL', but not necessarily.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 6i.

 -- Register: \n[HM]
     Defines the header margin height at the top of the page.

     Effective: next page.

     Default: 1i.

 -- Register: \n[FM]
     Defines the footer margin height at the bottom of the page.

     Effective: next page.

     Default: 1i.

Text Settings
.............

 -- Register: \n[PS]
     Defines the point size of the body text.  If the value is larger
     than or equal to 1000, divide it by 1000 to get a fractional point
     size.  For example, '.nr PS 10250' sets the document's point size
     to 10.25p.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 10p.

 -- Register: \n[VS]
     Defines the space between lines (line height plus leading).  If the
     value is larger than or equal to 1000, divide it by 1000 to get a
     fractional point size.  Due to backwards compatibility, 'VS' must
     be smaller than 40000 (this is 40.0p).

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 12p.

 -- Register: \n[PSINCR]
     Defines an increment in point size, which is applied to section
     headings at nesting levels below the value specified in 'GROWPS'.
     The value of 'PSINCR' should be specified in points, with the p
     scaling factor, and may include a fractional component; for
     example, '.nr PSINCR 1.5p' sets a point size increment of 1.5p.

     Effective: next section heading.

     Default: 1p.

 -- Register: \n[GROWPS]
     Defines the heading level below which the point size increment set
     by 'PSINCR' becomes effective.  Section headings at and above the
     level specified by 'GROWPS' are printed at the point size set by
     'PS'; for each level below the value of 'GROWPS', the point size is
     increased in steps equal to the value of 'PSINCR'.  Setting
     'GROWPS' to any value less than 2 disables the incremental heading
     size feature.

     Effective: next section heading.

     Default: 0.

 -- Register: \n[HY]
     Defines the hyphenation level.  'HY' sets safely the value of the
     low-level 'hy' register.  Setting the value of 'HY' to 0 is
     equivalent to using the 'nh' request.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 6.

 -- Register: \n[FAM]
     Defines the font family used to typeset the document.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: as defined in the output device.

Paragraph Settings
..................

 -- Register: \n[PI]
     Defines the initial indentation of a ('PP' macro) paragraph.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 5n.

 -- Register: \n[PD]
     Defines the space between paragraphs.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 0.3v.

 -- Register: \n[QI]
     Defines the indentation on both sides of a quoted ('QP', 'QS', and
     'QE' macros) paragraph.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 5n.

 -- Register: \n[PORPHANS]
     Defines the minimum number of initial lines of any paragraph that
     should be kept together, to avoid orphan lines at the bottom of a
     page.  If a new paragraph is started close to the bottom of a page,
     and there is insufficient space to accommodate 'PORPHANS' lines
     before an automatic page break, then the page break is forced,
     before the start of the paragraph.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 1.

 -- Register: \n[HORPHANS]
     Defines the minimum number of lines of the following paragraph that
     should be kept together with any section heading introduced by the
     'NH' or 'SH' macros.  If a section heading is placed close to the
     bottom of a page, and there is insufficient space to accommodate
     both the heading and at least 'HORPHANS' lines of the following
     paragraph, before an automatic page break, then the page break is
     forced before the heading.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 1.

Footnote Settings
.................

 -- Register: \n[FL]
     Defines the length of a footnote.

     Effective: next footnote.

     Default: '\n[LL]' * 5 / 6.

 -- Register: \n[FI]
     Defines the footnote indentation.

     Effective: next footnote.

     Default: 2n.

 -- Register: \n[FF]
     The footnote format:
     '0'
          Print the footnote number as a superscript; indent the
          footnote (default).

     '1'
          Print the number followed by a period (like 1.) and indent the
          footnote.

     '2'
          Like 1, without an indentation.

     '3'
          Like 1, but print the footnote number as a hanging paragraph.

     Effective: next footnote.

     Default: 0.

 -- Register: \n[FPS]
     Defines the footnote point size.  If the value is larger than or
     equal to 1000, divide it by 1000 to get a fractional point size.

     Effective: next footnote.

     Default: '\n[PS]' - 2.

 -- Register: \n[FVS]
     Defines the footnote vertical spacing.  If the value is larger than
     or equal to 1000, divide it by 1000 to get a fractional point size.

     Effective: next footnote.

     Default: '\n[FPS]' + 2.

 -- Register: \n[FPD]
     Defines the footnote paragraph spacing.

     Effective: next footnote.

     Default: '\n[PD]' / 2.

Miscellaneous Number Registers
..............................

 -- Register: \n[MINGW]
     Defines the minimum width between columns in a multi-column
     document.

     Effective: next page.

     Default: 2n.

 -- Register: \n[DD]
     Sets the vertical spacing before and after a display, a 'tbl'
     table, an 'eqn' equation, or a 'pic' image.

     Effective: next paragraph.

     Default: 0.5v.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Cover Page Macros,  Next: ms Body Text,  Prev: ms Document Control Registers,  Up: ms

4.3.4 Cover page macros
-----------------------

Use the following macros to create a cover page for your document in the
order shown.

 -- Macro: .RP [no]
     Specifies the report format for your document.  The report format
     creates a separate cover page.  The default action (no 'RP' macro)
     is to print a subset of the cover page on page 1 of your document.

     If you use the word 'no' as an optional argument, 'groff' prints a
     title page but does not repeat any of the title page information
     (title, author, abstract, etc.) on page 1 of the document.

 -- Macro: .P1
     (P-one) Prints the header on page 1.  The default is to suppress
     the header.

 -- Macro: .DA [...]
     (optional) Prints the current date, or the arguments to the macro
     if any, on the title page (if specified) and in the footers.  This
     is the default for 'nroff'.

 -- Macro: .ND [...]
     (optional) Prints the current date, or the arguments to the macro
     if any, on the title page (if specified) but not in the footers.
     This is the default for 'troff'.

 -- Macro: .TL
     Specifies the document title.  'groff' collects text following the
     'TL' macro into the title, until reaching the author name or
     abstract.

 -- Macro: .AU
     Specifies the author's name, which appears on the line (or lines)
     immediately following.  You can specify multiple authors as
     follows:

          .AU
          John Doe
          .AI
          University of West Bumblefuzz
          .AU
          Martha Buck
          .AI
          Monolithic Corporation

          ...

 -- Macro: .AI
     Specifies the author's institution.  You can specify multiple
     institutions in the same way that you specify multiple authors.

 -- Macro: .AB [no]
     Begins the abstract.  The default is to print the word ABSTRACT,
     centered and in italics, above the text of the abstract.  The word
     'no' as an optional argument suppresses this heading.

 -- Macro: .AE
     Ends the abstract.

   The following is example mark-up for a title page.

     .RP
     .TL
     The Inevitability of Code Bloat
     in Commercial and Free Software
     .AU
     J. Random Luser
     .AI
     University of West Bumblefuzz
     .AB
     This report examines the long-term growth
     of the code bases in two large, popular software
     packages; the free Emacs and the commercial
     Microsoft Word.
     While differences appear in the type or order
     of features added, due to the different
     methodologies used, the results are the same
     in the end.
     .PP
     The free software approach is shown to be
     superior in that while free software can
     become as bloated as commercial offerings,
     free software tends to have fewer serious
     bugs and the added features are in line with
     user demand.
     .AE

     ... the rest of the paper follows ...


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Body Text,  Next: ms Page Layout,  Prev: ms Cover Page Macros,  Up: ms

4.3.5 Body text
---------------

This section describes macros used to mark up the body of your document.
Examples include paragraphs, sections, and other groups.

* Menu:

* Paragraphs in ms::
* Headings in ms::
* Highlighting in ms::
* Lists in ms::
* Indentation values in ms::
* Tabstops in ms::
* ms Displays and Keeps::
* ms Insertions::
* Example multi-page table::
* ms Footnotes::


File: groff.info,  Node: Paragraphs in ms,  Next: Headings in ms,  Prev: ms Body Text,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.1 Paragraphs
..................

The following paragraph types are available.

 -- Macro: .PP
     Sets a paragraph with an initial indentation.

 -- Macro: .LP
     Sets a paragraph without an initial indentation.

 -- Macro: .QP
     Sets a paragraph that is indented at both left and right margins by
     the amount of the register 'QI'.  The effect is identical to the
     HTML '<BLOCKQUOTE>' element.  The next paragraph or heading returns
     margins to normal.  'QP' inserts vertical space of amount set by
     register 'PD' before the paragraph.

 -- Macro: .QS
 -- Macro: .QE
     These macros begin and end a quoted section.  The 'QI' register
     controls the amount of indentation.  Both 'QS' and 'QE' insert
     inter-paragraph vertical space set by register 'PD'.  The text
     between 'QS' and 'QE' can be structured further by use of the
     macros 'LP' or 'PP'.

 -- Macro: .XP
     Sets a paragraph whose lines are indented, except for the first
     line.  This is a Berkeley extension.

   The following markup uses all four paragraph macros.

     .NH 2
     Cases used in the study
     .LP
     The following software and versions were
     considered for this report.
     .PP
     For commercial software, we chose
     .B "Microsoft Word for Windows" ,
     starting with version 1.0 through the
     current version (Word 2000).
     .PP
     For free software, we chose
     .B Emacs ,
     from its first appearance as a standalone
     editor through the current version (v20).
     See [Bloggs 2002] for details.
     .QP
     Franklin's Law applied to software:
     software expands to outgrow both
     RAM and disk space over time.
     .LP
     Bibliography:
     .XP
     Bloggs, Joseph R.,
     .I "Everyone's a Critic" ,
     Underground Press, March 2002.
     A definitive work that answers all questions
     and criticisms about the quality and usability of
     free software.

   The 'PORPHANS' register (*note ms Document Control Registers::)
operates in conjunction with each of these macros, to inhibit the
printing of orphan lines at the bottom of any page.


File: groff.info,  Node: Headings in ms,  Next: Highlighting in ms,  Prev: Paragraphs in ms,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.2 Headings
................

Use headings to create a hierarchical structure for your document.  The
'ms' macros print headings in *bold*, using the same font family and
point size as the body text.

   The following describes the heading macros:

 -- Macro: .NH curr-level
 -- Macro: .NH S level0 ...
     Numbered heading.  The argument is either a numeric argument to
     indicate the level of the heading, or the letter 'S' followed by
     numeric arguments to set the heading level explicitly.

     If you specify heading levels out of sequence, such as invoking
     '.NH 3' after '.NH 1', 'groff' prints a warning on standard error.

 -- String: \*[SN]
 -- String: \*[SN-DOT]
 -- String: \*[SN-NO-DOT]
     After invocation of 'NH', the assigned section number is made
     available in the strings 'SN-DOT' (as it appears in a printed
     section heading with default formatting, followed by a terminating
     period), and 'SN-NO-DOT' (with the terminating period omitted).
     The string 'SN' is also defined, as an alias for 'SN-DOT'; if
     preferred, you may redefine it as an alias for 'SN-NO-DOT', by
     including the initialization
          .als SN SN-NO-DOT

     at any time *before* you would like the change to take effect.

 -- String: \*[SN-STYLE]
     You may control the style used to print section numbers, within
     numbered section headings, by defining an appropriate alias for the
     string 'SN-STYLE'.  The default style, in which the printed section
     number is followed by a terminating period, is obtained by defining
     the alias

          .als SN-STYLE SN-DOT

     If you prefer to omit the terminating period, from section numbers
     appearing in numbered section headings, you may define the alias

          .als SN-STYLE SN-NO-DOT

     Any such change in section numbering style becomes effective from
     the next use of '.NH', following redefinition of the alias for
     'SN-STYLE'.

 -- Macro: .SH [match-level]
     Unnumbered subheading.

     The optional MATCH-LEVEL argument is a GNU extension.  It is a
     number indicating the level of the heading, in a manner analogous
     to the CURR-LEVEL argument to '.NH'.  Its purpose is to match the
     point size, at which the heading is printed, to the size of a
     numbered heading at the same level, when the 'GROWPS' and 'PSINCR'
     heading size adjustment mechanism is in effect.  *Note ms Document
     Control Registers::.

   The 'HORPHANS' register (*note ms Document Control Registers::)
operates in conjunction with the 'NH' and 'SH' macros, to inhibit the
printing of orphaned section headings at the bottom of any page.


File: groff.info,  Node: Highlighting in ms,  Next: Lists in ms,  Prev: Headings in ms,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.3 Highlighting
....................

The 'ms' macros provide a variety of methods to highlight or emphasize
text:

 -- Macro: .B [txt [post [pre]]]
     Sets its first argument in *bold type*.  If you specify a second
     argument, 'groff' prints it in the previous font after the bold
     text, with no intervening space (this allows you to set punctuation
     after the highlighted text without highlighting the punctuation).
     Similarly, it prints the third argument (if any) in the previous
     font *before* the first argument.  For example,

          .B foo ) (

     prints (*foo*).

     If you give this macro no arguments, 'groff' prints all text
     following in bold until the next highlighting, paragraph, or
     heading macro.

 -- Macro: .R [txt [post [pre]]]
     Sets its first argument in roman (or regular) type.  It operates
     similarly to the 'B' macro otherwise.

 -- Macro: .I [txt [post [pre]]]
     Sets its first argument in _italic type_.  It operates similarly to
     the 'B' macro otherwise.

 -- Macro: .CW [txt [post [pre]]]
     Sets its first argument in a 'constant width face'.  It operates
     similarly to the 'B' macro otherwise.

 -- Macro: .BI [txt [post [pre]]]
     Sets its first argument in bold italic type.  It operates similarly
     to the 'B' macro otherwise.

 -- Macro: .BX [txt]
     Prints its argument and draws a box around it.  If you want to box
     a string that contains spaces, use a digit-width space ('\0').

 -- Macro: .UL [txt [post]]
     Prints its first argument with an underline.  If you specify a
     second argument, 'groff' prints it in the previous font after the
     underlined text, with no intervening space.

 -- Macro: .LG
     Prints all text following in larger type (two points larger than
     the current point size) until the next font size, highlighting,
     paragraph, or heading macro.  You can specify this macro multiple
     times to enlarge the point size as needed.

 -- Macro: .SM
     Prints all text following in smaller type (two points smaller than
     the current point size) until the next type size, highlighting,
     paragraph, or heading macro.  You can specify this macro multiple
     times to reduce the point size as needed.

 -- Macro: .NL
     Prints all text following in the normal point size (that is, the
     value of the 'PS' register).

 -- String: \*[{]
 -- String: \*[}]
     Text enclosed with '\*{' and '\*}' is printed as a superscript.


File: groff.info,  Node: Lists in ms,  Next: Indentation values in ms,  Prev: Highlighting in ms,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.4 Lists
.............

The 'IP' macro handles duties for all lists.

 -- Macro: .IP [marker [width]]
     The MARKER is usually a bullet glyph ('\[bu]') for unordered lists,
     a number (or auto-incrementing number register) for numbered lists,
     or a word or phrase for indented (glossary-style) lists.

     The WIDTH specifies the indentation for the body of each list item;
     its default unit is 'n'.  Once specified, the indentation remains
     the same for all list items in the document until specified again.

     The 'PORPHANS' register (*note ms Document Control Registers::)
     operates in conjunction with the 'IP' macro, to inhibit the
     printing of orphaned list markers at the bottom of any page.

   The following is an example of a bulleted list.

     A bulleted list:
     .IP \[bu] 2
     lawyers
     .IP \[bu]
     guns
     .IP \[bu]
     money

   Produces:

     A bulleted list:

     o lawyers

     o guns

     o money

   The following is an example of a numbered list.

     .nr step 1 1
     A numbered list:
     .IP \n[step] 3
     lawyers
     .IP \n+[step]
     guns
     .IP \n+[step]
     money

   Produces:

     A numbered list:

     1. lawyers

     2. guns

     3. money

   Note the use of the auto-incrementing number register in this
example.

   The following is an example of a glossary-style list.

     A glossary-style list:
     .IP lawyers 0.4i
     Two or more attorneys.
     .IP guns
     Firearms, preferably
     large-caliber.
     .IP money
     Gotta pay for those
     lawyers and guns!

   Produces:

     A glossary-style list:

     lawyers
           Two or more attorneys.

     guns  Firearms, preferably large-caliber.

     money
           Gotta pay for those lawyers and guns!

   In the last example, the 'IP' macro places the definition on the same
line as the term if it has enough space; otherwise, it breaks to the
next line and starts the definition below the term.  This may or may not
be the effect you want, especially if some of the definitions break and
some do not.  The following examples show two possible ways to force a
break.

   The first workaround uses the 'br' request to force a break after
printing the term or label.

     A glossary-style list:
     .IP lawyers 0.4i
     Two or more attorneys.
     .IP guns
     .br
     Firearms, preferably large-caliber.
     .IP money
     Gotta pay for those lawyers and guns!

   The second workaround uses the '\p' escape to force the break.  Note
the space following the escape; this is important.  If you omit the
space, 'groff' prints the first word on the same line as the term or
label (if it fits) *then* breaks the line.

     A glossary-style list:
     .IP lawyers 0.4i
     Two or more attorneys.
     .IP guns
     \p Firearms, preferably large-caliber.
     .IP money
     Gotta pay for those lawyers and guns!

   To set nested lists, use the 'RS' and 'RE' macros.  *Note Indentation
values in ms::, for more information.

   For example:

     .IP \[bu] 2
     Lawyers:
     .RS
     .IP \[bu]
     Dewey,
     .IP \[bu]
     Cheatham,
     .IP \[bu]
     and Howe.
     .RE
     .IP \[bu]
     Guns

   Produces:

     o Lawyers:

       o  Dewey,

       o  Cheatham,

       o  and Howe.

     o Guns


File: groff.info,  Node: Indentation values in ms,  Next: Tabstops in ms,  Prev: Lists in ms,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.5 Indentation values
..........................

In many situations, you may need to indentation a section of text while
still wrapping and filling.  *Note Lists in ms::, for an example of
nested lists.

 -- Macro: .RS
 -- Macro: .RE
     These macros begin and end an indented section.  The 'PI' register
     controls the amount of indentation, allowing the indented text to
     line up under hanging and indented paragraphs.

   *Note ms Displays and Keeps::, for macros to indentation and turn off
filling.


File: groff.info,  Node: Tabstops in ms,  Next: ms Displays and Keeps,  Prev: Indentation values in ms,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.6 Tab Stops
.................

Use the 'ta' request to define tab stops as needed.  *Note Tabs and
Fields::.

 -- Macro: .TA
     Use this macro to reset the tab stops to the default for 'ms'
     (every 5n).  You can redefine the 'TA' macro to create a different
     set of default tab stops.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Displays and Keeps,  Next: ms Insertions,  Prev: Tabstops in ms,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.7 Displays and keeps
..........................

Use displays to show text-based examples or figures (such as code
listings).

   Displays turn off filling, so lines of code are displayed as-is
without inserting 'br' requests in between each line.  Displays can be
"kept" on a single page, or allowed to break across pages.

 -- Macro: .DS L
 -- Macro: .LD
 -- Macro: .DE
     Left-justified display.  The '.DS L' call generates a page break,
     if necessary, to keep the entire display on one page.  The 'LD'
     macro allows the display to break across pages.  The 'DE' macro
     ends the display.

 -- Macro: .DS I
 -- Macro: .ID
 -- Macro: .DE
     Indents the display as defined by the 'DI' register.  The '.DS I'
     call generates a page break, if necessary, to keep the entire
     display on one page.  The 'ID' macro allows the display to break
     across pages.  The 'DE' macro ends the display.

 -- Macro: .DS B
 -- Macro: .BD
 -- Macro: .DE
     Sets a block-centered display: the entire display is
     left-justified, but indented so that the longest line in the
     display is centered on the page.  The '.DS B' call generates a page
     break, if necessary, to keep the entire display on one page.  The
     'BD' macro allows the display to break across pages.  The 'DE'
     macro ends the display.

 -- Macro: .DS C
 -- Macro: .CD
 -- Macro: .DE
     Sets a centered display: each line in the display is centered.  The
     '.DS C' call generates a page break, if necessary, to keep the
     entire display on one page.  The 'CD' macro allows the display to
     break across pages.  The 'DE' macro ends the display.

 -- Macro: .DS R
 -- Macro: .RD
 -- Macro: .DE
     Right-justifies each line in the display.  The '.DS R' call
     generates a page break, if necessary, to keep the entire display on
     one page.  The 'RD' macro allows the display to break across pages.
     The 'DE' macro ends the display.

 -- Macro: .Ds
 -- Macro: .De
     These two macros were formerly provided as aliases for 'DS' and
     'DE', respectively.  They have been removed, and should no longer
     be used.  The original implementations of 'DS' and 'DE' are
     retained, and should be used instead.  X11 documents that actually
     use 'Ds' and 'De' always load a specific macro file from the X11
     distribution ('macros.t') that provides proper definitions for the
     two macros.

   On occasion, you may want to "keep" other text together on a page.
For example, you may want to keep two paragraphs together, or a
paragraph that refers to a table (or list, or other item) immediately
following.  The 'ms' macros provide the 'KS' and 'KE' macros for this
purpose.

 -- Macro: .KS
 -- Macro: .KE
     The 'KS' macro begins a block of text to be kept on a single page,
     and the 'KE' macro ends the block.

 -- Macro: .KF
 -- Macro: .KE
     Specifies a "floating keep"; if the keep cannot fit on the current
     page, 'groff' holds the contents of the keep and allows text
     following the keep (in the source file) to fill in the remainder of
     the current page.  When the page breaks, whether by an explicit
     'bp' request or by reaching the end of the page, 'groff' prints the
     floating keep at the top of the new page.  This is useful for
     printing large graphics or tables that do not need to appear
     exactly where specified.

   You can also use the 'ne' request to force a page break if there is
not enough vertical space remaining on the page.

   Use the following macros to draw a box around a section of text (such
as a display).

 -- Macro: .B1
 -- Macro: .B2
     Marks the beginning and ending of text that is to have a box drawn
     around it.  The 'B1' macro begins the box; the 'B2' macro ends it.
     Text in the box is automatically placed in a diversion (keep).


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Insertions,  Next: Example multi-page table,  Prev: ms Displays and Keeps,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.8 Tables, figures, equations, and references
..................................................

The 'ms' macros support the standard 'groff' preprocessors: 'tbl',
'pic', 'eqn', and 'refer'.  You mark text meant for preprocessors by
enclosing it in pairs of tags as follows.

 -- Macro: .TS [H]
 -- Macro: .TE
     Denotes a table, to be processed by the 'tbl' preprocessor.  The
     optional argument 'H' to 'TS' instructs 'groff' to create a running
     header with the information up to the 'TH' macro.  'groff' prints
     the header at the beginning of the table; if the table runs onto
     another page, 'groff' prints the header on the next page as well.

 -- Macro: .PS
 -- Macro: .PE
     Denotes a graphic, to be processed by the 'pic' preprocessor.  You
     can create a 'pic' file by hand, using the AT&T 'pic' manual
     available on the Web as a reference, or by using a graphics program
     such as 'xfig'.

 -- Macro: .EQ [align]
 -- Macro: .EN
     Denotes an equation, to be processed by the 'eqn' preprocessor.
     The optional ALIGN argument can be 'C', 'L', or 'I' to center (the
     default), left-justify, or indent the equation.

 -- Macro: .[
 -- Macro: .]
     Denotes a reference, to be processed by the 'refer' preprocessor.
     The GNU 'refer(1)' man page provides a comprehensive reference to
     the preprocessor and the format of the bibliographic database.

* Menu:

* Example multi-page table::


File: groff.info,  Node: Example multi-page table,  Next: ms Footnotes,  Prev: ms Insertions,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.9 An example multi-page table
...................................

The following is an example of how to set up a table that may print
across two or more pages.

     .TS H
     allbox expand;
     cb | cb .
     Text      ...of heading...
     _
     .TH
     .T&
     l | l .
     ... the rest of the table follows...
     .CW
     .TE


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Footnotes,  Prev: Example multi-page table,  Up: ms Body Text

4.3.5.10 Footnotes
..................

The 'ms' macro package has a flexible footnote system.  You can specify
either numbered footnotes or symbolic footnotes (that is, using a marker
such as a dagger symbol).

 -- String: \*[*]
     Specifies the location of a numbered footnote marker in the text.

 -- Macro: .FS
 -- Macro: .FE
     Specifies the text of the footnote.  The default action is to
     create a numbered footnote; you can create a symbolic footnote by
     specifying a "mark" glyph (such as '\[dg]' for the dagger glyph) in
     the body text and as an argument to the 'FS' macro, followed by the
     text of the footnote and the 'FE' macro.

   You can control how 'groff' prints footnote numbers by changing the
value of the 'FF' register.  *Note ms Document Control Registers::.

   Footnotes can be safely used within keeps and displays, but you
should avoid using numbered footnotes within floating keeps.  You can
set a second '\**' marker between a '\**' and its corresponding '.FS'
entry; as long as each 'FS' macro occurs _after_ the corresponding '\**'
and the occurrences of '.FS' are in the same order as the corresponding
occurrences of '\**'.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Page Layout,  Next: Differences from AT&T ms,  Prev: ms Body Text,  Up: ms

4.3.6 Page layout
-----------------

The default output from the 'ms' macros provides a minimalist page
layout: it prints a single column, with the page number centered at the
top of each page.  It prints no footers.

   You can change the layout by setting the proper number registers and
strings.

* Menu:

* ms Headers and Footers::
* ms Margins::
* ms Multiple Columns::
* ms TOC::
* ms Strings and Special Characters::


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Headers and Footers,  Next: ms Margins,  Prev: ms Page Layout,  Up: ms Page Layout

4.3.6.1 Headers and footers
...........................

For documents that do not distinguish between odd and even pages, set
the following strings:

 -- String: \*[LH]
 -- String: \*[CH]
 -- String: \*[RH]
     Sets the left, center, and right headers.

 -- String: \*[LF]
 -- String: \*[CF]
 -- String: \*[RF]
     Sets the left, center, and right footers.

   For documents that need different information printed in the even and
odd pages, use the following macros:

 -- Macro: .OH 'left'center'right'
 -- Macro: .EH 'left'center'right'
 -- Macro: .OF 'left'center'right'
 -- Macro: .EF 'left'center'right'
     The 'OH' and 'EH' macros define headers for the odd and even pages;
     the 'OF' and 'EF' macros define footers for the odd and even pages.
     This is more flexible than defining the individual strings.

     You can replace the quote (''') marks with any character not
     appearing in the header or footer text.

   To specify custom header and footer processing, redefine the
following macros:

 -- Macro: .PT
 -- Macro: .HD
 -- Macro: .BT
     The 'PT' macro defines a custom header; the 'BT' macro defines a
     custom footer.  These macros must handle odd/even/first page
     differences if necessary.

     The 'HD' macro defines additional header processing to take place
     after executing the 'PT' macro.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Margins,  Next: ms Multiple Columns,  Prev: ms Headers and Footers,  Up: ms Page Layout

4.3.6.2 Margins
...............

You control margins using a set of number registers.  *Note ms Document
Control Registers::, for details.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Multiple Columns,  Next: ms TOC,  Prev: ms Margins,  Up: ms Page Layout

4.3.6.3 Multiple columns
........................

The 'ms' macros can set text in as many columns as do reasonably fit on
the page.  The following macros are available; all of them force a page
break if a multi-column mode is already set.  However, if the current
mode is single-column, starting a multi-column mode does _not_ force a
page break.

 -- Macro: .1C
     Single-column mode.

 -- Macro: .2C
     Two-column mode.

 -- Macro: .MC [width [gutter]]
     Multi-column mode.  If you specify no arguments, it is equivalent
     to the '2C' macro.  Otherwise, WIDTH is the width of each column
     and GUTTER is the space between columns.  The 'MINGW' number
     register controls the default gutter width.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms TOC,  Next: ms Strings and Special Characters,  Prev: ms Multiple Columns,  Up: ms Page Layout

4.3.6.4 Creating a table of contents
....................................

The facilities in the 'ms' macro package for creating a table of
contents are semi-automated at best.  Assuming that you want the table
of contents to consist of the document's headings, you need to repeat
those headings wrapped in 'XS' and 'XE' macros.

 -- Macro: .XS [page]
 -- Macro: .XA [page]
 -- Macro: .XE
     These macros define a table of contents or an individual entry in
     the table of contents, depending on their use.  The macros are very
     simple; they cannot indent a heading based on its level.  The
     easiest way to work around this is to add tabs to the table of
     contents string.  The following is an example:

          .NH 1
          Introduction
          .XS
          Introduction
          .XE
          .LP
          ...
          .CW
          .NH 2
          Methodology
          .XS
          Methodology
          .XE
          .LP
          ...

     You can manually create a table of contents by beginning with the
     'XS' macro for the first entry, specifying the page number for that
     entry as the argument to 'XS'.  Add subsequent entries using the
     'XA' macro, specifying the page number for that entry as the
     argument to 'XA'.  The following is an example:

          .XS 1
          Introduction
          .XA 2
          A Brief History of the Universe
          .XA 729
          Details of Galactic Formation
          ...
          .XE

 -- Macro: .TC [no]
     Prints the table of contents on a new page, setting the page number
     to *i* (Roman lowercase numeral one).  You should usually place
     this macro at the end of the file, since 'groff' is a single-pass
     formatter and can only print what has been collected up to the
     point that the 'TC' macro appears.

     The optional argument 'no' suppresses printing the title specified
     by the string register 'TOC'.

 -- Macro: .PX [no]
     Prints the table of contents on a new page, using the current page
     numbering sequence.  Use this macro to print a manually generated
     table of contents at the beginning of your document.

     The optional argument 'no' suppresses printing the title specified
     by the string register 'TOC'.

   The 'Groff and Friends HOWTO' includes a 'sed' script that
automatically inserts 'XS' and 'XE' macro entries after each heading in
a document.

   Altering the 'NH' macro to automatically build the table of contents
is perhaps initially more difficult, but would save a great deal of time
in the long run if you use 'ms' regularly.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Strings and Special Characters,  Prev: ms TOC,  Up: ms Page Layout

4.3.6.5 Strings and Special Characters
......................................

The 'ms' macros provide the following predefined strings.  You can
change the string definitions to help in creating documents in languages
other than English.

 -- String: \*[REFERENCES]
     Contains the string printed at the beginning of the references
     (bibliography) page.  The default is 'References'.

 -- String: \*[ABSTRACT]
     Contains the string printed at the beginning of the abstract.  The
     default is 'ABSTRACT'.

 -- String: \*[TOC]
     Contains the string printed at the beginning of the table of
     contents.

 -- String: \*[MONTH1]
 -- String: \*[MONTH2]
 -- String: \*[MONTH3]
 -- String: \*[MONTH4]
 -- String: \*[MONTH5]
 -- String: \*[MONTH6]
 -- String: \*[MONTH7]
 -- String: \*[MONTH8]
 -- String: \*[MONTH9]
 -- String: \*[MONTH10]
 -- String: \*[MONTH11]
 -- String: \*[MONTH12]
     Prints the full name of the month in dates.  The default is
     'January', 'February', etc.

   The following special characters are available(1) (*note ms Strings
and Special Characters-Footnote-1::):

 -- String: \*[-]
     Prints an em dash.

 -- String: \*[Q]
 -- String: \*[U]
     Prints typographer's quotes in troff, and plain quotes in nroff.
     '\*Q' is the left quote and '\*U' is the right quote.

   Improved accent marks are available in the 'ms' macros.

 -- Macro: .AM
     Specify this macro at the beginning of your document to enable
     extended accent marks and special characters.  This is a Berkeley
     extension.

     To use the accent marks, place them *after* the character being
     accented.

     Note that groff's native support for accents is superior to the
     following definitions.

   The following accent marks are available after invoking the 'AM'
macro:

 -- String: \*[']
     Acute accent.

 -- String: \*[`]
     Grave accent.

 -- String: \*[^]
     Circumflex.

 -- String: \*[,]
     Cedilla.

 -- String: \*[~]
     Tilde.

 -- String: \*[:]
     Umlaut.

 -- String: \*[v]
     Hacek.

 -- String: \*[_]
     Macron (overbar).

 -- String: \*[.]
     Underdot.

 -- String: \*[o]
     Ring above.

   The following are standalone characters available after invoking the
'AM' macro:

 -- String: \*[?]
     Upside-down question mark.

 -- String: \*[!]
     Upside-down exclamation point.

 -- String: \*[8]
     German ß ligature.

 -- String: \*[3]
     Yogh.

 -- String: \*[Th]
     Uppercase thorn.

 -- String: \*[th]
     Lowercase thorn.

 -- String: \*[D-]
     Uppercase eth.

 -- String: \*[d-]
     Lowercase eth.

 -- String: \*[q]
     Hooked o.

 -- String: \*[ae]
     Lowercase æ ligature.

 -- String: \*[Ae]
     Uppercase Æ ligature.


File: groff.info,  Node: ms Strings and Special Characters-Footnotes,  Up: ms Strings and Special Characters

   (1) For an explanation what special characters are see *note Special
Characters::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Differences from AT&T ms,  Next: Naming Conventions,  Prev: ms Page Layout,  Up: ms

4.3.7 Differences from AT&T 'ms'
--------------------------------

This section lists the (minor) differences between the 'groff -ms'
macros and AT&T 'troff -ms' macros.

   * The internals of 'groff -ms' differ from the internals of AT&T
     'troff -ms'.  Documents that depend upon implementation details of
     AT&T 'troff -ms' may not format properly with 'groff -ms'.

   * The general error-handling policy of 'groff -ms' is to detect and
     report errors, rather than silently to ignore them.

   * 'groff -ms' does not work in compatibility mode (that is, with the
     '-C' option).

   * There is no special support for typewriter-like devices.

   * 'groff -ms' does not provide cut marks.

   * Multiple line spacing is not supported.  Use a larger vertical
     spacing instead.

   * Some Unix 'ms' documentation says that the 'CW' and 'GW' number
     registers can be used to control the column width and gutter width,
     respectively.  These number registers are not used in 'groff -ms'.

   * Macros that cause a reset (paragraphs, headings, etc.) may change
     the indentation.  Macros that change the indentation do not
     increment or decrement the indentation, but rather set it
     absolutely.  This can cause problems for documents that define
     additional macros of their own.  The solution is to use not the
     'in' request but instead the 'RS' and 'RE' macros.

   * To make 'groff -ms' use the default page offset (which also
     specifies the left margin), the 'PO' register must stay undefined
     until the first '-ms' macro is evaluated.  This implies that 'PO'
     should not be used early in the document, unless it is changed
     also: Remember that accessing an undefined register automatically
     defines it.

 -- Register: \n[GS]
     This number register is set to 1 by the 'groff -ms' macros, but it
     is not used by the 'AT&T' 'troff -ms' macros.  Documents that need
     to determine whether they are being formatted with 'AT&T' 'troff
     -ms' or 'groff -ms' should use this number register.

   Emulations of a few ancient Bell Labs macros can be re-enabled by
calling the otherwise undocumented 'SC' section-header macro.  Calling
'SC' enables 'UC' for marking up a product or application name, and the
pair 'P1'/'P2' for surrounding code example displays.

   These are not enabled by default because (a) they were not
documented, in the original 'ms' manual, and (b) the 'P1' and 'UC'
macros collide with different macros with the same names in the Berkeley
version of 'ms'.

   These 'groff' emulations are sufficient to give back the 1976
Kernighan & Cherry paper 'Typesetting Mathematics - User's Guide' its
section headings, and restore some text that had gone missing as
arguments of undefined macros.  No warranty express or implied is given
as to how well the typographic details these produce match the original
Bell Labs macros.

* Menu:

* Missing ms Macros::
* Additional ms Macros::


File: groff.info,  Node: Missing ms Macros,  Next: Additional ms Macros,  Prev: Differences from AT&T ms,  Up: Differences from AT&T ms

4.3.7.1 'troff' macros not appearing in 'groff'
...............................................

Macros missing from 'groff -ms' are cover page macros specific to Bell
Labs and Berkeley.  The macros known to be missing are:

'.TM'
     Technical memorandum; a cover sheet style

'.IM'
     Internal memorandum; a cover sheet style

'.MR'
     Memo for record; a cover sheet style

'.MF'
     Memo for file; a cover sheet style

'.EG'
     Engineer's notes; a cover sheet style

'.TR'
     Computing Science Tech Report; a cover sheet style

'.OK'
     Other keywords

'.CS'
     Cover sheet information

'.MH'
     A cover sheet macro


File: groff.info,  Node: Additional ms Macros,  Prev: Missing ms Macros,  Up: Differences from AT&T ms

4.3.7.2 'groff' macros not appearing in AT&T 'troff'
....................................................

The 'groff -ms' macros have a few minor extensions compared to the AT&T
'troff -ms' macros.

 -- Macro: .AM
     Improved accent marks.  *Note ms Strings and Special Characters::,
     for details.

 -- Macro: .DS I
     Indented display.  The default behavior of AT&T 'troff -ms' was to
     indent; the 'groff' default prints displays flush left with the
     body text.

 -- Macro: .CW
     Print text in 'constant width' (Courier) font.

 -- Macro: .IX
     Indexing term (printed on standard error).  You can write a script
     to capture and process an index generated in this manner.

   The following additional number registers appear in 'groff -ms':

 -- Register: \n[MINGW]
     Specifies a minimum space between columns (for multi-column
     output); this takes the place of the 'GW' register that was
     documented but apparently not implemented in AT&T 'troff'.

   Several new string registers are available as well.  You can change
these to handle (for example) the local language.  *Note ms Strings and
Special Characters::, for details.


File: groff.info,  Node: Naming Conventions,  Prev: Differences from AT&T ms,  Up: ms

4.3.8 Naming Conventions
------------------------

The following conventions are used for names of macros, strings and
number registers.  External names available to documents that use the
'groff -ms' macros contain only uppercase letters and digits.

   Internally the macros are divided into modules; naming conventions
are as follows:

   * Names used only within one module are of the form MODULE'*'NAME.

   * Names used outside the module in which they are defined are of the
     form MODULE'@'NAME.

   * Names associated with a particular environment are of the form
     ENVIRONMENT':'NAME; these are used only within the 'par' module.

   * NAME does not have a module prefix.

   * Constructed names used to implement arrays are of the form
     ARRAY'!'INDEX.

   Thus the groff ms macros reserve the following names:

   * Names containing the characters '*', '@', and ':'.

   * Names containing only uppercase letters and digits.


File: groff.info,  Node: me,  Next: mm,  Prev: ms,  Up: Macro Packages

4.4 'me'
========

See the 'meintro.me' and 'meref.me' documents in groff's 'doc'
directory.


File: groff.info,  Node: mm,  Next: mom,  Prev: me,  Up: Macro Packages

4.5 'mm'
========

See the 'groff_mm(7)' man page (type 'man groff_mm' at the command
line).


File: groff.info,  Node: mom,  Prev: mm,  Up: Macro Packages

4.6 'mom'
=========

The main documentation files for the 'mom' macros are in HTML format.
Additional, useful documentation is in PDF format.  See the 'groff(1)'
man page, section "Installation Directories", for their location.

   * 'toc.html' Entry point to the full mom manual.

   * 'macrolist.html' Hyperlinked index of macros with brief
     descriptions, arranged by category.

   * 'mom-pdf.pdf' PDF features and usage.

   The mom macros are in active development between groff releases.  The
most recent version, along with up-to-date documentation, is available
at <http://www.schaffter.ca/mom/mom-05.html>.

   The 'groff_mom(7)' man page (type 'man groff_mom' at the command
line) contains a partial list of available macros, however their usage
is best understood by consulting the HTML documentation.


File: groff.info,  Node: gtroff Reference,  Next: Preprocessors,  Prev: Macro Packages,  Up: Top

5 'gtroff' Reference
********************

This chapter covers *all* of the facilities of 'gtroff'.  Users of macro
packages may skip it if not interested in details.

* Menu:

* Text::
* Measurements::
* Expressions::
* Identifiers::
* Embedded Commands::
* Registers::
* Manipulating Filling and Adjusting::
* Manipulating Hyphenation::
* Manipulating Spacing::
* Tabs and Fields::
* Character Translations::
* Troff and Nroff Mode::
* Line Layout::
* Line Control::
* Page Layout::
* Page Control::
* Fonts and Symbols::
* Sizes::
* Strings::
* Conditionals and Loops::
* Writing Macros::
* Page Motions::
* Drawing Requests::
* Traps::
* Diversions::
* Environments::
* Suppressing output::
* Colors::
* I/O::
* Postprocessor Access::
* Miscellaneous::
* Gtroff Internals::
* Debugging::
* Implementation Differences::


File: groff.info,  Node: Text,  Next: Measurements,  Prev: gtroff Reference,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.1 Text
========

'gtroff' input files contain text with control commands interspersed
throughout.  But, even without control codes, 'gtroff' still does
several things with the input text:

   * filling and adjusting

   * adding additional space after sentences

   * hyphenating

   * inserting implicit line breaks

* Menu:

* Filling and Adjusting::
* Hyphenation::
* Sentences::
* Tab Stops::
* Implicit Line Breaks::
* Input Conventions::
* Input Encodings::


File: groff.info,  Node: Filling and Adjusting,  Next: Hyphenation,  Prev: Text,  Up: Text

5.1.1 Filling and Adjusting
---------------------------

When 'gtroff' reads text, it collects words from the input and fits as
many of them together on one output line as it can.  This is known as
"filling".

   Once 'gtroff' has a "filled" line, it tries to "adjust" it.  This
means it widens the spacing between words until the text reaches the
right margin (in the default adjustment mode).  Extra spaces between
words are preserved, but spaces at the end of lines are ignored.  Spaces
at the front of a line cause a "break" (breaks are explained in *note
Implicit Line Breaks::).

   *Note Manipulating Filling and Adjusting::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Hyphenation,  Next: Sentences,  Prev: Filling and Adjusting,  Up: Text

5.1.2 Hyphenation
-----------------

Since the odds are not great for finding a set of words, for every
output line, which fit nicely on a line without inserting excessive
amounts of space between words, 'gtroff' hyphenates words so that it can
justify lines without inserting too much space between words.  It uses
an internal hyphenation algorithm (a simplified version of the algorithm
used within TeX) to indicate which words can be hyphenated and how to do
so.  When a word is hyphenated, the first part of the word is added to
the current filled line being output (with an attached hyphen), and the
other portion is added to the next line to be filled.

   *Note Manipulating Hyphenation::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Sentences,  Next: Tab Stops,  Prev: Hyphenation,  Up: Text

5.1.3 Sentences
---------------

Although it is often debated, some typesetting rules say there should be
different amounts of space after various punctuation marks.  For
example, the 'Chicago typesetting manual' says that a period at the end
of a sentence should have twice as much space following it as would a
comma or a period as part of an abbreviation.

   'gtroff' does this by flagging certain characters (normally '!', '?',
and '.') as "end-of-sentence" characters.  When 'gtroff' encounters one
of these characters at the end of a line, it appends a normal space
followed by a "sentence space" in the formatted output.  (This justifies
one of the conventions mentioned in *note Input Conventions::.)

   In addition, the following characters and symbols are treated
transparently while handling end-of-sentence characters: '"', ''', ')',
']', '*', '\[dg]', '\[rq]', and '\[cq]'.

   See the 'cflags' request in *note Using Symbols::, for more details.

   To prevent the insertion of extra space after an end-of-sentence
character (at the end of a line), append '\&'.


File: groff.info,  Node: Tab Stops,  Next: Implicit Line Breaks,  Prev: Sentences,  Up: Text

5.1.4 Tab Stops
---------------

'gtroff' translates "tabulator characters", also called "tabs" (normally
code point ASCII '0x09' or EBCDIC '0x05'), in the input into movements
to the next tabulator stop.  These tab stops are initially located every
half inch across the page.  Using this, simple tables can be made
easily.  However, it can often be deceptive as the appearance (and
width) of the text on a terminal and the results from 'gtroff' can vary
greatly.

   Also, a possible sticking point is that lines beginning with tab
characters are still filled, again producing unexpected results.  For
example, the following input

           1          2          3
                      4          5

produces

           1          2          3                     4          5

   *Note Tabs and Fields::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Implicit Line Breaks,  Next: Input Conventions,  Prev: Tab Stops,  Up: Text

5.1.5 Implicit Line Breaks
--------------------------

An important concept in 'gtroff' is the "break".  When a break occurs,
'gtroff' outputs the partially filled line (unjustified), and resumes
collecting and filling text on the next output line.

   There are several ways to cause a break in 'gtroff'.  A blank line
not only causes a break, but it also outputs a one-line vertical space
(effectively a blank line).  Note that this behaviour can be modified
with the blank line macro request 'blm'.  *Note Blank Line Traps::.

   A line that begins with a space causes a break and the space is
output at the beginning of the next line.  Note that this space isn't
adjusted, even in fill mode; however, the behaviour can be modified with
the leading spaces macro request 'lsm'.  *Note Leading Spaces Traps::.

   The end of file also causes a break - otherwise the last line of the
document may vanish!

   Certain requests also cause breaks, implicitly or explicitly.  This
is discussed in *note Manipulating Filling and Adjusting::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Input Conventions,  Next: Input Encodings,  Prev: Implicit Line Breaks,  Up: Text

5.1.6 Input Conventions
-----------------------

Since 'gtroff' does filling automatically, it is traditional in 'groff'
not to try and type things in as nicely formatted paragraphs.  These are
some conventions commonly used when typing 'gtroff' text:

   * Break lines after punctuation, particularly at the end of a
     sentence and in other logical places.  Keep separate phrases on
     lines by themselves, as entire phrases are often added or deleted
     when editing.

   * Try to keep lines less than 40-60 characters, to allow space for
     inserting more text.

   * Do not try to do any formatting in a WYSIWYG manner (i.e., don't
     try using spaces to get proper indentation).


File: groff.info,  Node: Input Encodings,  Prev: Input Conventions,  Up: Text

5.1.7 Input Encodings
---------------------

Currently, the following input encodings are available.

cp1047
     This input encoding works only on EBCDIC platforms (and vice versa,
     the other input encodings don't work with EBCDIC); the file
     'cp1047.tmac' is by default loaded at start-up.

latin-1
     This is the default input encoding on non-EBCDIC platforms; the
     file 'latin1.tmac' is loaded at start-up.

latin-2
     To use this encoding, either say '.mso latin2.tmac' at the very
     beginning of your document or use '-mlatin2' as a command-line
     argument for 'groff'.

latin-5
     For Turkish.  Either say '.mso latin5.tmac' at the very beginning
     of your document or use '-mlatin5' as a command-line argument for
     'groff'.

latin-9 (latin-0)
     This encoding is intended (at least in Europe) to replace latin-1
     encoding.  The main difference to latin-1 is that latin-9 contains
     the Euro character.  To use this encoding, either say
     '.mso latin9.tmac' at the very beginning of your document or use
     '-mlatin9' as a command-line argument for 'groff'.

   Note that it can happen that some input encoding characters are not
available for a particular output device.  For example, saying

     groff -Tlatin1 -mlatin9 ...

fails if you use the Euro character in the input.  Usually, this
limitation is present only for devices that have a limited set of output
glyphs (e.g. '-Tascii' and '-Tlatin1'); for other devices it is usually
sufficient to install proper fonts that contain the necessary glyphs.

   Due to the importance of the Euro glyph in Europe, the groff package
now comes with a POSTSCRIPT font called 'freeeuro.pfa', which provides
various glyph shapes for the Euro.  In other words, latin-9 encoding is
supported for the '-Tps' device out of the box (latin-2 isn't).

   By its very nature, '-Tutf8' supports all input encodings; '-Tdvi'
has support for both latin-2 and latin-9 if the command-line '-mec' is
used also to load the file 'ec.tmac' (which flips to the EC fonts).


File: groff.info,  Node: Measurements,  Next: Expressions,  Prev: Text,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.2 Measurements
================

'gtroff' (like many other programs) requires numeric parameters to
specify various measurements.  Most numeric parameters(1) (*note
Measurements-Footnote-1::) may have a "measurement unit" attached.
These units are specified as a single character that immediately follows
the number or expression.  Each of these units are understood, by
'gtroff', to be a multiple of its "basic unit".  So, whenever a
different measurement unit is specified 'gtroff' converts this into its
"basic units".  This basic unit, represented by a 'u', is a device
dependent measurement, which is quite small, ranging from 1/75th to
1/72000th of an inch.  The values may be given as fractional numbers;
however, fractional basic units are always rounded to integers.

   Some of the measurement units are completely independent of any of
the current settings (e.g. type size) of 'gtroff'.

   Although groff's basic unit is device-dependent, it may still be
smaller than the smallest unit the device is capable of producing.  The
register '.H' specifies how many groff basic units constitute the
current device's basic unit horizontally, and the register '.V'
specifies this value vertically.

'i'
     Inches.  An antiquated measurement unit still in use in certain
     backwards countries with incredibly low-cost computer equipment.
     One inch is defined to be 2.54 cm (worldwide since 1964).

'c'
     Centimeters.  One centimeter is about 0.3937 in.

'p'
     Points.  This is a typesetter's measurement used for measure type
     size.  It is 72 points to an inch.

'P'
     Pica.  Another typesetting measurement.  6 picas to an inch (and
     12 points to a pica).

's'
'z'
     *Note Fractional Type Sizes::, for a discussion of these units.

'f'
     Fractions.  Value is 65536.  *Note Colors::, for usage.

   The other measurements understood by 'gtroff' depend on settings
currently in effect in 'gtroff'.  These are very useful for specifying
measurements that should look proper with any size of text.

'm'
     Ems.  This unit is equal to the current font size in points.  So
     called because it is _approximately_ the width of the letter 'm' in
     the current font.

'n'
     Ens.  In 'groff', this is half of an em.

'v'
     Vertical space.  This is equivalent to the current line spacing.
     *Note Sizes::, for more information about this.

'M'
     100ths of an em.

* Menu:

* Default Units::


File: groff.info,  Node: Measurements-Footnotes,  Up: Measurements

   (1) those that specify vertical or horizontal motion or a type size


File: groff.info,  Node: Default Units,  Prev: Measurements,  Up: Measurements

5.2.1 Default Units
-------------------

Many requests take a default unit.  While this can be helpful at times,
it can cause strange errors in some expressions.  For example, the line
length request expects em units.  Here are several attempts to get a
line length of 3.5 inches and their results:

     3.5i      =>   3.5i
     7/2       =>   0i
     7/2i      =>   0i
     (7 / 2)u  =>   0i
     7i/2      =>   0.1i
     7i/2u     =>   3.5i

Everything is converted to basic units first.  In the above example it
is assumed that 1i equals 240u, and 1m equals 10p (thus 1m equals 33u).
The value 7i/2 is first handled as 7i/2m, then converted to 1680u/66u,
which is 25u, and this is approximately 0.1i.  As can be seen, a scaling
indicator after a closing parenthesis is simply ignored.

   Thus, the safest way to specify measurements is to always attach a
scaling indicator.  If you want to multiply or divide by a certain
scalar value, use 'u' as the unit for that value.


File: groff.info,  Node: Expressions,  Next: Identifiers,  Prev: Measurements,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.3 Expressions
===============

'gtroff' has most arithmetic operators common to other languages:

   * Arithmetic: '+' (addition), '-' (subtraction), '/' (division), '*'
     (multiplication), '%' (modulo).

     'gtroff' only provides integer arithmetic.  The internal type used
     for computing results is 'int', which is usually a 32-bit signed
     integer.

   * Comparison: '<' (less than), '>' (greater than), '<=' (less than or
     equal), '>=' (greater than or equal), '=' (equal), '==' (the same
     as '=').

   * Logical: '&' (logical and), ':' (logical or).

   * Unary operators: '-' (negating, i.e. changing the sign), '+' (just
     for completeness; does nothing in expressions), '!' (logical not;
     this works only within 'if' and 'while' requests).(1)  (*note
     Expressions-Footnote-1::) See below for the use of unary operators
     in motion requests.

     The logical not operator, as described above, works only within
     'if' and 'while' requests.  Furthermore, it may appear only at the
     beginning of an expression, and negates the entire expression.
     Attempting to insert the '!' operator within the expression results
     in a 'numeric expression expected' warning.  This maintains
     compatibility with old versions of 'troff'.

     Example:

          .nr X 1
          .nr Y 0
          .\" This does not work as expected
          .if (\n[X])&(!\n[Y]) .nop X only
          .
          .\" Use this construct instead
          .if (\n[X]=1)&(\n[Y]=0) .nop X only

   * Extrema: '>?' (maximum), '<?' (minimum).

     Example:

          .nr x 5
          .nr y 3
          .nr z (\n[x] >? \n[y])

     The register 'z' now contains 5.

   * Scaling: '(C;E)'.  Evaluate E using C as the default scaling
     indicator.  If C is missing, ignore scaling indicators in the
     evaluation of E.

   Parentheses may be used as in any other language.  However, in
'gtroff' they are necessary to ensure order of evaluation.  'gtroff' has
no operator precedence; expressions are evaluated left to right.  This
means that 'gtroff' evaluates '3+5*4' as if it were parenthesized like
'(3+5)*4', not as '3+(5*4)', as might be expected.

   For many requests that cause a motion on the page, the unary
operators '+' and '-' work differently if leading an expression.  They
then indicate a motion relative to the current position (down or up,
respectively).

   Similarly, a leading '|' operator indicates an absolute position.
For vertical movements, it specifies the distance from the top of the
page; for horizontal movements, it gives the distance from the beginning
of the _input_ line.

   '+' and '-' are also treated differently by the following requests
and escapes: 'bp', 'in', 'll', 'lt', 'nm', 'nr', 'pl', 'pn', 'po', 'ps',
'pvs', 'rt', 'ti', '\H', '\R', and '\s'.  Here, leading plus and minus
signs indicate increments and decrements.

   *Note Setting Registers::, for some examples.

 -- Escape: \B'anything'
     Return 1 if ANYTHING is a valid numeric expression; or 0 if
     ANYTHING is empty or not a valid numeric expression.

   Due to the way arguments are parsed, spaces are not allowed in
expressions, unless the entire expression is surrounded by parentheses.

   *Note Request and Macro Arguments::, and *note Conditionals and
Loops::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Expressions-Footnotes,  Up: Expressions

   (1) Note that, for example, '!(-1)' evaluates to 'true' because
'gtroff' treats both negative numbers and zero as 'false'.


File: groff.info,  Node: Identifiers,  Next: Embedded Commands,  Prev: Expressions,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.4 Identifiers
===============

Like any other language, 'gtroff' has rules for properly formed
"identifiers".  In 'gtroff', an identifier can be made up of almost any
printable character, with the exception of the following characters:

   * Whitespace characters (spaces, tabs, and newlines).

   * Backspace (ASCII '0x08' or EBCDIC '0x16') and character code
     '0x01'.

   * The following input characters are invalid and are ignored if
     'groff' runs on a machine based on ASCII, causing a warning message
     of type 'input' (see *note Debugging::, for more details): '0x00',
     '0x0B', '0x0D'-'0x1F', '0x80'-'0x9F'.

     And here are the invalid input characters if 'groff' runs on an
     EBCDIC host: '0x00', '0x08', '0x09', '0x0B', '0x0D'-'0x14',
     '0x17'-'0x1F', '0x30'-'0x3F'.

     Currently, some of these reserved codepoints are used internally,
     thus making it non-trivial to extend 'gtroff' to cover Unicode or
     other character sets and encodings that use characters of these
     ranges.

     Note that invalid characters are removed before parsing; an
     identifier 'foo', followed by an invalid character, followed by
     'bar' is treated as 'foobar'.

   For example, any of the following is valid.

     br
     PP
     (l
     end-list
     @_

Note that identifiers longer than two characters with a closing bracket
(']') in its name can't be accessed with escape sequences that expect an
identifier as a parameter.  For example, '\[foo]]' accesses the glyph
'foo', followed by ']', whereas '\C'foo]'' really asks for glyph 'foo]'.

   To avoid problems with the 'refer' preprocessor, macro names should
not start with '[' or ']'.  Due to backwards compatibility, everything
after '.[' and '.]' is handled as a special argument to 'refer'.  For
example, '.[foo' makes 'refer' to start a reference, using 'foo' as a
parameter.

 -- Escape: \A'ident'
     Test whether an identifier IDENT is valid in 'gtroff'.  It expands
     to the character 1 or 0 according to whether its argument (usually
     delimited by quotes) is or is not acceptable as the name of a
     string, macro, diversion, number register, environment, or font.
     It returns 0 if no argument is given.  This is useful for looking
     up user input in some sort of associative table.

          \A'end-list'
              => 1

   *Note Escapes::, for details on parameter delimiting characters.

   Identifiers in 'gtroff' can be any length, but, in some contexts,
'gtroff' needs to be told where identifiers end and text begins (and in
different ways depending on their length):

   * Single character.

   * Two characters.  Must be prefixed with '(' in some situations.

   * Arbitrary length ('gtroff' only).  Must be bracketed with '['
     and ']' in some situations.  Any length identifier can be put in
     brackets.

   Unlike many other programming languages, undefined identifiers are
silently ignored or expanded to nothing.  When 'gtroff' finds an
undefined identifier, it emits a warning, doing the following:

   * If the identifier is a string, macro, or diversion, 'gtroff'
     defines it as empty.

   * If the identifier is a number register, 'gtroff' defines it with a
     value of 0.

   *Note Warnings::., *note Interpolating Registers::, and *note
Strings::.

   Note that macros, strings, and diversions share the same name space.

     .de xxx
     .  nop foo
     ..
     .
     .di xxx
     bar
     .br
     .di
     .
     .xxx
         => bar

As can be seen in the previous example, 'gtroff' reuses the identifier
'xxx', changing it from a macro to a diversion.  No warning is emitted!
The contents of the first macro definition is lost.

   *Note Interpolating Registers::, and *note Strings::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Embedded Commands,  Next: Registers,  Prev: Identifiers,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.5 Embedded Commands
=====================

Most documents need more functionality beyond filling, adjusting and
implicit line breaking.  In order to gain further functionality,
'gtroff' allows commands to be embedded into the text, in two ways.

   The first is a "request" that takes up an entire line, and does some
large-scale operation (e.g. break lines, start new pages).

   The other is an "escape" that can be usually embedded anywhere in the
text; most requests can accept it even as an argument.  Escapes
generally do more minor operations like sub- and superscripts, print a
symbol, etc.

* Menu:

* Requests::
* Macros::
* Escapes::


File: groff.info,  Node: Requests,  Next: Macros,  Prev: Embedded Commands,  Up: Embedded Commands

5.5.1 Requests
--------------

A request line begins with a control character, which is either a single
quote (''', the "no-break control character") or a period ('.', the
normal "control character").  These can be changed; see *note Character
Translations::, for details.  After this there may be optional tabs or
spaces followed by an identifier, which is the name of the request.
This may be followed by any number of space-separated arguments (_no_
tabs here).

   Since a control character followed by whitespace only is ignored, it
is common practice to use this feature for structuring the source code
of documents or macro packages.

     .de foo
     .  tm This is foo.
     ..
     .
     .
     .de bar
     .  tm This is bar.
     ..

   Another possibility is to use the blank line macro request 'blm' by
assigning an empty macro to it.

     .de do-nothing
     ..
     .blm do-nothing  \" activate blank line macro

     .de foo
     .  tm This is foo.
     ..


     .de bar
     .  tm This is bar.
     ..

     .blm             \" deactivate blank line macro

   *Note Blank Line Traps::.

   To begin a line with a control character without it being
interpreted, precede it with '\&'.  This represents a zero width space,
which means it does not affect the output.

   In most cases the period is used as a control character.  Several
requests cause a break implicitly; using the single quote control
character prevents this.

 -- Register: \n[.br]
     A read-only number register, which is set to 1 if a macro is called
     with the normal control character (as defined with the 'cc'
     request), and set to 0 otherwise.

     This allows reliable modification of requests.

          .als bp*orig bp
          .de bp
          .  tm before bp
          .  ie \\n[.br] .bp*orig
          .  el 'bp*orig
          .  tm after bp
          ..

     Using this register outside of a macro makes no sense (it always
     returns zero in such cases).

     If a macro is called as a string (that is, using '\*'), the value
     of the '.br' register is inherited from the caller.

* Menu:

* Request and Macro Arguments::


File: groff.info,  Node: Request and Macro Arguments,  Prev: Requests,  Up: Requests

5.5.1.1 Request and Macro Arguments
...................................

Arguments to requests and macros are processed much like the shell: The
line is split into arguments according to spaces.(1)  (*note Request and
Macro Arguments-Footnote-1::)

   An argument to a macro that is intended to contain spaces can either
be enclosed in double quotes, or have the spaces "escaped" with
backslashes.  This is _not_ true for requests.

   Here are a few examples for a hypothetical macro 'uh':

     .uh The Mouse Problem
     .uh "The Mouse Problem"
     .uh The\ Mouse\ Problem

The first line is the 'uh' macro being called with 3 arguments, 'The',
'Mouse', and 'Problem'.  The latter two have the same effect of calling
the 'uh' macro with one argument, 'The Mouse Problem'.(2)  (*note
Request and Macro Arguments-Footnote-2::)

   A double quote that isn't preceded by a space doesn't start a macro
argument.  If not closing a string, it is printed literally.

   For example,

     .xxx a" "b c" "de"fg"

has the arguments 'a"', 'b c', 'de', and 'fg"'.  Don't rely on this
obscure behaviour!

   There are two possibilities to get a double quote reliably.

   * Enclose the whole argument with double quotes and use two
     consecutive double quotes to represent a single one.  This
     traditional solution has the disadvantage that double quotes don't
     survive argument expansion again if called in compatibility mode
     (using the '-C' option of 'groff'):

          .de xx
          .  tm xx: `\\$1' `\\$2' `\\$3'
          .
          .  yy "\\$1" "\\$2" "\\$3"
          ..
          .de yy
          .  tm yy: `\\$1' `\\$2' `\\$3'
          ..
          .xx A "test with ""quotes""" .
              => xx: `A' `test with "quotes"' `.'
              => yy: `A' `test with ' `quotes""'

     If not in compatibility mode, you get the expected result

          xx: `A' `test with "quotes"' `.'
          yy: `A' `test with "quotes"' `.'

     since 'gtroff' preserves the input level.

   * Use the double quote glyph '\(dq'.  This works with and without
     compatibility mode enabled since 'gtroff' doesn't convert '\(dq'
     back to a double quote input character.

     Note that this method won't work with Unix 'troff' in general since
     the glyph 'dq' isn't defined normally.

   Double quotes in the 'ds' request are handled differently.  *Note
Strings::, for more details.


File: groff.info,  Node: Request and Macro Arguments-Footnotes,  Up: Request and Macro Arguments

   (1) Plan 9's 'troff' implementation also allows tabs for argument
separation - 'gtroff' intentionally doesn't support this.

   (2) The last solution, i.e., using escaped spaces, is "classical" in
the sense that it can be found in most 'troff' documents.  Nevertheless,
it is not optimal in all situations, since '\ ' inserts a fixed-width,
non-breaking space character that can't stretch.  'gtroff' provides a
different command '\~' to insert a stretchable, non-breaking space.


File: groff.info,  Node: Macros,  Next: Escapes,  Prev: Requests,  Up: Embedded Commands

5.5.2 Macros
------------

'gtroff' has a "macro" facility for defining a series of lines that can
be invoked by name.  They are called in the same manner as requests -
arguments also may be passed basically in the same manner.

   *Note Writing Macros::, and *note Request and Macro Arguments::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Escapes,  Prev: Macros,  Up: Embedded Commands

5.5.3 Escapes
-------------

Escapes may occur anywhere in the input to 'gtroff'.  They usually begin
with a backslash and are followed by a single character, which indicates
the function to be performed.  The escape character can be changed; see
*note Character Translations::.

   Escape sequences that require an identifier as a parameter accept
three possible syntax forms.

   * The next single character is the identifier.

   * If this single character is an opening parenthesis, take the
     following two characters as the identifier.  Note that there is no
     closing parenthesis after the identifier.

   * If this single character is an opening bracket, take all characters
     until a closing bracket as the identifier.

Examples:

     \fB
     \n(XX
     \*[TeX]

   Other escapes may require several arguments and/or some special
format.  In such cases the argument is traditionally enclosed in single
quotes (and quotes are always used in this manual for the definitions of
escape sequences).  The enclosed text is then processed according to
what that escape expects.  Example:

     \l'1.5i\(bu'

   Note that the quote character can be replaced with any other
character that does not occur in the argument (even a newline or a space
character) in the following escapes: '\o', '\b', and '\X'.  This makes
e.g.

     A caf
     \o
     e\'


     in Paris
       => A café in Paris

possible, but it is better not to use this feature to avoid confusion.

   The following escape sequences (which are handled similarly to
characters since they don't take a parameter) are also allowed as
delimiters: '\%', '\ ', '\|', '\^', '\{', '\}', '\'', '\`', '\-', '\_',
'\!', '\?', '\)', '\/', '\,', '\&', '\:', '\~', '\0', '\a', '\c', '\d',
'\e', '\E', '\p', '\r', '\t', and '\u'.  Again, don't use these if
possible.

   No newline characters as delimiters are allowed in the following
escapes: '\A', '\B', '\Z', '\C', and '\w'.

   Finally, the escapes '\D', '\h', '\H', '\l', '\L', '\N', '\R', '\s',
'\S', '\v', and '\x' can't use the following characters as delimiters:

   * The digits '0'-'9'.

   * The (single-character) operators '+-/*%<>=&:().'.

   * The space, tab, and newline characters.

   * All escape sequences except '\%', '\:', '\{', '\}', '\'', '\`',
     '\-', '\_', '\!', '\/', '\c', '\e', and '\p'.

   To have a backslash (actually, the current escape character) appear
in the output several escapes are defined: '\\', '\e' or '\E'.  These
are very similar, and only differ with respect to being used in macros
or diversions.  *Note Character Translations::, for an exact description
of those escapes.

   *Note Implementation Differences::, *note Copy-in Mode::, and *note
Diversions::, *note Identifiers::, for more information.

* Menu:

* Comments::


File: groff.info,  Node: Comments,  Prev: Escapes,  Up: Escapes

5.5.3.1 Comments
................

Probably one of the most(1) (*note Comments-Footnote-1::) common forms
of escapes is the comment.

 -- Escape: \"
     Start a comment.  Everything to the end of the input line is
     ignored.

     This may sound simple, but it can be tricky to keep the comments
     from interfering with the appearance of the final output.

     If the escape is to the right of some text or a request, that
     portion of the line is ignored, but the space leading up to it is
     noticed by 'gtroff'.  This only affects the 'ds' and 'as' request
     and its variants.

     One possibly irritating idiosyncracy is that tabs must not be used
     to line up comments.  Tabs are not treated as whitespace between
     the request and macro arguments.

     A comment on a line by itself is treated as a blank line, because
     after eliminating the comment, that is all that remains:

          Test
          \" comment
          Test

     produces

          Test

          Test

     To avoid this, it is common to start the line with '.\"', which
     causes the line to be treated as an undefined request and thus
     ignored completely.

     Another commenting scheme seen sometimes is three consecutive
     single quotes (''''') at the beginning of a line.  This works, but
     'gtroff' gives a warning about an undefined macro (namely ''''),
     which is harmless, but irritating.

 -- Escape: \#
     To avoid all this, 'gtroff' has a new comment mechanism using the
     '\#' escape.  This escape works the same as '\"' except that the
     newline is also ignored:

          Test
          \# comment
          Test

     produces

          Test Test

     as expected.

 -- Request: .ig [end]
     Ignore all input until 'gtroff' encounters the macro named '.'END
     on a line by itself (or '..' if END is not specified).  This is
     useful for commenting out large blocks of text:

          text text text...
          .ig
          This is part of a large block
          of text that has been
          temporarily(?) commented out.

          We can restore it simply by removing
          the .ig request and the ".." at the
          end of the block.
          ..
          More text text text...

     produces

          text text text...  More text text text...

     Note that the commented-out block of text does not cause a break.

     The input is read in copy-mode; auto-incremented registers _are_
     affected (*note Auto-increment::).


File: groff.info,  Node: Comments-Footnotes,  Up: Comments

   (1) Unfortunately, this is a lie.  But hopefully future 'gtroff'
hackers will believe it ':-)'


File: groff.info,  Node: Registers,  Next: Manipulating Filling and Adjusting,  Prev: Embedded Commands,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.6 Registers
=============

Numeric variables in 'gtroff' are called "registers".  There are a
number of built-in registers, supplying anything from the date to
details of formatting parameters.

   *Note Identifiers::, for details on register identifiers.

* Menu:

* Setting Registers::
* Interpolating Registers::
* Auto-increment::
* Assigning Formats::
* Built-in Registers::


File: groff.info,  Node: Setting Registers,  Next: Interpolating Registers,  Prev: Registers,  Up: Registers

5.6.1 Setting Registers
-----------------------

Define or set registers using the 'nr' request or the '\R' escape.

   Although the following requests and escapes can be used to create
registers, simply using an undefined register will cause it to be set to
zero.

 -- Request: .nr ident value
 -- Escape: \R'ident value'
     Set number register IDENT to VALUE.  If IDENT doesn't exist,
     'gtroff' creates it.

     The argument to '\R' usually has to be enclosed in quotes.  *Note
     Escapes::, for details on parameter delimiting characters.

     The '\R' escape doesn't produce an input token in 'gtroff'; in
     other words, it vanishes completely after 'gtroff' has processed
     it.

     For example, the following two lines are equivalent:

          .nr a (((17 + (3 * 4))) % 4)
          \R'a (((17 + (3 * 4))) % 4)'
              => 1

     Note that the complete transparency of '\R' can cause surprising
     effects if you use number registers like '.k', which get evaluated
     at the time they are accessed.

          .ll 1.6i
          .
          aaa bbb ccc ddd eee fff ggg hhh\R':k \n[.k]'
          .tm :k == \n[:k]
              => :k == 126950
          .
          .br
          .
          aaa bbb ccc ddd eee fff ggg hhh\h'0'\R':k \n[.k]'
          .tm :k == \n[:k]
              => :k == 15000

     If you process this with the POSTSCRIPT device ('-Tps'), there will
     be a line break eventually after 'ggg' in both input lines.
     However, after processing the space after 'ggg', the partially
     collected line is not overfull yet, so 'troff' continues to collect
     input until it sees the space (or in this case, the newline) after
     'hhh'.  At this point, the line is longer than the line length, and
     the line gets broken.

     In the first input line, since the '\R' escape leaves no traces,
     the check for the overfull line hasn't been done yet at the point
     where '\R' gets handled, and you get a value for the '.k' number
     register that is even greater than the current line length.

     In the second input line, the insertion of '\h'0'' to emit an
     invisible zero-width space forces 'troff' to check the line length,
     which in turn causes the start of a new output line.  Now '.k'
     returns the expected value.

   Both 'nr' and '\R' have two additional special forms to increment or
decrement a register.

 -- Request: .nr ident +value
 -- Request: .nr ident -value
 -- Escape: \R'ident +value'
 -- Escape: \R'ident -value'
     Increment (decrement) register IDENT by VALUE.

          .nr a 1
          .nr a +1
          \na
              => 2

     To assign the negated value of a register to another register, some
     care must be taken to get the desired result:

          .nr a 7
          .nr b 3
          .nr a -\nb
          \na
              => 4
          .nr a (-\nb)
          \na
              => -3

     The surrounding parentheses prevent the interpretation of the minus
     sign as a decrementing operator.  An alternative is to start the
     assignment with a '0':

          .nr a 7
          .nr b -3
          .nr a \nb
          \na
              => 4
          .nr a 0\nb
          \na
              => -3

 -- Request: .rr ident
     Remove number register IDENT.  If IDENT doesn't exist, the request
     is ignored.

 -- Request: .rnn ident1 ident2
     Rename number register IDENT1 to IDENT2.  If either IDENT1 or
     IDENT2 doesn't exist, the request is ignored.

 -- Request: .aln ident1 ident2
     Create an alias IDENT1 for a number register IDENT2.  The new name
     and the old name are exactly equivalent.  If IDENT1 is undefined, a
     warning of type 'reg' is generated, and the request is ignored.
     *Note Debugging::, for information about warnings.


File: groff.info,  Node: Interpolating Registers,  Next: Auto-increment,  Prev: Setting Registers,  Up: Registers

5.6.2 Interpolating Registers
-----------------------------

Numeric registers can be accessed via the '\n' escape.

 -- Escape: \ni
 -- Escape: \n(id
 -- Escape: \n[ident]
     Interpolate number register with name IDENT (one-character name I,
     two-character name ID).  This means that the value of the register
     is expanded in-place while 'gtroff' is parsing the input line.
     Nested assignments (also called indirect assignments) are possible.

          .nr a 5
          .nr as \na+\na
          \n(as
              => 10

          .nr a1 5
          .nr ab 6
          .ds str b
          .ds num 1
          \n[a\n[num]]
              => 5
          \n[a\*[str]]
              => 6


File: groff.info,  Node: Auto-increment,  Next: Assigning Formats,  Prev: Interpolating Registers,  Up: Registers

5.6.3 Auto-increment
--------------------

Number registers can also be auto-incremented and auto-decremented.  The
increment or decrement value can be specified with a third argument to
the 'nr' request or '\R' escape.

 -- Request: .nr ident value incr
     Set number register IDENT to VALUE; the increment for
     auto-incrementing is set to INCR.  Note that the '\R' escape
     doesn't support this notation.

   To activate auto-incrementing, the escape '\n' has a special syntax
form.

 -- Escape: \n+i
 -- Escape: \n-i
 -- Escape: \n+(id
 -- Escape: \n-(id
 -- Escape: \n+[ident]
 -- Escape: \n-[ident]
     Before interpolating, increment or decrement IDENT (one-character
     name I, two-character name ID) by the auto-increment value as
     specified with the 'nr' request (or the '\R' escape).  If no
     auto-increment value has been specified, these syntax forms are
     identical to '\n'.

   For example,

     .nr a 0 1
     .nr xx 0 5
     .nr foo 0 -2
     \n+a, \n+a, \n+a, \n+a, \n+a
     .br
     \n-(xx, \n-(xx, \n-(xx, \n-(xx, \n-(xx
     .br
     \n+[foo], \n+[foo], \n+[foo], \n+[foo], \n+[foo]

produces

     1, 2, 3, 4, 5
     -5, -10, -15, -20, -25
     -2, -4, -6, -8, -10

   To change the increment value without changing the value of a
register (A in the example), the following can be used:

     .nr a \na 10


File: groff.info,  Node: Assigning Formats,  Next: Built-in Registers,  Prev: Auto-increment,  Up: Registers

5.6.4 Assigning Formats
-----------------------

When a register is used, it is always textually replaced (or
interpolated) with a representation of that number.  This output format
can be changed to a variety of formats (numbers, Roman numerals, etc.).
This is done using the 'af' request.

 -- Request: .af ident format
     Change the output format of a number register.  The first argument
     IDENT is the name of the number register to be changed, and the
     second argument FORMAT is the output format.  The following output
     formats are available:

     '1'
          Decimal arabic numbers.  This is the default format: 0, 1, 2,
          3, ...

     '0...0'
          Decimal numbers with as many digits as specified.  So, '00'
          would result in printing numbers as 01, 02, 03, ...

          In fact, any digit instead of zero does work; 'gtroff' only
          counts how many digits are specified.  As a consequence,
          'af''s default format '1' could be specified as '0' also (and
          exactly this is returned by the '\g' escape, see below).

     'I'
          Upper-case Roman numerals: 0, I, II, III, IV, ...

     'i'
          Lower-case Roman numerals: 0, i, ii, iii, iv, ...

     'A'
          Upper-case letters: 0, A, B, C, ..., Z, AA, AB, ...

     'a'
          Lower-case letters: 0, a, b, c, ..., z, aa, ab, ...

     Omitting the number register format causes a warning of type
     'missing'.  *Note Debugging::, for more details.  Specifying a
     nonexistent format causes an error.

     The following example produces '10, X, j, 010':

          .nr a 10
          .af a 1           \" the default format
          \na,
          .af a I
          \na,
          .af a a
          \na,
          .af a 001
          \na

     The largest number representable for the 'i' and 'I' formats is
     39999 (or -39999); Unix 'troff' uses 'z' and 'w' to represent 10000
     and 5000 in Roman numerals, and so does 'gtroff'.  Currently, the
     correct glyphs of Roman numeral five thousand and Roman numeral ten
     thousand (Unicode code points 'U+2182' and 'U+2181', respectively)
     are not available.

     If IDENT doesn't exist, it is created.

     Changing the output format of a read-only register causes an error.
     It is necessary to first copy the register's value to a writeable
     register, then apply the 'af' request to this other register.

 -- Escape: \gi
 -- Escape: \g(id
 -- Escape: \g[ident]
     Return the current format of the specified register IDENT
     (one-character name I, two-character name ID).  For example, '\ga'
     after the previous example would produce the string '000'.  If the
     register hasn't been defined yet, nothing is returned.


File: groff.info,  Node: Built-in Registers,  Prev: Assigning Formats,  Up: Registers

5.6.5 Built-in Registers
------------------------

The following lists some built-in registers that are not described
elsewhere in this manual.  Any register that begins with a '.' is
read-only.  A complete listing of all built-in registers can be found in
*note Register Index::.

'\n[.F]'
     This string-valued register returns the current input file name.

'\n[.H]'
     Number of basic units per horizontal unit of output device
     resolution.  *Note Measurements::.

'\n[.R]'
     The number of number registers available.  This is always 10000 in
     GNU 'troff'; it exists for backward compatibility.

'\n[.U]'
     If 'gtroff' is called with the '-U' command-line option to activate
     unsafe mode, the number register '.U' is set to 1, and to zero
     otherwise.  *Note Groff Options::.

'\n[.V]'
     Number of basic units per vertical unit of output device
     resolution.  *Note Measurements::.

'\n[seconds]'
     The number of seconds after the minute, normally in the range 0
     to 59, but can be up to 61 to allow for leap seconds.  Initialized
     at start-up of 'gtroff'.

'\n[minutes]'
     The number of minutes after the hour, in the range 0 to 59.
     Initialized at start-up of 'gtroff'.

'\n[hours]'
     The number of hours past midnight, in the range 0 to 23.
     Initialized at start-up of 'gtroff'.

'\n[dw]'
     Day of the week (1-7).

'\n[dy]'
     Day of the month (1-31).

'\n[mo]'
     Current month (1-12).

'\n[year]'
     The current year.

'\n[yr]'
     The current year minus 1900.  Unfortunately, the documentation of
     Unix Version 7's 'troff' had a year 2000 bug: It incorrectly
     claimed that 'yr' contains the last two digits of the year.  That
     claim has never been true of either AT&T 'troff' or GNU 'troff'.
     Old 'troff' input that looks like this:

          '\" The following line stopped working after 1999
          This document was formatted in 19\n(yr.

     can be corrected as follows:

          This document was formatted in \n[year].

     or, to be portable to older 'troff' versions, as follows:

          .nr y4 1900+\n(yr
          This document was formatted in \n(y4.

'\n[.c]'
'\n[c.]'
     The current _input_ line number.  Register '.c' is read-only,
     whereas 'c.' (a 'gtroff' extension) is writable also, affecting
     both '.c' and 'c.'.

'\n[ln]'
     The current _output_ line number after a call to the 'nm' request
     to activate line numbering.

     *Note Miscellaneous::, for more information about line numbering.

'\n[.x]'
     The major version number.  For example, if the version number is
     1.03 then '.x' contains '1'.

'\n[.y]'
     The minor version number.  For example, if the version number is
     1.03 then '.y' contains '03'.

'\n[.Y]'
     The revision number of 'groff'.

'\n[$$]'
     The process ID of 'gtroff'.

'\n[.g]'
     Always 1.  Macros should use this to determine whether they are
     running under GNU 'troff'.

'\n[.A]'
     If the command-line option '-a' is used to produce an ASCII
     approximation of the output, this is set to 1, zero otherwise.
     *Note Groff Options::.

'\n[.O]'
     This read-only register is set to the suppression nesting level
     (see escapes '\O').  *Note Suppressing output::.

'\n[.P]'
     This register is set to 1 (and to 0 otherwise) if the current page
     is actually being printed, i.e., if the '-o' option is being used
     to only print selected pages.  *Note Groff Options::, for more
     information.

'\n[.T]'
     If 'gtroff' is called with the '-T' command-line option, the number
     register '.T' is set to 1, and zero otherwise.  *Note Groff
     Options::.

'\*[.T]'
     A single read-write string register that contains the current
     output device (for example, 'latin1' or 'ps').  This is the only
     string register defined by 'gtroff'.


File: groff.info,  Node: Manipulating Filling and Adjusting,  Next: Manipulating Hyphenation,  Prev: Registers,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.7 Manipulating Filling and Adjusting
======================================

Various ways of causing "breaks" were given in *note Implicit Line
Breaks::.  The 'br' request likewise causes a break.  Several other
requests also cause breaks, but implicitly.  These are 'bp', 'ce', 'cf',
'fi', 'fl', 'in', 'nf', 'rj', 'sp', 'ti', and 'trf'.

 -- Request: .br
     Break the current line, i.e., the input collected so far is emitted
     without adjustment.

     If the no-break control character is used, 'gtroff' suppresses the
     break:

          a
          'br
          b
              => a b

   Initially, 'gtroff' fills and adjusts text to both margins.  Filling
can be disabled via the 'nf' request and re-enabled with the 'fi'
request.

 -- Request: .fi
 -- Register: \n[.u]
     Activate fill mode (which is the default).  This request implicitly
     enables adjusting; it also inserts a break in the text currently
     being filled.  The read-only number register '.u' is set to 1.

     The fill mode status is associated with the current environment
     (*note Environments::).

     See *note Line Control::, for interaction with the '\c' escape.

 -- Request: .nf
     Activate no-fill mode.  Input lines are output as-is, retaining
     line breaks and ignoring the current line length.  This command
     implicitly disables adjusting; it also causes a break.  The number
     register '.u' is set to 0.

     The fill mode status is associated with the current environment
     (*note Environments::).

     See *note Line Control::, for interaction with the '\c' escape.

 -- Request: .ad [mode]
 -- Register: \n[.j]
     Set adjusting mode.

     Activation and deactivation of adjusting is done implicitly with
     calls to the 'fi' or 'nf' requests.

     MODE can have one of the following values:

     'l'
          Adjust text to the left margin.  This produces what is
          traditionally called ragged-right text.

     'r'
          Adjust text to the right margin, producing ragged-left text.

     'c'
          Center filled text.  This is different to the 'ce' request,
          which only centers text without filling.

     'b'
     'n'
          Justify to both margins.  This is the default used by
          'gtroff'.

     Finally, MODE can be the numeric argument returned by the '.j'
     register.

     Using 'ad' without argument is the same as saying '.ad \[.j]'.  In
     particular, 'gtroff' adjusts lines in the same way it did before
     adjusting was deactivated (with a call to 'na', say).  For example,
     this input code

          .de AD
          .  br
          .  ad \\$1
          ..
          .
          .de NA
          .  br
          .  na
          ..
          .
          textA
          .AD r
          .nr ad \n[.j]
          textB
          .AD c
          textC
          .NA
          textD
          .AD         \" back to centering
          textE
          .AD \n[ad]  \" back to right justifying
          textF

     produces the following output:

          textA
                                                              textB
                                    textC
          textD
                                    textE
                                                              textF

     As just demonstrated, the current adjustment mode is available in
     the read-only number register '.j'; it can be stored and
     subsequently used to set adjustment.

     The adjustment mode status is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).

 -- Request: .na
     Disable adjusting.  This request won't change the current
     adjustment mode: A subsequent call to 'ad' uses the previous
     adjustment setting.

     The adjustment mode status is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).

 -- Request: .brp
 -- Escape: \p
     Break, adjusting the current line per the current adjustment mode.

     With '\p', this break will happen at the next word boundary.  The
     '\p' itself is removed entirely, adding neither a break nor a space
     where it appears in input; it can thus be placed in the middle of a
     word to cause a break at the end of that word.

     In most cases this produces very ugly results since 'gtroff'
     doesn't have a sophisticated paragraph building algorithm (as TeX
     has, for example); instead, 'gtroff' fills and adjusts a paragraph
     line by line:

          This is an uninteresting sentence.
          This is an uninteresting sentence.\p
          This is an uninteresting sentence.

     is formatted as

          This is  an uninteresting  sentence.   This  is an
          uninteresting                            sentence.
          This is an uninteresting sentence.

 -- Request: .ss word_space_size [sentence_space_size]
 -- Register: \n[.ss]
 -- Register: \n[.sss]
     Change the size of a space between words.  It takes its units as
     one twelfth of the space width parameter for the current font.
     Initially both the WORD_SPACE_SIZE and SENTENCE_SPACE_SIZE are 12.
     In fill mode, the values specify the minimum distance.

     If two arguments are given to the 'ss' request, the second argument
     sets the sentence space size.  If the second argument is not given,
     sentence space size is set to WORD_SPACE_SIZE.  The sentence space
     size is used in two circumstances: If the end of a sentence occurs
     at the end of a line in fill mode, then both an inter-word space
     and a sentence space are added; if two spaces follow the end of a
     sentence in the middle of a line, then the second space is a
     sentence space.  If a second argument is never given to the 'ss'
     request, the behaviour of Unix 'troff' is the same as that
     exhibited by GNU 'troff'.  In GNU 'troff', as in Unix 'troff', a
     sentence should always be followed by either a newline or two
     spaces.

     The read-only number registers '.ss' and '.sss' hold the values of
     the parameters set by the first and second arguments of the 'ss'
     request.

     The word space and sentence space values are associated with the
     current environment (*note Environments::).

     Contrary to AT&T 'troff', this request is _not_ ignored if a TTY
     output device is used; the given values are then rounded down to a
     multiple of 12 (*note Implementation Differences::).

     The request is ignored if there is no parameter.

     Another useful application of the 'ss' request is to insert
     discardable horizontal space, i.e., space that is discarded at a
     line break.  For example, paragraph-style footnotes could be
     separated this way:

          .ll 4.5i
          1.\ This is the first footnote.\c
          .ss 48
          .nop
          .ss 12
          2.\ This is the second footnote.

     The result:

          1. This is the first footnote.        2. This
          is the second footnote.

     Note that the '\h' escape produces unbreakable space.

 -- Request: .ce [nnn]
 -- Register: \n[.ce]
     Center text.  While the '.ad c' request also centers text, it fills
     the text as well.  'ce' does not fill the text it affects.  This
     request causes a break.  The number of lines still to be centered
     is associated with the current environment (*note Environments::).

     The following example demonstrates the differences.  Here is the
     input:

          .ll 4i
          .ce 1000
          This is a small text fragment that shows the differences
          between the `.ce' and the `.ad c' request.
          .ce 0

          .ad c
          This is a small text fragment that shows the differences
          between the `.ce' and the `.ad c' request.

     And here the result:

            This is a small text fragment that
                   shows the differences
          between the `.ce' and the `.ad c' request.

            This is a small text fragment that
          shows the differences between the `.ce'
                  and the `.ad c' request.

     With no arguments, 'ce' centers the next line of text.  NNN
     specifies the number of lines to be centered.  If the argument is
     zero or negative, centering is disabled.

     The basic length for centering text is the line length (as set with
     the 'll' request) minus the indentation (as set with the 'in'
     request).  Temporary indentation is ignored.

     As can be seen in the previous example, it is a common idiom to
     turn on centering for a large number of lines, and to turn off
     centering after text to be centered.  This is useful for any
     request that takes a number of lines as an argument.

     The '.ce' read-only number register contains the number of lines
     remaining to be centered, as set by the 'ce' request.

 -- Request: .rj [nnn]
 -- Register: \n[.rj]
     Justify unfilled text to the right margin.  Arguments are identical
     to the 'ce' request.  The '.rj' read-only number register is the
     number of lines to be right-justified as set by the 'rj' request.
     This request causes a break.  The number of lines still to be
     right-justified is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).


File: groff.info,  Node: Manipulating Hyphenation,  Next: Manipulating Spacing,  Prev: Manipulating Filling and Adjusting,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.8 Manipulating Hyphenation
============================

Here a description of requests that influence hyphenation.

 -- Request: .hy [mode]
 -- Register: \n[.hy]
     Enable hyphenation.  The request has an optional numeric argument,
     MODE, to restrict hyphenation if necessary:

     '1'
          The default argument if MODE is omitted: hyphenation is
          enabled, and the first and the last characters of a word are
          not hyphenated.  This is also the start-up value of 'gtroff'.

     '2'
          Do not hyphenate the last word on a page or column.

     '4'
          Do not hyphenate the last two characters of a word.

     '8'
          Do not hyphenate the first two characters of a word.

     '16'
          Allow hyphenation before the last character of a word.

     '32'
          Allow hyphenation after the first character of a word.

     The values in the previous table are additive.  For example,
     value 12 causes 'gtroff' to neither hyphenate the last two nor the
     first two characters of a word.  Note that value 13 would do
     exactly the same; in other words, value 1 need not be added if the
     value is larger than 1.

     Some values cannot be used together because they contradict; for
     instance, values 4 and 16, and values 8 and 32.

     The number of characters at the beginning of a word after which the
     first hyphenation point should be inserted is determined by the
     patterns themselves; it can't be reduced further without
     introducing additional, invalid hyphenation points (unfortunately,
     this information is not part of a pattern file, you have to know it
     in advance).  The same is true for the number of characters at the
     end of word before the last hyphenation point should be inserted.
     For example, the code

          .ll 1
          .hy 48
          splitting

     returns

          s-
          plit-
          t-
          in-
          g

     instead of the correct 'split-ting'.  US-English patterns as
     distributed with groff need two characters at the beginning and
     three characters at the end; this means that value 4 of 'hy' is
     mandatory.  Value 8 is possible as an additional restriction, but
     values 1 (the default!), 16, and 32 should be avoided.

     Here is a table of left and right minimum values for hyphenation as
     needed by the patterns distributed with groff; see the
     'groff_tmac(5) man page' (type 'man groff_tmac' at the command
     line) for more information on groff's language macro files.

     language             pattern name   left min   right min
     -----------------------------------------------------------
     Czech                cs             2          2
     US English           us             2          3
     French               fr             2          3
     German traditional   det            2          2
     German reformed      den            2          2
     Swedish              sv             1          2

     Hyphenation exceptions within pattern files (i.e., the words within
     a '\hyphenation' group) also obey the hyphenation restrictions
     given by 'hy'.  However, exceptions specified with the 'hw' do not.

     The current hyphenation restrictions can be found in the read-only
     number register '.hy'.

     The hyphenation mode is associated with the current environment
     (*note Environments::).

 -- Request: .nh
     Disable hyphenation (i.e., set the hyphenation mode to zero).  Note
     that the hyphenation mode of the last call to 'hy' is not
     remembered.

     The hyphenation mode is associated with the current environment
     (*note Environments::).

 -- Request: .hlm [nnn]
 -- Register: \n[.hlm]
 -- Register: \n[.hlc]
     Set the maximum number of consecutive hyphenated lines to NNN.  If
     this number is negative, there is no maximum.  The default value
     is -1 if NNN is omitted.  This value is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).  Only lines output from a given
     environment count towards the maximum associated with that
     environment.  Hyphens resulting from '\%' are counted; explicit
     hyphens are not.

     The current setting of 'hlm' is available in the '.hlm' read-only
     number register.  Also the number of immediately preceding
     consecutive hyphenated lines are available in the read-only number
     register '.hlc'.

 -- Request: .hw word1 word2 ...
     Define how WORD1, WORD2, etc. are to be hyphenated.  The words must
     be given with hyphens at the hyphenation points.  For example:

          .hw in-sa-lub-rious

     Besides the space character, any character whose hyphenation code
     value is zero can be used to separate the arguments of 'hw' (see
     the documentation for the 'hcode' request below for more
     information).  In addition, this request can be used more than
     once.

     Hyphenation points specified with 'hw' are not subject to the
     restrictions given by the 'hy' request.

     Hyphenation exceptions specified with the 'hw' request are
     associated with the current hyphenation language; it causes an
     error if there is no current hyphenation language.

     This request is ignored if there is no parameter.

     In old versions of 'troff' there was a limited amount of space to
     store such information; fortunately, with 'gtroff', this is no
     longer a restriction.

 -- Escape: \%
 -- Escape: \:
     To tell 'gtroff' how to hyphenate words on the fly, use the '\%'
     escape, also known as the "hyphenation character".  Preceding a
     word with this character prevents it from being hyphenated; putting
     it inside a word indicates to 'gtroff' that the word may be
     hyphenated at that point.  Note that this mechanism only affects
     that one occurrence of the word; to change the hyphenation of a
     word for the entire document, use the 'hw' request.

     The '\:' escape inserts a zero-width break point (that is, the word
     breaks but without adding a hyphen).

          ... check the /var/log/\:httpd/\:access_log file ...

     Note that '\X' and '\Y' start a word, that is, the '\%' escape in
     (say) '\X'...'\%foobar' and '\Y'...'\%foobar' no longer prevents
     hyphenation but inserts a hyphenation point at the beginning of
     'foobar'; most likely this isn't what you want to do.

 -- Request: .hc [char]
     Change the hyphenation character to CHAR.  This character then
     works the same as the '\%' escape, and thus, no longer appears in
     the output.  Without an argument, 'hc' resets the hyphenation
     character to be '\%' (the default) only.

     The hyphenation character is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).

 -- Request: .hpf pattern_file
 -- Request: .hpfa pattern_file
 -- Request: .hpfcode a b [c d ...]
     Read in a file of hyphenation patterns.  This file is searched for
     in the same way as 'NAME.tmac' (or 'tmac.NAME') is searched for if
     the '-mNAME' option is specified.

     It should have the same format as (simple) TeX patterns files.
     More specifically, the following scanning rules are implemented.

        * A percent sign starts a comment (up to the end of the line)
          even if preceded by a backslash.

        * No support for 'digraphs' like '\$'.

        * '^^XX' (X is 0-9 or a-f) and '^^X' (character code of X in the
          range 0-127) are recognized; other use of '^' causes an error.

        * No macro expansion.

        * 'hpf' checks for the expression '\patterns{...}' (possibly
          with whitespace before and after the braces).  Everything
          between the braces is taken as hyphenation patterns.
          Consequently, '{' and '}' are not allowed in patterns.

        * Similarly, '\hyphenation{...}' gives a list of hyphenation
          exceptions.

        * '\endinput' is recognized also.

        * For backwards compatibility, if '\patterns' is missing, the
          whole file is treated as a list of hyphenation patterns (only
          recognizing the '%' character as the start of a comment).

     If no 'hpf' request is specified (either in the document or in a
     macro package), 'gtroff' won't hyphenate at all.

     The 'hpfa' request appends a file of patterns to the current list.

     The 'hpfcode' request defines mapping values for character codes in
     hyphenation patterns.  'hpf' or 'hpfa' then apply the mapping
     (after reading the patterns) before replacing or appending them to
     the current list of patterns.  Its arguments are pairs of character
     codes - integers from 0 to 255.  The request maps character code A
     to code B, code C to code D, and so on.  You can use character
     codes that would be invalid otherwise.  By default, everything maps
     to itself except letters 'A' to 'Z', which map to 'a' to 'z'.

     The set of hyphenation patterns is associated with the current
     language set by the 'hla' request.  The 'hpf' request is usually
     invoked by the 'troffrc' or 'troffrc-end' file; by default,
     'troffrc' loads hyphenation patterns and exceptions for American
     English (in files 'hyphen.us' and 'hyphenex.us').

     A second call to 'hpf' (for the same language) replaces the
     hyphenation patterns with the new ones.

     Invoking 'hpf' causes an error if there is no current hyphenation
     language.

 -- Request: .hcode c1 code1 [c2 code2 ...]
     Set the hyphenation code of character C1 to CODE1, that of C2 to
     CODE2, etc.  A hyphenation code must be a single input character
     (not a special character) other than a digit or a space.

     To make hyphenation work, hyphenation codes must be set up.  At
     start-up, groff only assigns hyphenation codes to the letters
     'a'-'z' (mapped to themselves) and to the letters 'A'-'Z' (mapped
     to 'a'-'z'); all other hyphenation codes are set to zero.
     Normally, hyphenation patterns contain only lowercase letters,
     which should be applied regardless of case.  In other words, the
     words 'FOO' and 'Foo' should be hyphenated exactly the same way as
     the word 'foo' is hyphenated, and this is what 'hcode' is good for.
     Words that contain other letters won't be hyphenated properly if
     the corresponding hyphenation patterns actually do contain them.
     For example, the following 'hcode' requests are necessary to assign
     hyphenation codes to the letters 'ÄäÖöÜüß' (this is needed for
     German):

          .hcode ä ä  Ä ä
          .hcode ö ö  Ö ö
          .hcode ü ü  Ü ü
          .hcode ß ß

     Without those assignments, groff treats German words like
     'Kindergärten' (the plural form of 'kindergarten') as two
     substrings 'kinderg' and 'rten' because the hyphenation code of the
     umlaut a is zero by default.  There is a German hyphenation pattern
     that covers 'kinder', so groff finds the hyphenation 'kin-der'.
     The other two hyphenation points ('kin-der-gär-ten') are missed.

     This request is ignored if it has no parameter.

 -- Request: .hym [length]
 -- Register: \n[.hym]
     Set the (right) hyphenation margin to LENGTH.  If the current
     adjustment mode is not 'b' or 'n', the line is not hyphenated if it
     is shorter than LENGTH.  Without an argument, the hyphenation
     margin is reset to its default value, which is 0.  The default
     scaling indicator for this request is 'm'.  The hyphenation margin
     is associated with the current environment (*note Environments::).

     A negative argument resets the hyphenation margin to zero, emitting
     a warning of type 'range'.

     The current hyphenation margin is available in the '.hym' read-only
     number register.

 -- Request: .hys [hyphenation_space]
 -- Register: \n[.hys]
     Set the hyphenation space to HYPHENATION_SPACE.  If the current
     adjustment mode is 'b' or 'n', don't hyphenate the line if it can
     be justified by adding no more than HYPHENATION_SPACE extra space
     to each word space.  Without argument, the hyphenation space is set
     to its default value, which is 0.  The default scaling indicator
     for this request is 'm'.  The hyphenation space is associated with
     the current environment (*note Environments::).

     A negative argument resets the hyphenation space to zero, emitting
     a warning of type 'range'.

     The current hyphenation space is available in the '.hys' read-only
     number register.

 -- Request: .shc [glyph]
     Set the "soft hyphen character" to GLYPH.(1)  (*note Manipulating
     Hyphenation-Footnote-1::) If the argument is omitted, the soft
     hyphen character is set to the default glyph '\(hy' (this is the
     start-up value of 'gtroff' also).  The soft hyphen character is the
     glyph that is inserted when a word is hyphenated at a line break.
     If the soft hyphen character does not exist in the font of the
     character immediately preceding a potential break point, then the
     line is not broken at that point.  Neither definitions (specified
     with the 'char' request) nor translations (specified with the 'tr'
     request) are considered when finding the soft hyphen character.

 -- Request: .hla language
 -- Register: \n[.hla]
     Set the current hyphenation language to the string LANGUAGE.
     Hyphenation exceptions specified with the 'hw' request and
     hyphenation patterns specified with the 'hpf' and 'hpfa' requests
     are both associated with the current hyphenation language.  The
     'hla' request is usually invoked by the 'troffrc' or the
     'troffrc-end' files; 'troffrc' sets the default language to 'us'.

     The current hyphenation language is available as a string in the
     read-only number register '.hla'.

          .ds curr_language \n[.hla]
          \*[curr_language]
              => us


File: groff.info,  Node: Manipulating Hyphenation-Footnotes,  Up: Manipulating Hyphenation

   (1) "Soft hyphen character" is a misnomer since it is an output
glyph.


File: groff.info,  Node: Manipulating Spacing,  Next: Tabs and Fields,  Prev: Manipulating Hyphenation,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.9 Manipulating Spacing
========================

 -- Request: .sp [distance]
     Space downwards DISTANCE.  With no argument it advances 1 line.  A
     negative argument causes 'gtroff' to move up the page the specified
     distance.  If the argument is preceded by a '|' then 'gtroff' moves
     that distance from the top of the page.  This request causes a line
     break, and that adds the current line spacing to the space you have
     just specified.  The default scaling indicator is 'v'.

     For convenience you may wish to use the following macros to set the
     height of the next line at a given distance from the top or the
     bottom of the page:

          .de y-from-top-down
          .  sp |\\$1-\\n[.v]u
          ..
          .
          .de y-from-bot-up
          .  sp |\\n[.p]u-\\$1-\\n[.v]u
          ..

     A call to '.y-from-bot-up 10c' means that the bottom of the next
     line will be at 10 cm from the paper edge at the bottom.

     If a vertical trap is sprung during execution of 'sp', the amount
     of vertical space after the trap is discarded.  For example, this

          .de xxx
          ..
          .
          .wh 0 xxx
          .
          .pl 5v
          foo
          .sp 2
          bar
          .sp 50
          baz

     results in

          foo


          bar

          baz

     The amount of discarded space is available in the number register
     '.trunc'.

     To protect 'sp' against vertical traps, use the 'vpt' request:

          .vpt 0
          .sp -3
          .vpt 1

 -- Request: .ls [nnn]
 -- Register: \n[.L]
     Output NNN-1 blank lines after each line of text.  With no
     argument, 'gtroff' uses the previous value before the last 'ls'
     call.

          .ls 2    \" This causes double-spaced output
          .ls 3    \" This causes triple-spaced output
          .ls      \" Again double-spaced

     The line spacing is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

     The read-only number register '.L' contains the current line
     spacing setting.

   *Note Changing Type Sizes::, for the requests 'vs' and 'pvs' as
alternatives to 'ls'.

 -- Escape: \x'spacing'
 -- Register: \n[.a]
     Sometimes, extra vertical spacing is only needed occasionally, e.g.
     to allow space for a tall construct (like an equation).  The '\x'
     escape does this.  The escape is given a numerical argument,
     usually enclosed in quotes (like '\x'3p''); the default scaling
     indicator is 'v'.  If this number is positive extra vertical space
     is inserted below the current line.  A negative number adds space
     above.  If this escape is used multiple times on the same line, the
     maximum of the values is used.

     *Note Escapes::, for details on parameter delimiting characters.

     The '.a' read-only number register contains the most recent
     (non-negative) extra vertical line space.

     Using '\x' can be necessary in combination with the '\b' escape, as
     the following example shows.

          This is a test with the \[rs]b escape.
          .br
          This is a test with the \[rs]b escape.
          .br
          This is a test with \b'xyz'\x'-1m'\x'1m'.
          .br
          This is a test with the \[rs]b escape.
          .br
          This is a test with the \[rs]b escape.

     produces

          This is a test with the \b escape.
          This is a test with the \b escape.
                              x
          This is a test with y.
                              z
          This is a test with the \b escape.
          This is a test with the \b escape.

 -- Request: .ns
 -- Request: .rs
 -- Register: \n[.ns]
     Enable "no-space mode".  In this mode, spacing (either via 'sp' or
     via blank lines) is disabled.  The 'bp' request to advance to the
     next page is also disabled, except if it is accompanied by a page
     number (see *note Page Control::, for more information).  This mode
     ends when actual text is output or the 'rs' request is encountered,
     which ends no-space mode.  The read-only number register '.ns' is
     set to 1 as long as no-space mode is active.

     This request is useful for macros that conditionally insert
     vertical space before the text starts (for example, a paragraph
     macro could insert some space except when it is the first paragraph
     after a section header).


File: groff.info,  Node: Tabs and Fields,  Next: Character Translations,  Prev: Manipulating Spacing,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.10 Tabs and Fields
====================

A tab character (ASCII char 9, EBCDIC char 5) causes a horizontal
movement to the next tab stop (much like it did on a typewriter).

 -- Escape: \t
     This escape is a non-interpreted tab character.  In copy mode
     (*note Copy-in Mode::), '\t' is the same as a real tab character.

 -- Request: .ta [n1 n2 ... nn T r1 r2 ... rn]
 -- Register: \n[.tabs]
     Change tab stop positions.  This request takes a series of tab
     specifiers as arguments (optionally divided into two groups with
     the letter 'T') that indicate where each tab stop is to be
     (overriding any previous settings).

     Tab stops can be specified absolutely, i.e., as the distance from
     the left margin.  For example, the following sets 6 tab stops every
     one inch.

          .ta 1i 2i 3i 4i 5i 6i

     Tab stops can also be specified using a leading '+', which means
     that the specified tab stop is set relative to the previous tab
     stop.  For example, the following is equivalent to the previous
     example.

          .ta 1i +1i +1i +1i +1i +1i

     'gtroff' supports an extended syntax to specify repeat values after
     the 'T' mark (these values are always taken as relative) - this is
     the usual way to specify tabs set at equal intervals.  The
     following is, yet again, the same as the previous examples.  It
     does even more since it defines an infinite number of tab stops
     separated by one inch.

          .ta T 1i

     Now we are ready to interpret the full syntax given at the
     beginning: Set tabs at positions N1, N2, ..., NN and then set tabs
     at NN+R1, NN+R2, ..., NN+RN and then at NN+RN+R1, NN+RN+R2, ...,
     NN+RN+RN, and so on.

     Example: '4c +6c T 3c 5c 2c' is equivalent to '4c 10c 13c 18c 20c
     23c 28c 30c ...'.

     The material in each tab column (i.e., the column between two tab
     stops) may be justified to the right or left or centered in the
     column.  This is specified by appending 'R', 'L', or 'C' to the tab
     specifier.  The default justification is 'L'.  Example:

          .ta 1i 2iC 3iR

     Some notes:

        * The default unit of the 'ta' request is 'm'.

        * A tab stop is converted into a non-breakable horizontal
          movement that can be neither stretched nor squeezed.  For
          example,

               .ds foo a\tb\tc
               .ta T 5i
               \*[foo]

          creates a single line, which is a bit longer than 10 inches (a
          string is used to show exactly where the tab characters are).
          Now consider the following:

               .ds bar a\tb b\tc
               .ta T 5i
               \*[bar]

          'gtroff' first converts the tab stops of the line into
          unbreakable horizontal movements, then splits the line after
          the second 'b' (assuming a sufficiently short line length).
          Usually, this isn't what the user wants.

        * Superfluous tabs (i.e., tab characters that do not correspond
          to a tab stop) are ignored except the first one, which
          delimits the characters belonging to the last tab stop for
          right-justifying or centering.  Consider the following example

               .ds Z   foo\tbar\tfoo
               .ds ZZ  foo\tbar\tfoobar
               .ds ZZZ foo\tbar\tfoo\tbar
               .ta 2i 4iR
               \*[Z]
               .br
               \*[ZZ]
               .br
               \*[ZZZ]
               .br

          which produces the following output:

               foo                 bar              foo
               foo                 bar           foobar
               foo                 bar              foobar

          The first line right-justifies the second 'foo' relative to
          the tab stop.  The second line right-justifies 'foobar'.  The
          third line finally right-justifies only 'foo' because of the
          additional tab character, which marks the end of the string
          belonging to the last defined tab stop.

        * Tab stops are associated with the current environment (*note
          Environments::).

        * Calling 'ta' without an argument removes all tab stops.

        * The start-up value of 'gtroff' is 'T 0.5i'.

     The read-only number register '.tabs' contains a string
     representation of the current tab settings suitable for use as an
     argument to the 'ta' request.

          .ds tab-string \n[.tabs]
          \*[tab-string]
              => T120u

     The 'troff' version of the Plan 9 operating system uses register
     '.S' for the same purpose.

 -- Request: .tc [fill-glyph]
     Normally 'gtroff' fills the space to the next tab stop with
     whitespace.  This can be changed with the 'tc' request.  With no
     argument 'gtroff' reverts to using whitespace, which is the
     default.  The value of this "tab repetition character" is
     associated with the current environment (*note Environments::).(1)
     (*note Tabs and Fields-Footnote-1::)

 -- Request: .linetabs n
 -- Register: \n[.linetabs]
     If N is missing or not zero, enable "line-tabs" mode, or disable it
     otherwise (the default).  In line-tabs mode, 'gtroff' computes tab
     distances relative to the (current) output line instead of the
     input line.

     For example, the following code:

          .ds x a\t\c
          .ds y b\t\c
          .ds z c
          .ta 1i 3i
          \*x
          \*y
          \*z

     in normal mode, results in the output

          a         b         c

     in line-tabs mode, the same code outputs

          a         b                   c

     Line-tabs mode is associated with the current environment.  The
     read-only register '.linetabs' is set to 1 if in line-tabs mode,
     and 0 in normal mode.

* Menu:

* Leaders::
* Fields::


File: groff.info,  Node: Tabs and Fields-Footnotes,  Up: Tabs and Fields

   (1) "Tab repetition character" is a misnomer since it is an output
glyph.


File: groff.info,  Node: Leaders,  Next: Fields,  Prev: Tabs and Fields,  Up: Tabs and Fields

5.10.1 Leaders
--------------

Sometimes it may be desirable to use the 'tc' request to fill a
particular tab stop with a given glyph (for example dots in a table of
contents), but also normal tab stops on the rest of the line.  For this
'gtroff' provides an alternate tab mechanism, called "leaders", which
does just that.

   A leader character (character code 1) behaves similarly to a tab
character: It moves to the next tab stop.  The only difference is that
for this movement, the fill glyph defaults to a period character and not
to space.

 -- Escape: \a
     This escape is a non-interpreted leader character.  In copy mode
     (*note Copy-in Mode::), '\a' is the same as a real leader
     character.

 -- Request: .lc [fill-glyph]
     Declare the "leader repetition character".(1)  (*note
     Leaders-Footnote-1::) Without an argument, leaders act the same as
     tabs (i.e., using whitespace for filling).  'gtroff''s start-up
     value is a dot ('.').  The value of the leader repetition character
     is associated with the current environment (*note Environments::).

   For a table of contents, to name an example, tab stops may be defined
so that the section number is one tab stop, the title is the second with
the remaining space being filled with a line of dots, and then the page
number slightly separated from the dots.

     .ds entry 1.1\tFoo\a\t12
     .lc .
     .ta 1i 5i +.25i
     \*[entry]

This produces

     1.1  Foo..........................................  12


File: groff.info,  Node: Leaders-Footnotes,  Up: Leaders

   (1) "Leader repetition character" is a misnomer since it is an output
glyph.


File: groff.info,  Node: Fields,  Prev: Leaders,  Up: Tabs and Fields

5.10.2 Fields
-------------

"Fields" are a more general way of laying out tabular data.  A field is
defined as the data between a pair of "delimiting characters".  It
contains substrings that are separated by "padding characters".  The
width of a field is the distance on the _input_ line from the position
where the field starts to the next tab stop.  A padding character
inserts stretchable space similar to TeX's '\hss' command (thus it can
even be negative) to make the sum of all substring lengths plus the
stretchable space equal to the field width.  If more than one padding
character is inserted, the available space is evenly distributed among
them.

 -- Request: .fc [delim-char [padding-char]]
     Define a delimiting and a padding character for fields.  If the
     latter is missing, the padding character defaults to a space
     character.  If there is no argument at all, the field mechanism is
     disabled (which is the default).  Note that contrary to e.g. the
     tab repetition character, delimiting and padding characters are
     _not_ associated to the current environment (*note Environments::).

     Example:

          .fc # ^
          .ta T 3i
          #foo^bar^smurf#
          .br
          #foo^^bar^smurf#

     and here the result:

          foo         bar          smurf
          foo            bar       smurf


File: groff.info,  Node: Character Translations,  Next: Troff and Nroff Mode,  Prev: Tabs and Fields,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.11 Character Translations
===========================

The control character ('.') and the no-break control character (''') can
be changed with the 'cc' and 'c2' requests, respectively.

 -- Request: .cc [c]
     Set the control character to C.  With no argument the default
     control character '.' is restored.  The value of the control
     character is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

 -- Request: .c2 [c]
     Set the no-break control character to C.  With no argument the
     default control character ''' is restored.  The value of the
     no-break control character is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).

   *Note Requests::.

 -- Request: .eo
     Disable the escape mechanism completely.  After executing this
     request, the backslash character '\' no longer starts an escape
     sequence.

     This request can be very helpful in writing macros since it is not
     necessary then to double the escape character.  Here an example:

          .\" This is a simplified version of the
          .\" .BR request from the man macro package
          .eo
          .de BR
          .  ds result \&
          .  while (\n[.$] >= 2) \{\
          .    as result \fB\$1\fR\$2
          .    shift 2
          .  \}
          .  if \n[.$] .as result \fB\$1
          \*[result]
          .  ft R
          ..
          .ec

 -- Request: .ec [c]
     Set the escape character to C.  With no argument the default escape
     character '\' is restored.  It can be also used to re-enable the
     escape mechanism after an 'eo' request.

     Note that changing the escape character globally likely breaks
     macro packages since 'gtroff' has no mechanism to 'intern' macros,
     i.e., to convert a macro definition into an internal form that is
     independent of its representation (TeX has this mechanism).  If a
     macro is called, it is executed literally.

 -- Request: .ecs
 -- Request: .ecr
     The 'ecs' request saves the current escape character in an internal
     register.  Use this request in combination with the 'ec' request to
     temporarily change the escape character.

     The 'ecr' request restores the escape character saved with 'ecs'.
     Without a previous call to 'ecs', this request sets the escape
     character to '\'.

 -- Escape: \\
 -- Escape: \e
 -- Escape: \E
     Print the current escape character (which is the backslash
     character '\' by default).

     '\\' is a 'delayed' backslash; more precisely, it is the default
     escape character followed by a backslash, which no longer has
     special meaning due to the leading escape character.  It is _not_
     an escape sequence in the usual sense!  In any unknown escape
     sequence '\X' the escape character is ignored and X is printed.
     But if X is equal to the current escape character, no warning is
     emitted.

     As a consequence, only at top-level or in a diversion a backslash
     glyph is printed; in copy-in mode, it expands to a single
     backslash, which then combines with the following character to an
     escape sequence.

     The '\E' escape differs from '\e' by printing an escape character
     that is not interpreted in copy mode.  Use this to define strings
     with escapes that work when used in copy mode (for example, as a
     macro argument).  The following example defines strings to begin
     and end a superscript:

          .ds { \v'-.3m'\s'\En[.s]*60/100'
          .ds } \s0\v'.3m'

     Another example to demonstrate the differences between the various
     escape sequences, using a strange escape character, '-'.

          .ec -
          .de xxx
          --A'foo'
          ..
          .xxx
              => -A'foo'

     The result is surprising for most users, expecting '1' since 'foo'
     is a valid identifier.  What has happened?  As mentioned above, the
     leading escape character makes the following character ordinary.
     Written with the default escape character the sequence '--' becomes
     '\-' - this is the minus sign.

     If the escape character followed by itself is a valid escape
     sequence, only '\E' yields the expected result:

          .ec -
          .de xxx
          -EA'foo'
          ..
          .xxx
              => 1

 -- Escape: \.
     Similar to '\\', the sequence '\.' isn't a real escape sequence.
     As before, a warning message is suppressed if the escape character
     is followed by a dot, and the dot itself is printed.

          .de foo
          .  nop foo
          .
          .  de bar
          .    nop bar
          \\..
          .
          ..
          .foo
          .bar
              => foo bar

     The first backslash is consumed while the macro is read, and the
     second is swallowed while executing macro 'foo'.

   A "translation" is a mapping of an input character to an output
glyph.  The mapping occurs at output time, i.e., the input character
gets assigned the metric information of the mapped output character
right before input tokens are converted to nodes (*note Gtroff
Internals::, for more on this process).

 -- Request: .tr abcd...
 -- Request: .trin abcd...
     Translate character A to glyph B, character C to glyph D, etc.  If
     there is an odd number of arguments, the last one is translated to
     an unstretchable space ('\ ').

     The 'trin' request is identical to 'tr', but when you unformat a
     diversion with 'asciify' it ignores the translation.  *Note
     Diversions::, for details about the 'asciify' request.

     Some notes:

        * Special characters ('\(XX', '\[XXX]', '\C'XXX'', '\'', '\`',
          '\-', '\_'), glyphs defined with the 'char' request, and
          numbered glyphs ('\N'XXX'') can be translated also.

        * The '\e' escape can be translated also.

        * Characters can be mapped onto the '\%' and '\~' escapes (but
          '\%' and '\~' can't be mapped onto another glyph).

        * The following characters can't be translated: space (with one
          exception, see below), backspace, newline, leader (and '\a'),
          tab (and '\t').

        * Translations are not considered for finding the soft hyphen
          character set with the 'shc' request.

        * The pair 'C\&' (this is an arbitrary character C followed by
          the zero width space character) maps this character to
          nothing.

               .tr a\&
               foo bar
                   => foo br

          It is even possible to map the space character to nothing:

               .tr aa \&
               foo bar
                   => foobar

          As shown in the example, the space character can't be the
          first character/glyph pair as an argument of 'tr'.
          Additionally, it is not possible to map the space character to
          any other glyph; requests like '.tr aa x' undo '.tr aa \&'
          instead.

          If justification is active, lines are justified in spite of
          the 'empty' space character (but there is no minimal distance,
          i.e. the space character, between words).

        * After an output glyph has been constructed (this happens at
          the moment immediately before the glyph is appended to an
          output glyph list, either by direct output, in a macro,
          diversion, or string), it is no longer affected by 'tr'.

        * Translating character to glyphs where one of them or both are
          undefined is possible also; 'tr' does not check whether the
          entities in its argument do exist.

          *Note Gtroff Internals::.

        * 'troff' no longer has a hard-coded dependency on Latin-1; all
          'charXXX' entities have been removed from the font description
          files.  This has a notable consequence that shows up in
          warnings like 'can't find character with input code XXX' if
          the 'tr' request isn't handled properly.

          Consider the following translation:

               .tr éÉ

          This maps input character 'é' onto glyph 'É', which is
          identical to glyph 'char201'.  But this glyph intentionally
          doesn't exist!  Instead, '\[char201]' is treated as an input
          character entity and is by default mapped onto '\['E]', and
          'gtroff' doesn't handle translations of translations.

          The right way to write the above translation is

               .tr é\['E]

          In other words, the first argument of 'tr' should be an input
          character or entity, and the second one a glyph entity.

        * Without an argument, the 'tr' request is ignored.

 -- Request: .trnt abcd...
     'trnt' is the same as the 'tr' request except that the translations
     do not apply to text that is transparently throughput into a
     diversion with '\!'.  *Note Diversions::, for more information.

     For example,

          .tr ab
          .di x
          \!.tm a
          .di
          .x

     prints 'b' to the standard error stream; if 'trnt' is used instead
     of 'tr' it prints 'a'.


File: groff.info,  Node: Troff and Nroff Mode,  Next: Line Layout,  Prev: Character Translations,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.12 Troff and Nroff Mode
=========================

Originally, 'nroff' and 'troff' were two separate programs, the former
for TTY output, the latter for everything else.  With GNU 'troff', both
programs are merged into one executable, sending its output to a device
driver ('grotty' for TTY devices, 'grops' for POSTSCRIPT, etc.) which
interprets the intermediate output of 'gtroff'.  For Unix 'troff' it
makes sense to talk about "Nroff mode" and "Troff mode" since the
differences are hardcoded.  For GNU 'troff', this distinction is not
appropriate because 'gtroff' simply takes the information given in the
font files for a particular device without handling requests specially
if a TTY output device is used.

   Usually, a macro package can be used with all output devices.
Nevertheless, it is sometimes necessary to make a distinction between
TTY and non-TTY devices: 'gtroff' provides two built-in conditions 'n'
and 't' for the 'if', 'ie', and 'while' requests to decide whether
'gtroff' shall behave like 'nroff' or like 'troff'.

 -- Request: .troff
     Make the 't' built-in condition true (and the 'n' built-in
     condition false) for 'if', 'ie', and 'while' conditional requests.
     This is the default if 'gtroff' (_not_ 'groff') is started with the
     '-R' switch to avoid loading of the start-up files 'troffrc' and
     'troffrc-end'.  Without '-R', 'gtroff' stays in troff mode if the
     output device is not a TTY (e.g. 'ps').

 -- Request: .nroff
     Make the 'n' built-in condition true (and the 't' built-in
     condition false) for 'if', 'ie', and 'while' conditional requests.
     This is the default if 'gtroff' uses a TTY output device; the code
     for switching to nroff mode is in the file 'tty.tmac', which is
     loaded by the start-up file 'troffrc'.

   *Note Conditionals and Loops::, for more details on built-in
conditions.


File: groff.info,  Node: Line Layout,  Next: Line Control,  Prev: Troff and Nroff Mode,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.13 Line Layout
================

The following drawing shows the dimensions that 'gtroff' uses for
placing a line of output onto the page.  They are labeled with the
request that manipulates each dimension.

          -->| in |<--
             |<-----------ll------------>|
        +----+----+----------------------+----+
        |    :    :                      :    |
        +----+----+----------------------+----+
     -->| po |<--
        |<--------paper width---------------->|

These dimensions are:

'po'
     "Page offset" - this is the leftmost position of text on the final
     output, defining the "left margin".

'in'
     "Indentation" - this is the distance from the left margin where
     text is printed.

'll'
     "Line length" - this is the distance from the left margin to right
     margin.

   A simple demonstration:

     .ll 3i
     This is text without indentation.
     The line length has been set to 3\~inch.
     .in +.5i
     .ll -.5i
     Now the left and right margins are both increased.
     .in
     .ll
     Calling .in and .ll without parameters restore
     the previous values.

   Result:

     This  is text without indenta-
     tion.   The  line  length  has
     been set to 3 inch.
          Now   the  left  and
          right  margins   are
          both increased.
     Calling  .in  and  .ll without
     parameters restore the  previ-
     ous values.

 -- Request: .po [offset]
 -- Request: .po +offset
 -- Request: .po -offset
 -- Register: \n[.o]
     Set horizontal page offset to OFFSET (or increment or decrement the
     current value by OFFSET).  Note that this request does not cause a
     break, so changing the page offset in the middle of text being
     filled may not yield the expected result.  The initial value is 1i.
     For TTY output devices, it is set to 0 in the startup file
     'troffrc'; the default scaling indicator is 'm' (and not 'v' as
     incorrectly documented in the original Unix troff manual).

     The current page offset can be found in the read-only number
     register '.o'.

     If 'po' is called without an argument, the page offset is reset to
     the previous value before the last call to 'po'.

          .po 3i
          \n[.o]
              => 720
          .po -1i
          \n[.o]
              => 480
          .po
          \n[.o]
              => 720

 -- Request: .in [indent]
 -- Request: .in +indent
 -- Request: .in -indent
 -- Register: \n[.i]
     Set indentation to INDENT (or increment or decrement the current
     value by INDENT).  This request causes a break.  Initially, there
     is no indentation.

     If 'in' is called without an argument, the indentation is reset to
     the previous value before the last call to 'in'.  The default
     scaling indicator is 'm'.

     The indentation is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

     If a negative indentation value is specified (which is not
     allowed), 'gtroff' emits a warning of type 'range' and sets the
     indentation to zero.

     The effect of 'in' is delayed until a partially collected line (if
     it exists) is output.  A temporary indentation value is reset to
     zero also.

     The current indentation (as set by 'in') can be found in the
     read-only number register '.i'.

 -- Request: .ti offset
 -- Request: .ti +offset
 -- Request: .ti -offset
 -- Register: \n[.in]
     Temporarily indent the next output line by OFFSET.  If an increment
     or decrement value is specified, adjust the temporary indentation
     relative to the value set by the 'in' request.

     This request causes a break; its value is associated with the
     current environment (*note Environments::).  The default scaling
     indicator is 'm'.  A call of 'ti' without an argument is ignored.

     If the total indentation value is negative (which is not allowed),
     'gtroff' emits a warning of type 'range' and sets the temporary
     indentation to zero.  'Total indentation' is either OFFSET if
     specified as an absolute value, or the temporary plus normal
     indentation, if OFFSET is given as a relative value.

     The effect of 'ti' is delayed until a partially collected line (if
     it exists) is output.

     The read-only number register '.in' is the indentation that applies
     to the current output line.

     The difference between '.i' and '.in' is that the latter takes into
     account whether a partially collected line still uses the old
     indentation value or a temporary indentation value is active.

 -- Request: .ll [length]
 -- Request: .ll +length
 -- Request: .ll -length
 -- Register: \n[.l]
 -- Register: \n[.ll]
     Set the line length to LENGTH (or increment or decrement the
     current value by LENGTH).  Initially, the line length is set to
     6.5i.  The effect of 'll' is delayed until a partially collected
     line (if it exists) is output.  The default scaling indicator is
     'm'.

     If 'll' is called without an argument, the line length is reset to
     the previous value before the last call to 'll'.  If a negative
     line length is specified (which is not allowed), 'gtroff' emits a
     warning of type 'range' and sets the line length to zero.

     The line length is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

     The current line length (as set by 'll') can be found in the
     read-only number register '.l'.  The read-only number register
     '.ll' is the line length that applies to the current output line.

     Similar to '.i' and '.in', the difference between '.l' and '.ll' is
     that the latter takes into account whether a partially collected
     line still uses the old line length value.


File: groff.info,  Node: Line Control,  Next: Page Layout,  Prev: Line Layout,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.14 Line Control
=================

It is important to understand how 'gtroff' handles input and output
lines.

   Many escapes use positioning relative to the input line.  For
example, this

     This is a \h'|1.2i'test.

     This is a
     \h'|1.2i'test.

produces

     This is a   test.

     This is a             test.

   The main usage of this feature is to define macros that act exactly
at the place where called.

     .\" A simple macro to underline a word
     .de underline
     .  nop \\$1\l'|0\[ul]'
     ..

In the above example, '|0' specifies a negative distance from the
current position (at the end of the just emitted argument '\$1') back to
the beginning of the input line.  Thus, the '\l' escape draws a line
from right to left.

   'gtroff' makes a difference between input and output line
continuation; the latter is also called "interrupting" a line.

 -- Escape: \<RET>
 -- Escape: \c
 -- Register: \n[.int]
     Continue a line.  '\<RET>' (this is a backslash at the end of a
     line immediately followed by a newline) works on the input level,
     suppressing the effects of the following newline in the input.

          This is a \
          .test
              => This is a .test

     The '|' operator is also affected.

     '\c' works on the output level.  Anything after this escape on the
     same line is ignored except '\R', which works as usual.  Anything
     before '\c' on the same line is appended to the current partial
     output line.  The next non-command line after an interrupted line
     counts as a new input line.

     The visual results depend on whether no-fill mode is active.

        * If no-fill mode is active (using the 'nf' request), the next
          input text line after '\c' is handled as a continuation of the
          same input text line.

               .nf
               This is a \c
               test.
                   => This is a test.

        * If fill mode is active (using the 'fi' request), a word
          interrupted with '\c' is continued with the text on the next
          input text line, without an intervening space.

               This is a te\c
               st.
                   => This is a test.

     Note that an intervening control line that causes a break is
     stronger than '\c', flushing out the current partial line in the
     usual way.

     The '.int' register contains a positive value if the last output
     line was interrupted with '\c'; this is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).


File: groff.info,  Node: Page Layout,  Next: Page Control,  Prev: Line Control,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.15 Page Layout
================

'gtroff' provides some very primitive operations for controlling page
layout.

 -- Request: .pl [length]
 -- Request: .pl +length
 -- Request: .pl -length
 -- Register: \n[.p]
     Set the "page length" to LENGTH (or increment or decrement the
     current value by LENGTH).  This is the length of the physical
     output page.  The default scaling indicator is 'v'.

     The current setting can be found in the read-only number register
     '.p'.

     Note that this only specifies the size of the page, not the top and
     bottom margins.  Those are not set by 'gtroff' directly.  *Note
     Traps::, for further information on how to do this.

     Negative 'pl' values are possible also, but not very useful: No
     trap is sprung, and each line is output on a single page (thus
     suppressing all vertical spacing).

     If no argument or an invalid argument is given, 'pl' sets the page
     length to 11i.

   'gtroff' provides several operations that help in setting up top and
bottom titles (or headers and footers).

 -- Request: .tl 'left'center'right'
     Print a "title line".  It consists of three parts: a left justified
     portion, a centered portion, and a right justified portion.  The
     argument separator ''' can be replaced with any character not
     occurring in the title line.  The '%' character is replaced with
     the current page number.  This character can be changed with the
     'pc' request (see below).

     Without argument, 'tl' is ignored.

     Some notes:

        * The line length set by the 'll' request is not honoured by
          'tl'; use the 'lt' request (described below) instead, to
          control line length for text set by 'tl'.

        * A title line is not restricted to the top or bottom of a page.

        * 'tl' prints the title line immediately, ignoring a partially
          filled line (which stays untouched).

        * It is not an error to omit closing delimiters.  For example,
          '.tl /foo' is equivalent to '.tl /foo///': It prints a title
          line with the left justified word 'foo'; the centered and
          right justified parts are empty.

        * 'tl' accepts the same parameter delimiting characters as the
          '\A' escape; see *note Escapes::.

 -- Request: .lt [length]
 -- Request: .lt +length
 -- Request: .lt -length
 -- Register: \n[.lt]
     The title line is printed using its own line length, which is
     specified (or incremented or decremented) with the 'lt' request.
     Initially, the title line length is set to 6.5i.  If a negative
     line length is specified (which is not allowed), 'gtroff' emits a
     warning of type 'range' and sets the title line length to zero.
     The default scaling indicator is 'm'.  If 'lt' is called without an
     argument, the title length is reset to the previous value before
     the last call to 'lt'.

     The current setting of this is available in the '.lt' read-only
     number register; it is associated with the current environment
     (*note Environments::).

 -- Request: .pn page
 -- Request: .pn +page
 -- Request: .pn -page
 -- Register: \n[.pn]
     Change (increase or decrease) the page number of the _next_ page.
     The only argument is the page number; the request is ignored
     without a parameter.

     The read-only number register '.pn' contains the number of the next
     page: either the value set by a 'pn' request, or the number of the
     current page plus 1.

 -- Request: .pc [char]
     Change the page number character (used by the 'tl' request) to a
     different character.  With no argument, this mechanism is disabled.
     Note that this doesn't affect the number register '%'.

   *Note Traps::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Page Control,  Next: Fonts and Symbols,  Prev: Page Layout,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.16 Page Control
=================

 -- Request: .bp [page]
 -- Request: .bp +page
 -- Request: .bp -page
 -- Register: \n[%]
     Stop processing the current page and move to the next page.  This
     request causes a break.  It can also take an argument to set
     (increase, decrease) the page number of the next page (which
     actually becomes the current page after 'bp' has finished).  The
     difference between 'bp' and 'pn' is that 'pn' does not cause a
     break or actually eject a page.  *Note Page Layout::.

          .de newpage                         \" define macro
          'bp                                 \" begin page
          'sp .5i                             \" vertical space
          .tl 'left top'center top'right top' \" title
          'sp .3i                             \" vertical space
          ..                                  \" end macro

     'bp' has no effect if not called within the top-level diversion
     (*note Diversions::).

     The read-write register '%' holds the current page number.

     The number register '.pe' is set to 1 while 'bp' is active.  *Note
     Page Location Traps::.

 -- Request: .ne [space]
     It is often necessary to force a certain amount of space before a
     new page occurs.  This is most useful to make sure that there is
     not a single "orphan" line left at the bottom of a page.  The 'ne'
     request ensures that there is a certain distance, specified by the
     first argument, before the next page is triggered (see *note
     Traps::, for further information).  The default scaling indicator
     for 'ne' is 'v'; the default value of SPACE is 1v if no argument is
     given.

     For example, to make sure that no fewer than 2 lines get orphaned,
     do the following before each paragraph:

          .ne 2
          text text text

     'ne' then automatically causes a page break if there is space for
     one line only.

 -- Request: .sv [space]
 -- Request: .os
     'sv' is similar to the 'ne' request; it reserves the specified
     amount of vertical space.  If the desired amount of space exists
     before the next trap (or the bottom page boundary if no trap is
     set), the space is output immediately (ignoring a partially filled
     line, which stays untouched).  If there is not enough space, it is
     stored for later output via the 'os' request.  The default value
     is 1v if no argument is given; the default scaling indicator is
     'v'.

     Both 'sv' and 'os' ignore no-space mode.  While the 'sv' request
     allows negative values for SPACE, 'os' ignores them.

 -- Register: \n[nl]
     This register contains the current vertical position.  If the
     vertical position is zero and the top of page transition hasn't
     happened yet, 'nl' is set to negative value.  'gtroff' itself does
     this at the very beginning of a document before anything has been
     printed, but the main usage is to plant a header trap on a page if
     this page has already started.

     Consider the following:

          .de xxx
          .  sp
          .  tl ''Header''
          .  sp
          ..
          .
          First page.
          .bp
          .wh 0 xxx
          .nr nl (-1)
          Second page.

     Result:

          First page.

          ...

                                       Header

          Second page.

          ...

     Without resetting 'nl' to a negative value, the just planted trap
     would be active beginning with the _next_ page, not the current
     one.

     *Note Diversions::, for a comparison with the '.h' and '.d'
     registers.


File: groff.info,  Node: Fonts and Symbols,  Next: Sizes,  Prev: Page Control,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.17 Fonts and Symbols
======================

'gtroff' can switch fonts at any point in the text.

   The basic set of fonts is 'R', 'I', 'B', and 'BI'.  These are Times
Roman, Italic, Bold, and Bold Italic.  For non-TTY devices, there is
also at least one symbol font that contains various special symbols
(Greek, mathematics).

* Menu:

* Changing Fonts::
* Font Families::
* Font Positions::
* Using Symbols::
* Character Classes::
* Special Fonts::
* Artificial Fonts::
* Ligatures and Kerning::


File: groff.info,  Node: Changing Fonts,  Next: Font Families,  Prev: Fonts and Symbols,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.1 Changing Fonts
---------------------

 -- Request: .ft [font]
 -- Escape: \ff
 -- Escape: \f(fn
 -- Escape: \f[font]
 -- Register: \n[.sty]
     The 'ft' request and the '\f' escape change the current font to
     FONT (one-character name F, two-character name FN).

     If FONT is a style name (as set with the 'sty' request or with the
     'styles' command in the 'DESC' file), use it within the current
     font family (as set with the 'fam' request, the '\F' escape, or the
     'family' command in the 'DESC' file).

     It is not possible to switch to a font with the name 'DESC'
     (whereas this name could be used as a style name; however, this is
     not recommended).

     With no argument or using 'P' as an argument, '.ft' switches to the
     previous font.  Use '\f[]' to do this with the escape.  The old
     syntax forms '\fP' or '\f[P]' are also supported.

     Fonts are generally specified as upper-case strings, which are
     usually 1 to 4 characters representing an abbreviation or acronym
     of the font name.  This is no limitation, just a convention.

     The example below produces two identical lines.

          eggs, bacon,
          .ft B
          spam
          .ft
          and sausage.

          eggs, bacon, \fBspam\fP and sausage.

     Note that '\f' doesn't produce an input token in 'gtroff'.  As a
     consequence, it can be used in requests like 'mc' (which expects a
     single character as an argument) to change the font on the fly:

          .mc \f[I]x\f[]

     The current style name is available in the read-only number
     register '.sty' (this is a string-valued register); if the current
     font isn't a style, the empty string is returned.  It is associated
     with the current environment.

     *Note Font Positions::, for an alternative syntax.

 -- Request: .ftr f [g]
     Translate font F to font G.  Whenever a font named F is referred to
     in a '\f' escape sequence, in the 'F' and 'S' conditional
     operators, or in the 'ft', 'ul', 'bd', 'cs', 'tkf', 'special',
     'fspecial', 'fp', or 'sty' requests, font G is used.  If G is
     missing or equal to F the translation is undone.

     Note that it is not possible to chain font translations.  Example:

          .ftr XXX TR
          .ftr XXX YYY
          .ft XXX
              => warning: can't find font `XXX'

 -- Request: .fzoom f [zoom]
 -- Register: \n[.zoom]
     Set magnification of font F to factor ZOOM, which must be a
     non-negative integer multiple of 1/1000th.  This request is useful
     to adjust the optical size of a font in relation to the others.  In
     the example below, font 'CR' is magnified by 10% (the zoom factor
     is thus 1.1).

          .fam P
          .fzoom CR 1100
          .ps 12
          Palatino and \f[CR]Courier\f[]

     A missing or zero value of ZOOM is the same as a value of 1000,
     which means no magnification.  F must be a real font name, not a
     style.

     Note that the magnification of a font is completely transparent to
     troff; a change of the zoom factor doesn't cause any effect except
     that the dimensions of glyphs, (word) spaces, kerns, etc., of the
     affected font are adjusted accordingly.

     The zoom factor of the current font is available in the read-only
     number register '.zoom', in multiples of 1/1000th.  It returns zero
     if there is no magnification.


File: groff.info,  Node: Font Families,  Next: Font Positions,  Prev: Changing Fonts,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.2 Font Families
--------------------

Due to the variety of fonts available, 'gtroff' has added the concept of
"font families" and "font styles".  The fonts are specified as the
concatenation of the font family and style.  Specifying a font without
the family part causes 'gtroff' to use that style of the current family.

   Currently, fonts for the devices '-Tps', '-Tpdf', '-Tdvi', '-Tlj4',
'-Tlbp', and the X11 fonts are set up to this mechanism.  By default,
'gtroff' uses the Times family with the four styles 'R', 'I', 'B', and
'BI'.

   This way, it is possible to use the basic four fonts and to select a
different font family on the command line (*note Groff Options::).

 -- Request: .fam [family]
 -- Register: \n[.fam]
 -- Escape: \Ff
 -- Escape: \F(fm
 -- Escape: \F[family]
 -- Register: \n[.fn]
     Switch font family to FAMILY (one-character name F, two-character
     name FM).  If no argument is given, switch back to the previous
     font family.  Use '\F[]' to do this with the escape.  Note that
     '\FP' doesn't work; it selects font family 'P' instead.

     The value at start-up is 'T'.  The current font family is available
     in the read-only number register '.fam' (this is a string-valued
     register); it is associated with the current environment.

          spam,
          .fam H    \" helvetica family
          spam,     \" used font is family H + style R = HR
          .ft B     \" family H + style B = font HB
          spam,
          .fam T    \" times family
          spam,     \" used font is family T + style B = TB
          .ft AR    \" font AR (not a style)
          baked beans,
          .ft R     \" family T + style R = font TR
          and spam.

     Note that '\F' doesn't produce an input token in 'gtroff'.  As a
     consequence, it can be used in requests like 'mc' (which expects a
     single character as an argument) to change the font family on the
     fly:

          .mc \F[P]x\F[]

     The '.fn' register contains the current "real font name" of the
     current font.  This is a string-valued register.  If the current
     font is a style, the value of '\n[.fn]' is the proper concatenation
     of family and style name.

 -- Request: .sty n style
     Associate STYLE with font position N.  A font position can be
     associated either with a font or with a style.  The current font is
     the index of a font position and so is also either a font or a
     style.  If it is a style, the font that is actually used is the
     font which name is the concatenation of the name of the current
     family and the name of the current style.  For example, if the
     current font is 1 and font position 1 is associated with style 'R'
     and the current font family is 'T', then font 'TR' is used.  If the
     current font is not a style, then the current family is ignored.
     If the requests 'cs', 'bd', 'tkf', 'uf', or 'fspecial' are applied
     to a style, they are instead applied to the member of the current
     family corresponding to that style.

     N must be a non-negative integer value.

     The default family can be set with the '-f' option (*note Groff
     Options::).  The 'styles' command in the 'DESC' file controls which
     font positions (if any) are initially associated with styles rather
     than fonts.  For example, the default setting for POSTSCRIPT fonts

          styles R I B BI

     is equivalent to

          .sty 1 R
          .sty 2 I
          .sty 3 B
          .sty 4 BI

     'fam' and '\F' always check whether the current font position is
     valid; this can give surprising results if the current font
     position is associated with a style.

     In the following example, we want to access the POSTSCRIPT font
     'FooBar' from the font family 'Foo':

          .sty \n[.fp] Bar
          .fam Foo
              => warning: can't find font `FooR'

     The default font position at start-up is 1; for the POSTSCRIPT
     device, this is associated with style 'R', so 'gtroff' tries to
     open 'FooR'.

     A solution to this problem is to use a dummy font like the
     following:

          .fp 0 dummy TR    \" set up dummy font at position 0
          .sty \n[.fp] Bar  \" register style `Bar'
          .ft 0             \" switch to font at position 0
          .fam Foo          \" activate family `Foo'
          .ft Bar           \" switch to font `FooBar'

     *Note Font Positions::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Font Positions,  Next: Using Symbols,  Prev: Font Families,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.3 Font Positions
---------------------

For the sake of old phototypesetters and compatibility with old versions
of 'troff', 'gtroff' has the concept of font "positions", on which
various fonts are mounted.

 -- Request: .fp pos font [external-name]
 -- Register: \n[.f]
 -- Register: \n[.fp]
     Mount font FONT at position POS (which must be a non-negative
     integer).  This numeric position can then be referred to with font
     changing commands.  When 'gtroff' starts it is using font
     position 1 (which must exist; position 0 is unused usually at
     start-up).

     The current font in use, as a font position, is available in the
     read-only number register '.f'.  This can be useful to remember the
     current font for later recall.  It is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).

          .nr save-font \n[.f]
          .ft B
          ... text text text ...
          .ft \n[save-font]

     The number of the next free font position is available in the
     read-only number register '.fp'.  This is useful when mounting a
     new font, like so:

          .fp \n[.fp] NEATOFONT

     Fonts not listed in the 'DESC' file are automatically mounted on
     the next available font position when they are referenced.  If a
     font is to be mounted explicitly with the 'fp' request on an unused
     font position, it should be mounted on the first unused font
     position, which can be found in the '.fp' register.  Although
     'gtroff' does not enforce this strictly, it is not allowed to mount
     a font at a position whose number is much greater (approx. 1000
     positions) than that of any currently used position.

     The 'fp' request has an optional third argument.  This argument
     gives the external name of the font, which is used for finding the
     font description file.  The second argument gives the internal name
     of the font, which is used to refer to the font in 'gtroff' after
     it has been mounted.  If there is no third argument then the
     internal name is used as the external name.  This feature makes it
     possible to use fonts with long names in compatibility mode.

   Both the 'ft' request and the '\f' escape have alternative syntax
forms to access font positions.

 -- Request: .ft nnn
 -- Escape: \fn
 -- Escape: \f(nn
 -- Escape: \f[nnn]
     Change the current font position to NNN (one-digit position N,
     two-digit position NN), which must be a non-negative integer.

     If NNN is associated with a style (as set with the 'sty' request or
     with the 'styles' command in the 'DESC' file), use it within the
     current font family (as set with the 'fam' request, the '\F'
     escape, or the 'family' command in the 'DESC' file).

          this is font 1
          .ft 2
          this is font 2
          .ft                   \" switch back to font 1
          .ft 3
          this is font 3
          .ft
          this is font 1 again

     *Note Changing Fonts::, for the standard syntax form.


File: groff.info,  Node: Using Symbols,  Next: Character Classes,  Prev: Font Positions,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.4 Using Symbols
--------------------

A "glyph" is a graphical representation of a "character".  While a
character is an abstract entity containing semantic information, a glyph
is something that can be actually seen on screen or paper.  It is
possible that a character has multiple glyph representation forms (for
example, the character 'A' can be either written in a roman or an italic
font, yielding two different glyphs); sometimes more than one character
maps to a single glyph (this is a "ligature" - the most common is 'fi').

   A "symbol" is simply a named glyph.  Within 'gtroff', all glyph names
of a particular font are defined in its font file.  If the user requests
a glyph not available in this font, 'gtroff' looks up an ordered list of
"special fonts".  By default, the POSTSCRIPT output device supports the
two special fonts 'SS' (slanted symbols) and 'S' (symbols) (the former
is looked up before the latter).  Other output devices use different
names for special fonts.  Fonts mounted with the 'fonts' keyword in the
'DESC' file are globally available.  To install additional special fonts
locally (i.e. for a particular font), use the 'fspecial' request.

   Here are the exact rules how 'gtroff' searches a given symbol:

   * If the symbol has been defined with the 'char' request, use it.
     This hides a symbol with the same name in the current font.

   * Check the current font.

   * If the symbol has been defined with the 'fchar' request, use it.

   * Check whether the current font has a font-specific list of special
     fonts; test all fonts in the order of appearance in the last
     'fspecial' call if appropriate.

   * If the symbol has been defined with the 'fschar' request for the
     current font, use it.

   * Check all fonts in the order of appearance in the last 'special'
     call.

   * If the symbol has been defined with the 'schar' request, use it.

   * As a last resort, consult all fonts loaded up to now for special
     fonts and check them, starting with the lowest font number.  Note
     that this can sometimes lead to surprising results since the
     'fonts' line in the 'DESC' file often contains empty positions,
     which are filled later on.  For example, consider the following:

          fonts 3 0 0 FOO

     This mounts font 'foo' at font position 3.  We assume that 'FOO' is
     a special font, containing glyph 'foo', and that no font has been
     loaded yet.  The line

          .fspecial BAR BAZ

     makes font 'BAZ' special only if font 'BAR' is active.  We further
     assume that 'BAZ' is really a special font, i.e., the font
     description file contains the 'special' keyword, and that it also
     contains glyph 'foo' with a special shape fitting to font 'BAR'.
     After executing 'fspecial', font 'BAR' is loaded at font
     position 1, and 'BAZ' at position 2.

     We now switch to a new font 'XXX', trying to access glyph 'foo'
     that is assumed to be missing.  There are neither font-specific
     special fonts for 'XXX' nor any other fonts made special with the
     'special' request, so 'gtroff' starts the search for special fonts
     in the list of already mounted fonts, with increasing font
     positions.  Consequently, it finds 'BAZ' before 'FOO' even for
     'XXX', which is not the intended behaviour.

   *Note Font Files::, and *note Special Fonts::, for more details.

   The list of available symbols is device dependent; see the
'groff_char(7)' man page for a complete list of all glyphs.  For
example, say

     man -Tdvi groff_char > groff_char.dvi

for a list using the default DVI fonts (not all versions of the 'man'
program support the '-T' option).  If you want to use an additional
macro package to change the used fonts, 'groff' must be called directly:

     groff -Tdvi -mec -man groff_char.7 > groff_char.dvi

   Glyph names not listed in groff_char(7) are derived algorithmically,
using a simplified version of the Adobe Glyph List (AGL) algorithm,
which is described in <https://github.com/adobe-type-tools/agl-aglfn>.
The (frozen) set of glyph names that can't be derived algorithmically is
called "groff glyph list (GGL)".

   * A glyph for Unicode character U+XXXX[X[X]], which is not a
     composite character is named 'uXXXX[X[X]]'.  X must be an uppercase
     hexadecimal digit.  Examples: 'u1234', 'u008E', 'u12DB8'.  The
     largest Unicode value is 0x10FFFF. There must be at least four 'X'
     digits; if necessary, add leading zeroes (after the 'u').  No zero
     padding is allowed for character codes greater than 0xFFFF.
     Surrogates (i.e., Unicode values greater than 0xFFFF represented
     with character codes from the surrogate area U+D800-U+DFFF) are not
     allowed too.

   * A glyph representing more than a single input character is named

          'u' COMPONENT1 '_' COMPONENT2 '_' COMPONENT3 ...

     Example: 'u0045_0302_0301'.

     For simplicity, all Unicode characters that are composites must be
     decomposed maximally (this is normalization form D in the Unicode
     standard); for example, 'u00CA_0301' is not a valid glyph name
     since U+00CA (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX) can be
     further decomposed into U+0045 (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E) and U+0302
     (COMBINING CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT).  'u0045_0302_0301' is thus the glyph
     name for U+1EBE, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX AND ACUTE.

   * groff maintains a table to decompose all algorithmically derived
     glyph names that are composites itself.  For example, 'u0100'
     (LATIN LETTER A WITH MACRON) is automatically decomposed into
     'u0041_0304'.  Additionally, a glyph name of the GGL is preferred
     to an algorithmically derived glyph name; groff also automatically
     does the mapping.  Example: The glyph 'u0045_0302' is mapped to
     '^E'.

   * glyph names of the GGL can't be used in composite glyph names; for
     example, '^E_u0301' is invalid.

 -- Escape: \(nm
 -- Escape: \[name]
 -- Escape: \[component1 component2 ...]
     Insert a symbol NAME (two-character name NM) or a composite glyph
     with component glyphs COMPONENT1, COMPONENT2, ...  There is no
     special syntax for one-character names - the natural form '\N'
     would collide with escapes.(1)  (*note Using Symbols-Footnote-1::)

     If NAME is undefined, a warning of type 'char' is generated, and
     the escape is ignored.  *Note Debugging::, for information about
     warnings.

     groff resolves '\[...]' with more than a single component as
     follows:

        * Any component that is found in the GGL is converted to the
          'uXXXX' form.

        * Any component 'uXXXX' that is found in the list of
          decomposable glyphs is decomposed.

        * The resulting elements are then concatenated with '_' in
          between, dropping the leading 'u' in all elements but the
          first.

     No check for the existence of any component (similar to 'tr'
     request) is done.

     Examples:

     '\[A ho]'
          'A' maps to 'u0041', 'ho' maps to 'u02DB', thus the final
          glyph name would be 'u0041_02DB'.  Note this is not the
          expected result: The ogonek glyph 'ho' is a spacing ogonek,
          but for a proper composite a non-spacing ogonek (U+0328) is
          necessary.  Looking into the file 'composite.tmac' one can
          find '.composite ho u0328', which changes the mapping of 'ho'
          while a composite glyph name is constructed, causing the final
          glyph name to be 'u0041_0328'.

     '\[^E u0301]'
     '\[^E aa]'
     '\[E a^ aa]'
     '\[E ^ ']'
          '^E' maps to 'u0045_0302', thus the final glyph name is
          'u0045_0302_0301' in all forms (assuming proper calls of the
          'composite' request).

     It is not possible to define glyphs with names like 'A ho' within a
     groff font file.  This is not really a limitation; instead, you
     have to define 'u0041_0328'.

 -- Escape: \C'xxx'
     Typeset the glyph named XXX.(2)  (*note Using Symbols-Footnote-2::)
     Normally it is more convenient to use '\[XXX]', but '\C' has the
     advantage that it is compatible with newer versions of AT&T 'troff'
     and is available in compatibility mode.

 -- Request: .composite from to
     Map glyph name FROM to glyph name TO if it is used in '\[...]' with
     more than one component.  See above for examples.

     This mapping is based on glyph names only; no check for the
     existence of either glyph is done.

     A set of default mappings for many accents can be found in the file
     'composite.tmac', which is loaded at start-up.

 -- Escape: \N'n'
     Typeset the glyph with code N in the current font ('n' is *not* the
     input character code).  The number N can be any non-negative
     decimal integer.  Most devices only have glyphs with codes between
     0 and 255; the Unicode output device uses codes in the range
     0-65535.  If the current font does not contain a glyph with that
     code, special fonts are _not_ searched.  The '\N' escape sequence
     can be conveniently used in conjunction with the 'char' request:

          .char \[phone] \f[ZD]\N'37'

     The code of each glyph is given in the fourth column in the font
     description file after the 'charset' command.  It is possible to
     include unnamed glyphs in the font description file by using a name
     of '---'; the '\N' escape sequence is the only way to use these.

     No kerning is applied to glyphs accessed with '\N'.

   Some escape sequences directly map onto special glyphs.

 -- Escape: \'
     This is a backslash followed by the apostrophe character, ASCII
     character '0x27' (EBCDIC character '0x7D').  The same as '\[aa]',
     the acute accent.

 -- Escape: \`
     This is a backslash followed by ASCII character '0x60' (EBCDIC
     character '0x79' usually).  The same as '\[ga]', the grave accent.

 -- Escape: \-
     This is the same as '\[-]', the minus sign in the current font.

 -- Escape: \_
     This is the same as '\[ul]', the underline character.

 -- Request: .cflags n c1 c2 ...
     Input characters and symbols have certain properties associated
     with it.(3)  (*note Using Symbols-Footnote-3::) These properties
     can be modified with the 'cflags' request.  The first argument is
     the sum of the desired flags and the remaining arguments are the
     characters or symbols to have those properties.  It is possible to
     omit the spaces between the characters or symbols.  Instead of
     single characters or symbols you can also use character classes
     (see *note Character Classes:: for more details).

     '1'
          The character ends sentences (initially characters '.?!' have
          this property).

     '2'
          Lines can be broken before the character (initially no
          characters have this property).  This only works if both the
          characters before and after have non-zero hyphenation codes
          (as set with the 'hcode' request).  Use value 64 to override
          this behaviour.

     '4'
          Lines can be broken after the character (initially the
          character '-' and the symbols '\[hy]' and '\[em]' have this
          property).  This only works if both the characters before and
          after have non-zero hyphenation codes (as set with the 'hcode'
          request).  Use value 64 to override this behaviour.

     '8'
          The character overlaps horizontally if used as a horizontal
          line building element.  Initially the symbols '\[ul]',
          '\[rn]', '\[ru]', '\[radicalex]', and '\[sqrtex]' have this
          property.

     '16'
          The character overlaps vertically if used as vertical line
          building element.  Initially symbol '\[br]' has this property.

     '32'
          An end-of-sentence character followed by any number of
          characters with this property is treated as the end of a
          sentence if followed by a newline or two spaces; in other
          words the character is "transparent" for the purposes of
          end-of-sentence recognition - this is the same as having a
          zero space factor in TeX (initially characters '"')]*' and the
          symbols '\[dg]', '\[rq]', and '\[cq]' have this property).

     '64'
          Ignore hyphenation code values of the surrounding characters.
          Use this in combination with values 2 and 4 (initially no
          characters have this property).  For example, if you need an
          automatic break point after the en-dash in number ranges like
          '3000-5000', insert

               .cflags 68 \(en

          into your document.  Note, however, that this can lead to bad
          layout if done without thinking; in most situations, a better
          solution instead of changing the 'cflags' value is to insert
          '\:' right after the hyphen at the places that really need a
          break point.

     '128'
          Prohibit a line break before the character, but allow a line
          break after the character.  This works only in combination
          with flags 256 and 512 (see below) and has no effect
          otherwise.

     '256'
          Prohibit a line break after the character, but allow a line
          break before the character.  This works only in combination
          with flags 128 and 512 (see below) and has no effect
          otherwise.

     '512'
          Allow line break before or after the character.  This works
          only in combination with flags 128 and 256 and has no effect
          otherwise.

          Contrary to flag values 2 and 4, the flags 128, 256, and 512
          work pairwise.  If, for example, the left character has value
          512, and the right character 128, no line break gets inserted.
          If we use value 6 instead for the left character, a line break
          after the character can't be suppressed since the right
          neighbour character doesn't get examined.

 -- Request: .char g [string]
 -- Request: .fchar g [string]
 -- Request: .fschar f g [string]
 -- Request: .schar g [string]
     Define a new glyph G to be STRING (which can be empty).(4)  (*note
     Using Symbols-Footnote-4::) Every time glyph G needs to be printed,
     STRING is processed in a temporary environment and the result is
     wrapped up into a single object.  Compatibility mode is turned off
     and the escape character is set to '\' while STRING is being
     processed.  Any emboldening, constant spacing or track kerning is
     applied to this object rather than to individual characters in
     STRING.

     A glyph defined by these requests can be used just like a normal
     glyph provided by the output device.  In particular, other
     characters can be translated to it with the 'tr' or 'trin'
     requests; it can be made the leader character by the 'lc' request;
     repeated patterns can be drawn with the glyph using the '\l' and
     '\L' escape sequences; words containing the glyph can be hyphenated
     correctly if the 'hcode' request is used to give the glyph's symbol
     a hyphenation code.

     There is a special anti-recursion feature: Use of 'g' within the
     glyph's definition is handled like normal characters and symbols
     not defined with 'char'.

     Note that the 'tr' and 'trin' requests take precedence if 'char'
     accesses the same symbol.

          .tr XY
          X
              => Y
          .char X Z
          X
              => Y
          .tr XX
          X
              => Z

     The 'fchar' request defines a fallback glyph: 'gtroff' only checks
     for glyphs defined with 'fchar' if it cannot find the glyph in the
     current font.  'gtroff' carries out this test before checking
     special fonts.

     'fschar' defines a fallback glyph for font F: 'gtroff' checks for
     glyphs defined with 'fschar' after the list of fonts declared as
     font-specific special fonts with the 'fspecial' request, but before
     the list of fonts declared as global special fonts with the
     'special' request.

     Finally, the 'schar' request defines a global fallback glyph:
     'gtroff' checks for glyphs defined with 'schar' after the list of
     fonts declared as global special fonts with the 'special' request,
     but before the already mounted special fonts.

     *Note Using Symbols::, for a detailed description of the glyph
     searching mechanism in 'gtroff'.

 -- Request: .rchar c1 c2 ...
 -- Request: .rfschar f c1 c2 ...
     Remove the definitions of glyphs C1, C2, ...  This undoes the
     effect of a 'char', 'fchar', or 'schar' request.

     It is possible to omit the whitespace between arguments.

     The request 'rfschar' removes glyph definitions defined with
     'fschar' for glyph f.

   *Note Special Characters::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Using Symbols-Footnotes,  Up: Using Symbols

   (1) Note that a one-character symbol is not the same as an input
character, i.e., the character 'a' is not the same as '\[a]'.  By
default, 'groff' defines only a single one-character symbol, '\[-]'; it
is usually accessed as '\-'.  On the other hand, 'gtroff' has the
special feature that '\[charXXX]' is the same as the input character
with character code XXX.  For example, '\[char97]' is identical to the
letter 'a' if ASCII encoding is active.

   (2) '\C' is actually a misnomer since it accesses an output glyph.

   (3) Note that the output glyphs themselves don't have such
properties.  For 'gtroff', a glyph is a numbered box with a given width,
depth, and height, nothing else.  All manipulations with the 'cflags'
request work on the input level.

   (4) 'char' is a misnomer since an output glyph is defined.


File: groff.info,  Node: Character Classes,  Next: Special Fonts,  Prev: Using Symbols,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.5 Character Classes
------------------------

Classes are particularly useful for East Asian languages such as
Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, where the number of needed characters is
much larger than in European languages, and where large sets of
characters share the same properties.

 -- Request: .class n c1 c2 ...
     In 'groff', a "character class" (or simply "class") is a set of
     characters, grouped by some user aspect.  The 'class' request
     defines such classes so that other requests can refer to all
     characters belonging to this set with a single class name.
     Currently, only the 'cflags' request can handle character classes.

     A 'class' request takes a class name followed by a list of
     entities.  In its simplest form, the entities are characters or
     symbols:

          .class [prepunct] , : ; > }

     Since class and glyph names share the same namespace, it is
     recommended to start and end the class name with '[' and ']',
     respectively, to avoid collisions with normal 'groff' symbols (and
     symbols defined by the user).  In particular, the presence of ']'
     in the symbol name intentionally prevents the usage of '\[...]',
     thus you must use the '\C' escape to access a class with such a
     name.

     You can also use a special character range notation, consisting of
     a start character or symbol, followed by '-', and an end character
     or symbol.  Internally, 'gtroff' converts these two symbol names to
     Unicode values (according to the groff glyph gist), which then give
     the start and end value of the range.  If that fails, the class
     definition is skipped.

     Finally, classes can be nested, too.

     Here is a more complex example:

          .class [prepunctx] \C'[prepunct]' \[u2013]-\[u2016]

     The class 'prepunctx' now contains the contents of the class
     'prepunct' as defined above (the set ', : ; > }'), and characters
     in the range between 'U+2013' and 'U+2016'.

     If you want to add '-' to a class, it must be the first character
     value in the argument list, otherwise it gets misinterpreted as a
     range.

     Note that it is not possible to use class names within range
     definitions.

     Typical use of the 'class' request is to control line-breaking and
     hyphenation rules as defined by the 'cflags' request.  For example,
     to inhibit line breaks before the characters belonging to the
     'prepunctx' class, you can write:

          .cflags 2 \C'[prepunctx]'

     See the 'cflags' request in *note Using Symbols::, for more
     details.


File: groff.info,  Node: Special Fonts,  Next: Artificial Fonts,  Prev: Character Classes,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.6 Special Fonts
--------------------

Special fonts are those that 'gtroff' searches when it cannot find the
requested glyph in the current font.  The Symbol font is usually a
special font.

   'gtroff' provides the following two requests to add more special
fonts.  *Note Using Symbols::, for a detailed description of the glyph
searching mechanism in 'gtroff'.

   Usually, only non-TTY devices have special fonts.

 -- Request: .special [s1 s2 ...]
 -- Request: .fspecial f [s1 s2 ...]
     Use the 'special' request to define special fonts.  Initially, this
     list is empty.

     Use the 'fspecial' request to designate special fonts only when
     font F is active.  Initially, this list is empty.

     Previous calls to 'special' or 'fspecial' are overwritten; without
     arguments, the particular list of special fonts is set to empty.
     Special fonts are searched in the order they appear as arguments.

     All fonts that appear in a call to 'special' or 'fspecial' are
     loaded.

     *Note Using Symbols::, for the exact search order of glyphs.


File: groff.info,  Node: Artificial Fonts,  Next: Ligatures and Kerning,  Prev: Special Fonts,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.7 Artificial Fonts
-----------------------

There are a number of requests and escapes for artificially creating
fonts.  These are largely vestiges of the days when output devices did
not have a wide variety of fonts, and when 'nroff' and 'troff' were
separate programs.  Most of them are no longer necessary in GNU 'troff'.
Nevertheless, they are supported.

 -- Escape: \H'height'
 -- Escape: \H'+height'
 -- Escape: \H'-height'
 -- Register: \n[.height]
     Change (increment, decrement) the height of the current font, but
     not the width.  If HEIGHT is zero, restore the original height.
     Default scaling indicator is 'z'.

     The read-only number register '.height' contains the font height as
     set by '\H'.

     Currently, only the '-Tps' and '-Tpdf' devices support this
     feature.

     Note that '\H' doesn't produce an input token in 'gtroff'.  As a
     consequence, it can be used in requests like 'mc' (which expects a
     single character as an argument) to change the font on the fly:

          .mc \H'+5z'x\H'0'

     In compatibility mode, 'gtroff' behaves differently: If an
     increment or decrement is used, it is always taken relative to the
     current point size and not relative to the previously selected font
     height.  Thus,

          .cp 1
          \H'+5'test \H'+5'test

     prints the word 'test' twice with the same font height (five points
     larger than the current font size).

 -- Escape: \S'slant'
 -- Register: \n[.slant]
     Slant the current font by SLANT degrees.  Positive values slant to
     the right.  Only integer values are possible.

     The read-only number register '.slant' contains the font slant as
     set by '\S'.

     Currently, only the '-Tps' and '-Tpdf' devices support this
     feature.

     Note that '\S' doesn't produce an input token in 'gtroff'.  As a
     consequence, it can be used in requests like 'mc' (which expects a
     single character as an argument) to change the font on the fly:

          .mc \S'20'x\S'0'

     This request is incorrectly documented in the original Unix troff
     manual; the slant is always set to an absolute value.

 -- Request: .ul [lines]
     The 'ul' request normally underlines subsequent lines if a TTY
     output device is used.  Otherwise, the lines are printed in italics
     (only the term 'underlined' is used in the following).  The single
     argument is the number of input lines to be underlined; with no
     argument, the next line is underlined.  If LINES is zero or
     negative, stop the effects of 'ul' (if it was active).  Requests
     and empty lines do not count for computing the number of underlined
     input lines, even if they produce some output like 'tl'.  Lines
     inserted by macros (e.g. invoked by a trap) do count.

     At the beginning of 'ul', the current font is stored and the
     underline font is activated.  Within the span of a 'ul' request, it
     is possible to change fonts, but after the last line affected by
     'ul' the saved font is restored.

     This number of lines still to be underlined is associated with the
     current environment (*note Environments::).  The underline font can
     be changed with the 'uf' request.

     The 'ul' request does not underline spaces.

 -- Request: .cu [lines]
     The 'cu' request is similar to 'ul' but underlines spaces as well
     (if a TTY output device is used).

 -- Request: .uf font
     Set the underline font (globally) used by 'ul' and 'cu'.  By
     default, this is the font at position 2.  FONT can be either a
     non-negative font position or the name of a font.

 -- Request: .bd font [offset]
 -- Request: .bd font1 font2 [offset]
 -- Register: \n[.b]
     Artificially create a bold font by printing each glyph twice,
     slightly offset.

     Two syntax forms are available.

        * Imitate a bold font unconditionally.  The first argument
          specifies the font to embolden, and the second is the number
          of basic units, minus one, by which the two glyphs are offset.
          If the second argument is missing, emboldening is turned off.

          FONT can be either a non-negative font position or the name of
          a font.

          OFFSET is available in the '.b' read-only register if a
          special font is active; in the 'bd' request, its default unit
          is 'u'.

        * Imitate a bold form conditionally.  Embolden FONT1 by OFFSET
          only if font FONT2 is the current font.  This command can be
          issued repeatedly to set up different emboldening values for
          different current fonts.  If the second argument is missing,
          emboldening is turned off for this particular current font.

          This affects special fonts only (either set up with the
          'special' command in font files or with the 'fspecial'
          request).

 -- Request: .cs font [width [em-size]]
     Switch to and from "constant glyph space mode".  If activated, the
     width of every glyph is WIDTH/36 ems.  The em size is given
     absolutely by EM-SIZE; if this argument is missing, the em value is
     taken from the current font size (as set with the 'ps' request)
     when the font is effectively in use.  Without second and third
     argument, constant glyph space mode is deactivated.

     Default scaling indicator for EM-SIZE is 'z'; WIDTH is an integer.


File: groff.info,  Node: Ligatures and Kerning,  Prev: Artificial Fonts,  Up: Fonts and Symbols

5.17.8 Ligatures and Kerning
----------------------------

Ligatures are groups of characters that are run together, i.e, producing
a single glyph.  For example, the letters 'f' and 'i' can form a
ligature 'fi' as in the word 'file'.  This produces a cleaner look
(albeit subtle) to the printed output.  Usually, ligatures are not
available in fonts for TTY output devices.

   Most POSTSCRIPT fonts support the fi and fl ligatures.  The C/A/T
typesetter that was the target of AT&T 'troff' also supported 'ff',
'ffi', and 'ffl' ligatures.  Advanced typesetters or 'expert' fonts may
include ligatures for 'ft' and 'ct', although GNU 'troff' does not
support these (yet).

   Only the current font is checked for ligatures and kerns; neither
special fonts nor entities defined with the 'char' request (and its
siblings) are taken into account.

 -- Request: .lg [flag]
 -- Register: \n[.lg]
     Switch the ligature mechanism on or off; if the parameter is
     non-zero or missing, ligatures are enabled, otherwise disabled.
     Default is on.  The current ligature mode can be found in the
     read-only number register '.lg' (set to 1 or 2 if ligatures are
     enabled, 0 otherwise).

     Setting the ligature mode to 2 enables the two-character ligatures
     (fi, fl, and ff) and disables the three-character ligatures (ffi
     and ffl).

   "Pairwise kerning" is another subtle typesetting mechanism that
modifies the distance between a glyph pair to improve readability.  In
most cases (but not always) the distance is decreased.  Typewriter-like
fonts and fonts for terminals where all glyphs have the same width don't
use kerning.

 -- Request: .kern [flag]
 -- Register: \n[.kern]
     Switch kerning on or off.  If the parameter is non-zero or missing,
     enable pairwise kerning, otherwise disable it.  The read-only
     number register '.kern' is set to 1 if pairwise kerning is enabled,
     0 otherwise.

     If the font description file contains pairwise kerning information,
     glyphs from that font are kerned.  Kerning between two glyphs can
     be inhibited by placing '\&' between them: 'V\&A'.

     *Note Font File Format::.

   "Track kerning" expands or reduces the space between glyphs.  This
can be handy, for example, if you need to squeeze a long word onto a
single line or spread some text to fill a narrow column.  It must be
used with great care since it is usually considered bad typography if
the reader notices the effect.

 -- Request: .tkf f s1 n1 s2 n2
     Enable track kerning for font F.  If the current font is F the
     width of every glyph is increased by an amount between N1 and N2
     (N1, N2 can be negative); if the current point size is less than or
     equal to S1 the width is increased by N1; if it is greater than or
     equal to S2 the width is increased by N2; if the point size is
     greater than or equal to S1 and less than or equal to S2 the
     increase in width is a linear function of the point size.

     The default scaling indicator is 'z' for S1 and S2, 'p' for N1 and
     N2.

     Note that the track kerning amount is added even to the rightmost
     glyph in a line; for large values it is thus recommended to
     increase the line length by the same amount to compensate it.

   Sometimes, when typesetting letters of different fonts, more or less
space at such boundaries is needed.  There are two escapes to help with
this.

 -- Escape: \/
     Increase the width of the preceding glyph so that the spacing
     between that glyph and the following glyph is correct if the
     following glyph is a roman glyph.  For example, if an italic 'f' is
     immediately followed by a roman right parenthesis, then in many
     fonts the top right portion of the 'f' overlaps the top left of the
     right parenthesis.  Use this escape sequence whenever an italic
     glyph is immediately followed by a roman glyph without any
     intervening space.  This small amount of space is also called
     "italic correction".

 -- Escape: \,
     Modify the spacing of the following glyph so that the spacing
     between that glyph and the preceding glyph is correct if the
     preceding glyph is a roman glyph.  Use this escape sequence
     whenever a roman glyph is immediately followed by an italic glyph
     without any intervening space.  In analogy to above, this space
     could be called "left italic correction", but this term isn't used
     widely.

 -- Escape: \&
     Insert a zero-width character, which is invisible.  Its intended
     use is to stop interaction of a character with its surroundings.

        * It prevents the insertion of extra space after an
          end-of-sentence character.

               Test.
               Test.
                   => Test.  Test.
               Test.\&
               Test.
                   => Test. Test.

        * It prevents interpretation of a control character at the
          beginning of an input line.

               .Test
                   => warning: `Test' not defined
               \&.Test
                   => .Test

        * It prevents kerning between two glyphs.

        * It is needed to map an arbitrary character to nothing in the
          'tr' request (*note Character Translations::).

 -- Escape: \)
     This escape is similar to '\&' except that it behaves like a
     character declared with the 'cflags' request to be transparent for
     the purposes of an end-of-sentence character.

     Its main usage is in macro definitions to protect against arguments
     starting with a control character.

          .de xxx
          \)\\$1
          ..
          .de yyy
          \&\\$1
          ..
          This is a test.\c
          .xxx '
          This is a test.
              =>This is a test.'  This is a test.
          This is a test.\c
          .yyy '
          This is a test.
              =>This is a test.' This is a test.


File: groff.info,  Node: Sizes,  Next: Strings,  Prev: Fonts and Symbols,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.18 Sizes
==========

'gtroff' uses two dimensions with each line of text, type size and
vertical spacing.  The "type size" is approximately the height of the
tallest glyph.(1)  (*note Sizes-Footnote-1::) "Vertical spacing" is the
amount of space 'gtroff' allows for a line of text; normally, this is
about 20% larger than the current type size.  Ratios smaller than this
can result in hard-to-read text; larger than this, it spreads the text
out more vertically (useful for term papers).  By default, 'gtroff' uses
10 point type on 12 point spacing.

   The difference between type size and vertical spacing is known, by
typesetters, as "leading" (this is pronounced 'ledding').

* Menu:

* Changing Type Sizes::
* Fractional Type Sizes::


File: groff.info,  Node: Sizes-Footnotes,  Up: Sizes

   (1) This is usually the parenthesis.  Note that in most cases the
real dimensions of the glyphs in a font are _not_ related to its type
size!  For example, the standard POSTSCRIPT font families 'Times Roman',
'Helvetica', and 'Courier' can't be used together at 10pt; to get
acceptable output, the size of 'Helvetica' has to be reduced by one
point, and the size of 'Courier' must be increased by one point.


File: groff.info,  Node: Changing Type Sizes,  Next: Fractional Type Sizes,  Prev: Sizes,  Up: Sizes

5.18.1 Changing Type Sizes
--------------------------

 -- Request: .ps [size]
 -- Request: .ps +size
 -- Request: .ps -size
 -- Escape: \ssize
 -- Register: \n[.s]
     Use the 'ps' request or the '\s' escape to change (increase,
     decrease) the type size (in points).  Specify SIZE as either an
     absolute point size, or as a relative change from the current size.
     The size 0 (for both '.ps' and '\s'), or no argument (for '.ps'
     only), goes back to the previous size.

     Default scaling indicator of 'size' is 'z'.  If 'size' is negative,
     it is set to 1u.

     The read-only number register '.s' returns the point size in points
     as a decimal fraction.  This is a string.  To get the point size in
     scaled points, use the '.ps' register instead.

     '.s' is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

          snap, snap,
          .ps +2
          grin, grin,
          .ps +2
          wink, wink, \s+2nudge, nudge,\s+8 say no more!
          .ps 10

     The '\s' escape may be called in a variety of ways.  Much like
     other escapes there must be a way to determine where the argument
     ends and the text begins.  Any of the following forms are valid:

     '\sN'
          Set the point size to N points.  N must be either 0 or in the
          range 4 to 39.

     '\s+N'
     '\s-N'
          Increase or decrease the point size by N points.  N must be
          exactly one digit.

     '\s(NN'
          Set the point size to NN points.  NN must be exactly two
          digits.

     '\s+(NN'
     '\s-(NN'
     '\s(+NN'
     '\s(-NN'
          Increase or decrease the point size by NN points.  NN must be
          exactly two digits.

     Note that '\s' doesn't produce an input token in 'gtroff'.  As a
     consequence, it can be used in requests like 'mc' (which expects a
     single character as an argument) to change the font on the fly:

          .mc \s[20]x\s[0]

     *Note Fractional Type Sizes::, for yet another syntactical form of
     using the '\s' escape.

 -- Request: .sizes s1 s2 ... sn [0]
     Some devices may only have certain permissible sizes, in which case
     'gtroff' rounds to the nearest permissible size.  The 'DESC' file
     specifies which sizes are permissible for the device.

     Use the 'sizes' request to change the permissible sizes for the
     current output device.  Arguments are in scaled points; the
     'sizescale' line in the 'DESC' file for the output device provides
     the scaling factor.  For example, if the scaling factor is 1000,
     then the value 12000 is 12 points.

     Each argument can be a single point size (such as '12000'), or a
     range of sizes (such as '4000-72000').  You can optionally end the
     list with a zero.

 -- Request: .vs [space]
 -- Request: .vs +space
 -- Request: .vs -space
 -- Register: \n[.v]
     Change (increase, decrease) the vertical spacing by SPACE.  The
     default scaling indicator is 'p'.

     If 'vs' is called without an argument, the vertical spacing is
     reset to the previous value before the last call to 'vs'.

     'gtroff' creates a warning of type 'range' if SPACE is negative;
     the vertical spacing is then set to smallest positive value, the
     vertical resolution (as given in the '.V' register).

     Note that '.vs 0' isn't saved in a diversion since it doesn't
     result in a vertical motion.  You explicitly have to repeat this
     command before inserting the diversion.

     The read-only number register '.v' contains the current vertical
     spacing; it is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

   The effective vertical line spacing consists of four components.
Breaking a line causes the following actions (in the given order).

   * Move the current point vertically by the "extra pre-vertical line
     space".  This is the minimum value of all '\x' escapes with a
     negative argument in the current output line.

   * Move the current point vertically by the vertical line spacing as
     set with the 'vs' request.

   * Output the current line.

   * Move the current point vertically by the "extra post-vertical line
     space".  This is the maximum value of all '\x' escapes with a
     positive argument in the line that has just been output.

   * Move the current point vertically by the "post-vertical line
     spacing" as set with the 'pvs' request.

   It is usually better to use 'vs' or 'pvs' instead of 'ls' to produce
double-spaced documents: 'vs' and 'pvs' have a finer granularity for the
inserted vertical space compared to 'ls'; furthermore, certain
preprocessors assume single-spacing.

   *Note Manipulating Spacing::, for more details on the '\x' escape and
the 'ls' request.

 -- Request: .pvs [space]
 -- Request: .pvs +space
 -- Request: .pvs -space
 -- Register: \n[.pvs]
     Change (increase, decrease) the post-vertical spacing by SPACE.
     The default scaling indicator is 'p'.

     If 'pvs' is called without an argument, the post-vertical spacing
     is reset to the previous value before the last call to 'pvs'.

     'gtroff' creates a warning of type 'range' if SPACE is zero or
     negative; the vertical spacing is then set to zero.

     The read-only number register '.pvs' contains the current
     post-vertical spacing; it is associated with the current
     environment (*note Environments::).


File: groff.info,  Node: Fractional Type Sizes,  Prev: Changing Type Sizes,  Up: Sizes

5.18.2 Fractional Type Sizes
----------------------------

A "scaled point" is equal to 1/SIZESCALE points, where SIZESCALE is
specified in the 'DESC' file (1 by default).  There is a new scale
indicator 'z', which has the effect of multiplying by SIZESCALE.
Requests and escape sequences in 'gtroff' interpret arguments that
represent a point size as being in units of scaled points, but they
evaluate each such argument using a default scale indicator of 'z'.
Arguments treated in this way are the argument to the 'ps' request, the
third argument to the 'cs' request, the second and fourth arguments to
the 'tkf' request, the argument to the '\H' escape sequence, and those
variants of the '\s' escape sequence that take a numeric expression as
their argument (see below).

   For example, suppose SIZESCALE is 1000; then a scaled point is
equivalent to a millipoint; the request '.ps 10.25' is equivalent to
'.ps 10.25z' and thus sets the point size to 10250 scaled points, which
is equal to 10.25 points.

   'gtroff' disallows the use of the 'z' scale indicator in instances
where it would make no sense, such as a numeric expression whose default
scale indicator was neither 'u' nor 'z'.  Similarly it would make no
sense to use a scaling indicator other than 'z' or 'u' in a numeric
expression whose default scale indicator was 'z', and so 'gtroff'
disallows this as well.

   There is also new scale indicator 's', which multiplies by the number
of units in a scaled point.  So, for example, '\n[.ps]s' is equal to
'1m'.  Be sure not to confuse the 's' and 'z' scale indicators.

 -- Register: \n[.ps]
     A read-only number register returning the point size in scaled
     points.

     '.ps' is associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

 -- Register: \n[.psr]
 -- Register: \n[.sr]
     The last-requested point size in scaled points is contained in the
     '.psr' read-only number register.  The last requested point size in
     points as a decimal fraction can be found in '.sr'.  This is a
     string-valued read-only number register.

     Note that the requested point sizes are device-independent, whereas
     the values returned by the '.ps' and '.s' registers are not.  For
     example, if a point size of 11pt is requested, and a 'sizes'
     request (or a 'sizescale' line in a 'DESC' file) specifies 10.95pt
     instead, this value is actually used.

     Both registers are associated with the current environment (*note
     Environments::).

   The '\s' escape has the following syntax for working with fractional
type sizes:

'\s[N]'
'\s'N''
     Set the point size to N scaled points; N is a numeric expression
     with a default scale indicator of 'z'.

'\s[+N]'
'\s[-N]'
'\s+[N]'
'\s-[N]'
'\s'+N''
'\s'-N''
'\s+'N''
'\s-'N''
     Increase or decrease the point size by N scaled points; N is a
     numeric expression (which may start with a minus sign) with a
     default scale indicator of 'z'.

   *Note Font Files::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Strings,  Next: Conditionals and Loops,  Prev: Sizes,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.19 Strings
============

'gtroff' has string variables, which are entirely for user convenience
(i.e. there are no built-in strings except '.T', but even this is a
read-write string variable).

   Although the following requests can be used to create strings, simply
using an undefined string will cause it to be defined as empty.  *Note
Identifiers::.

 -- Request: .ds name [string]
 -- Request: .ds1 name [string]
 -- Escape: \*n
 -- Escape: \*(nm
 -- Escape: \*[name arg1 arg2 ...]
     Define and access a string variable NAME (one-character name N,
     two-character name NM).  If NAME already exists, 'ds' overwrites
     the previous definition.  Only the syntax form using brackets can
     take arguments that are handled identically to macro arguments; the
     single exception is that a closing bracket as an argument must be
     enclosed in double quotes.  *Note Request and Macro Arguments::,
     and *note Parameters::.

     Example:

          .ds foo a \\$1 test
          .
          This is \*[foo nice].
              => This is a nice test.

     The '\*' escape "interpolates" (expands in-place) a previously
     defined string variable.  To be more precise, the stored string is
     pushed onto the input stack, which is then parsed by 'gtroff'.
     Similar to number registers, it is possible to nest strings, i.e.,
     string variables can be called within string variables.

     If the string named by the '\*' escape does not exist, it is
     defined as empty, and a warning of type 'mac' is emitted (see *note
     Debugging::, for more details).

     *Caution:* Unlike other requests, the second argument to the 'ds'
     request takes up the entire line including trailing spaces.  This
     means that comments on a line with such a request can introduce
     unwanted space into a string.

          .ds TeX T\h'-.2m'\v'.2m'E\v'-.2m'\h'-.1m'X \" Knuth's TeX

     Instead the comment should be put on another line or have the
     comment escape adjacent with the end of the string.

          .ds TeX T\h'-.2m'\v'.2m'E\v'-.2m'\h'-.1m'X\" Knuth's TeX

     To produce leading space the string can be started with a double
     quote.  No trailing quote is needed; in fact, any trailing quote is
     included in your string.

          .ds sign "           Yours in a white wine sauce,

     Strings are not limited to a single line of text.  A string can
     span several lines by escaping the newlines with a backslash.  The
     resulting string is stored _without_ the newlines.

          .ds foo lots and lots \
          of text are on these \
          next several lines

     It is not possible to have real newlines in a string.  To put a
     single double quote character into a string, use two consecutive
     double quote characters.

     The 'ds1' request turns off compatibility mode while interpreting a
     string.  To be more precise, a "compatibility save" input token is
     inserted at the beginning of the string, and a "compatibility
     restore" input token at the end.

          .nr xxx 12345
          .ds aa The value of xxx is \\n[xxx].
          .ds1 bb The value of xxx is \\n[xxx].
          .
          .cp 1
          .
          \*(aa
              => warning: number register `[' not defined
              => The value of xxx is 0xxx].
          \*(bb
              => The value of xxx is 12345.

     Strings, macros, and diversions (and boxes) share the same name
     space.  Internally, even the same mechanism is used to store them.
     This has some interesting consequences.  For example, it is
     possible to call a macro with string syntax and vice versa.

          .de xxx
          a funny test.
          ..
          This is \*[xxx]
              => This is a funny test.

          .ds yyy a funny test
          This is
          .yyy
              => This is a funny test.

     In particular, interpolating a string does not hide existing macro
     arguments.  Thus in a macro, a more efficient way of doing

          .xx \\$@

     is

          \\*[xx]\\

     Note that the latter calling syntax doesn't change the value of
     '\$0', which is then inherited from the calling macro.

     Diversions and boxes can be also called with string syntax.

     Another consequence is that you can copy one-line diversions or
     boxes to a string.

          .di xxx
          a \fItest\fR
          .br
          .di
          .ds yyy This is \*[xxx]\c
          \*[yyy].
              => This is a test.

     As the previous example shows, it is possible to store formatted
     output in strings.  The '\c' escape prevents the insertion of an
     additional blank line in the output.

     Copying diversions longer than a single output line produces
     unexpected results.

          .di xxx
          a funny
          .br
          test
          .br
          .di
          .ds yyy This is \*[xxx]\c
          \*[yyy].
              => test This is a funny.

     Usually, it is not predictable whether a diversion contains one or
     more output lines, so this mechanism should be avoided.  With Unix
     'troff', this was the only solution to strip off a final newline
     from a diversion.  Another disadvantage is that the spaces in the
     copied string are already formatted, making them unstretchable.
     This can cause ugly results.

     A clean solution to this problem is available in GNU 'troff', using
     the requests 'chop' to remove the final newline of a diversion, and
     'unformat' to make the horizontal spaces stretchable again.

          .box xxx
          a funny
          .br
          test
          .br
          .box
          .chop xxx
          .unformat xxx
          This is \*[xxx].
              => This is a funny test.

     *Note Gtroff Internals::, for more information.

 -- Request: .as name [string]
 -- Request: .as1 name [string]
     The 'as' request is similar to 'ds' but appends STRING to the
     string stored as NAME instead of redefining it.  If NAME doesn't
     exist yet, it is created.

          .as sign " with shallots, onions and garlic,

     The 'as1' request is similar to 'as', but compatibility mode is
     switched off while the appended string is interpreted.  To be more
     precise, a "compatibility save" input token is inserted at the
     beginning of the appended string, and a "compatibility restore"
     input token at the end.

   Rudimentary string manipulation routines are given with the next two
requests.

 -- Request: .substring str n1 [n2]
     Replace the string named STR with the substring defined by the
     indices N1 and N2.  The first character in the string has index 0.
     If N2 is omitted, it is implicitly set to the largest valid value
     (the string length minus one).  If the index value N1 or N2 is
     negative, it is counted from the end of the string, going
     backwards: The last character has index -1, the character before
     the last character has index -2, etc.

          .ds xxx abcdefgh
          .substring xxx 1 -4
          \*[xxx]
              => bcde
          .substring xxx 2
          \*[xxx]
              => de

 -- Request: .length reg str
     Compute the number of characters of STR and return it in the number
     register REG.  If REG doesn't exist, it is created.  'str' is read
     in copy mode.

          .ds xxx abcd\h'3i'efgh
          .length yyy \*[xxx]
          \n[yyy]
              => 14

 -- Request: .rn xx yy
     Rename the request, macro, diversion, or string XX to YY.

 -- Request: .rm xx
     Remove the request, macro, diversion, or string XX.  'gtroff'
     treats subsequent invocations as if the object had never been
     defined.

 -- Request: .als new old
     Create an alias named NEW for the request, string, macro, or
     diversion object named OLD.  The new name and the old name are
     exactly equivalent (it is similar to a hard rather than a soft
     link).  If OLD is undefined, 'gtroff' generates a warning of type
     'mac' and ignores the request.

     To understand how the 'als' request works it is probably best to
     think of two different pools: one pool for objects (macros,
     strings, etc.), and another one for names.  As soon as an object is
     defined, 'gtroff' adds it to the object pool, adds its name to the
     name pool, and creates a link between them.  When 'als' creates an
     alias, it adds a new name to the name pool that gets linked to the
     same object as the old name.

     Now consider this example.

          .de foo
          ..
          .
          .als bar foo
          .
          .de bar
          .  foo
          ..
          .
          .bar
              => input stack limit exceeded

     The definition of macro 'bar' replaces the old object this name is
     linked to.  However, the alias to 'foo' is still active!  In other
     words, 'foo' is still linked to the same object as 'bar', and the
     result of calling 'bar' is an infinite, recursive loop that finally
     leads to an error.

     To undo an alias, simply call 'rm' on the aliased name.  The object
     itself is not destroyed until there are no more aliases.

 -- Request: .chop xx
     Remove (chop) the last character from the macro, string, or
     diversion named XX.  This is useful for removing the newline from
     the end of diversions that are to be interpolated as strings.  This
     command can be used repeatedly; see *note Gtroff Internals::, for
     details on nodes inserted additionally by 'gtroff'.

   *Note Identifiers::, and *note Comments::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Conditionals and Loops,  Next: Writing Macros,  Prev: Strings,  Up: gtroff Reference

5.20 Conditionals and Loops
===========================

* Menu:

* Operators in Conditionals::
* if-else::
* while::


File: groff.info,  Node: Operators in Conditionals,  Next: if-else,  Prev: Conditionals and Loops,  Up: Conditionals and Loops

5.20.1 Operators in Conditionals
--------------------------------

In 'if', 'ie', and 'while' requests, in addition to ordinary *note
Expressions::, there are several more operators available:

'e'
'o'
     True if the current page is even or odd numbered (respectively).

'n'
     True if the document is being processed in nroff mode (i.e., the
     '.nroff' command has been issued).  *Note Troff and Nroff Mode::.

't'
     True if the document is being processed in troff mode (i.e., the
     '.troff' command has been issued).  *Note Troff and Nroff Mode::.

'v'
     Always false.  This condition is for compatibility with other
     'troff' versions only (identifying a '-Tversatec' device).

''XXX'YYY''
     True if the output produced by XXX is equal to the output produced
     by YYY.  Other characters can be used in place of the single
     quotes; the same set of delimiters as for the '\D' escape is used
     (*note Escapes::).  'gtroff' formats XXX and YYY in separate
     environments; after the comparison the resulting data is discarded.

          .ie "|"\fR|\fP" \
          true
          .el \
          false
              => true

     The resulting motions, glyph sizes, and fonts have to match,(1)
     (*note Operators in Conditionals-Footnote-1::) and not the
     individual motion, size, and font requests.  In the previous
     example, '|' and '\fR|\fP' both result in a roman '|' glyph with
     the same point size and at the same location on the page, so the
     strings are equal.  If '.ft I' had been added before the '.ie', the
     result would be "false" because (the first) '|' produces an italic
     '|' rather than a roman one.

     To compare strings without processing, surround the data with '\?'.

          .ie "\?|\?"\?\fR|\fP\?" \
          true
          .el \
          false
              => false

     Since data protected with '\?' is read in copy-in mode it is even
     possible to use incomplete input without causing an error.

          .ds a \[
          .ds b \[
          .ie '\?\*a\?'\?\*b\?' \
          true
          .el \
          false
              => true

'r XXX'
     True if there is a number register named XXX.

'd XXX'
     True if there is a string, macro, diversion, or request named XXX.

'm XXX'
     True if there is a color named XXX.

'c G'
     True if there is a glyph G available(2) (*note Operators in
     Conditionals-Footnote-2::); G is either an ASCII character or a
     special character ('\N'XXX'', '\(GG' or '\[GGG]'); the condition is
     also true if G has been defined by the 'char' request.

'F FONT'
     True if a font named FONT exists.  FONT is handled as if it was
     opened with the 'ft' request (that is, font translation and styles
     are applied), without actually mounting it.

     This test doesn't load the complete font but only its header to
     verify its validity.

'S STYLE'
     True if style STYLE has been registered.  Font translation is
     applied.

   Note that these operators can't be combined with other operators like
':' or '&'; only a leading '!' (without whitespace between the
exclamation mark and the operator) can be used to negate the result.

     .nr xxx 1
     .ie !r xxx \
     true
     .el \
     false
         => false

   A whitespace after '!' always evaluates to zero (this bizarre
behaviour is due to compatibility with Unix 'troff').

     .nr xxx 1
     .ie ! r xxx \
     true
     .el \
     false
         => r xxx true

   It is possible to omit the whitespace before the argument to the 'r',
'd', and 'c' operators.

   *Note Expressions::.


File: groff.info,  Node: Operators in Conditionals-Footnotes,  Up: Operators in Conditionals

   (1) The created output nodes must be identical.  *Note Gtroff
Internals::.

   (2) The name of this conditional operator is a misnomer since it
tests names of output glyphs.


File: groff.info,  Node: if-else,  Next: while,  Prev: Operators in Conditionals,  Up: Conditionals and Loops

5.20.2 if-else
--------------

'gtroff' has if-then-else constructs like other languages, although the
formatting can be painful.

 -- Request: .if expr anything

     Evaluate the expression EXPR, and executes ANYTHING (the remainder
     of the line) if EXPR evaluates to a value greater than zero (true).
     ANYTHING is interpreted as though it was on a line by itself
     (except that leading spaces are swallowed).  *Note Operators in
     Conditionals::, for more info.

          .nr xxx 1
          .nr yyy 2
          .if ((\n[xxx] == 1) & (\n[yyy] == 2)) true
              => true

 -- Request: .nop anything
     Executes ANYTHING.  This is similar to '.if 1'.

 -- Request: .ie expr anything
 -- Request: .el anything
     Use the 'ie' and 'el' requests to write an if-then-else.  The first
     request is the 'if' part and the latter is the 'else' part.

          .ie n .ls 2 \" double-spacing in nroff
          .el   .ls 1 \" single-spacing in troff

 -- Escape: \{
 -- Escape: \}
     In many cases, an if (or if-else) construct needs to execute more
     than one request.  This can be done using the escapes '\{' (which
     must start the first line) and '\}' (which must end the last line).

          .ie t \{\
          .    ds lq ``
          .    ds rq ''
          .\}
          .el \{\
          .    ds lq ""
          .    ds rq ""
          .\}

   *Note Expressions::.


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