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1 .\" $Id: man.7,v 1.58 2010/03/25 07:28:16 kristaps Exp $
2 .\"
3 .\" Copyright (c) 2009 Kristaps Dzonsons <kristaps@kth.se>
4 .\"
5 .\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
6 .\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
7 .\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
8 .\"
9 .\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
10 .\" WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
11 .\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
12 .\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
13 .\" WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
14 .\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
15 .\" OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
16 .\"
17 .Dd $Mdocdate: March 25 2010 $
18 .Dt MAN 7
19 .Os
20 .
21 .
22 .Sh NAME
23 .Nm man
24 .Nd man language reference
25 .
26 .
27 .Sh DESCRIPTION
28 The
29 .Nm man
30 language was historically used to format
31 .Ux
32 manuals. This reference document describes its syntax, structure, and
33 usage.
34 .
35 .Pp
36 .Bf -emphasis
37 Do not use
38 .Nm
39 to write your manuals.
40 .Ef
41 Use the
42 .Xr mdoc 7
43 language, instead.
44 .
45 .Pp
46 An
47 .Nm
48 document follows simple rules: lines beginning with the control
49 character
50 .Sq \&.
51 are parsed for macros. Other lines are interpreted within the scope of
52 prior macros:
53 .Bd -literal -offset indent
54 \&.SH Macro lines change control state.
55 Other lines are interpreted within the current state.
56 .Ed
57 .
58 .
59 .Sh INPUT ENCODING
60 .Nm
61 documents may contain only graphable 7-bit ASCII characters, the
62 space character, and the tabs character. All manuals must have
63 .Ux
64 line termination.
65 .
66 .Pp
67 Blank lines are acceptable; where found, the output will assert a
68 vertical space.
69 .
70 .
71 .Ss Comments
72 Text following a
73 .Sq \e\*" ,
74 whether in a macro or free-form text line, is ignored to the end of
75 line. A macro line with only a control character and comment escape,
76 .Sq \&.\e" ,
77 is also ignored. Macro lines with only a control character and
78 optionally whitespace are stripped from input.
79 .
80 .
81 .Ss Special Characters
82 Special characters may occur in both macro and free-form lines.
83 Sequences begin with the escape character
84 .Sq \e
85 followed by either an open-parenthesis
86 .Sq \&(
87 for two-character sequences; an open-bracket
88 .Sq \&[
89 for n-character sequences (terminated at a close-bracket
90 .Sq \&] ) ;
91 or a single one-character sequence. See
92 .Xr mandoc_char 7
93 for a complete list. Examples include
94 .Sq \e(em
95 .Pq em-dash
96 and
97 .Sq \ee
98 .Pq back-slash .
99 .
100 .
101 .Ss Text Decoration
102 Terms may be text-decorated using the
103 .Sq \ef
104 escape followed by an indicator: B (bold), I, (italic), R (Roman), or P
105 (revert to previous mode):
106 .Pp
107 .D1 \efBbold\efR \efIitalic\efP
108 .Pp
109 A numerical representation 3, 2, or 1 (bold, italic, and Roman,
110 respectively) may be used instead. A text decoration is only valid, if
111 specified in free-form text, until the next macro invocation; if
112 specified within a macro, it's only valid until the macro closes scope.
113 Note that macros like
114 .Sx \&BR
115 open and close a font scope with each argument.
116 .Pp
117 Text may also be sized with the
118 .Sq \es
119 escape, whose syntax is one of
120 .Sq \es+-n
121 for one-digit numerals;
122 .Sq \es(+-nn
123 or
124 .Sq \es+-(nn
125 for two-digit numerals; and
126 .Sq \es[+-N] ,
127 .Sq \es+-[N] ,
128 .Sq \es'+-N' ,
129 or
130 .Sq \es+-'N'
131 for arbitrary-digit numerals:
132 .Pp
133 .D1 \es+1bigger\es-1
134 .D1 \es[+10]much bigger\es[-10]
135 .D1 \es+(10much bigger\es-(10
136 .D1 \es+'100'much much bigger\es-'100'
137 .Pp
138 Both
139 .Sq \es
140 and
141 .Sq \ef
142 attributes are forgotten when entering or exiting a macro block.
143 .
144 .
145 .Ss Whitespace
146 Unless specifically escaped, consecutive blocks of whitespace are pruned
147 from input. These are later re-added, if applicable, by a front-end
148 utility such as
149 .Xr mandoc 1 .
150 .
151 .
152 .Ss Dates
153 The
154 .Sx \&TH
155 macro is the only
156 .Nm
157 macro that requires a date. The form for this date is the ISO-8601
158 standard
159 .Cm YYYY-MM-DD .
160 .
161 .
162 .Ss Scaling Widths
163 Many macros support scaled widths for their arguments, such as
164 stipulating a two-inch paragraph indentation with the following:
165 .Bd -literal -offset indent
166 \&.HP 2i
167 .Ed
168 .
169 .Pp
170 The syntax for scaled widths is
171 .Sq Li [+-]?[0-9]*.[0-9]*[:unit:]? ,
172 where a decimal must be preceded or proceeded by at least one digit.
173 Negative numbers, while accepted, are truncated to zero. The following
174 scaling units are accepted:
175 .
176 .Pp
177 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
178 .It c
179 centimetre
180 .It i
181 inch
182 .It P
183 pica (~1/6 inch)
184 .It p
185 point (~1/72 inch)
186 .It f
187 synonym for
188 .Sq u
189 .It v
190 default vertical span
191 .It m
192 width of rendered
193 .Sq m
194 .Pq em
195 character
196 .It n
197 width of rendered
198 .Sq n
199 .Pq en
200 character
201 .It u
202 default horizontal span
203 .It M
204 mini-em (~1/100 em)
205 .El
206 .Pp
207 Using anything other than
208 .Sq m ,
209 .Sq n ,
210 .Sq u ,
211 or
212 .Sq v
213 is necessarily non-portable across output media.
214 .
215 .Pp
216 If a scaling unit is not provided, the numerical value is interpreted
217 under the default rules of
218 .Sq v
219 for vertical spaces and
220 .Sq u
221 for horizontal ones.
222 .Em Note :
223 this differs from
224 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
225 which, if a unit is not provided, will instead interpret the string as
226 literal text.
227 .
228 .
229 .Sh MANUAL STRUCTURE
230 Each
231 .Nm
232 document must contain contains at least the
233 .Sx \&TH
234 macro describing the document's section and title. It may occur
235 anywhere in the document, although conventionally, it appears as the
236 first macro.
237 .
238 .Pp
239 Beyond
240 .Sx \&TH ,
241 at least one macro or text node must appear in the document. Documents
242 are generally structured as follows:
243 .Bd -literal -offset indent
244 \&.TH FOO 1 2009-10-10
245 \&.
246 \&.SH NAME
247 \efBfoo\efR \e(en a description goes here
248 \&.\e\*q The next is for sections 2 & 3 only.
249 \&.\e\*q .SH LIBRARY
250 \&.
251 \&.SH SYNOPSIS
252 \efBfoo\efR [\efB\e-options\efR] arguments...
253 \&.
254 \&.SH DESCRIPTION
255 The \efBfoo\efR utility processes files...
256 \&.
257 \&.\e\*q .SH IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
258 \&.\e\*q The next is for sections 1 & 8 only.
259 \&.\e\*q .SH EXIT STATUS
260 \&.\e\*q The next is for sections 2, 3, & 9 only.
261 \&.\e\*q .SH RETURN VALUES
262 \&.\e\*q The next is for sections 1, 6, 7, & 8 only.
263 \&.\e\*q .SH ENVIRONMENT
264 \&.\e\*q .SH FILES
265 \&.\e\*q .SH EXAMPLES
266 \&.\e\*q The next is for sections 1, 4, 6, 7, & 8 only.
267 \&.\e\*q .SH DIAGNOSTICS
268 \&.\e\*q The next is for sections 2, 3, & 9 only.
269 \&.\e\*q .SH ERRORS
270 \&.\e\*q .SH SEE ALSO
271 \&.\e\*q .BR foo ( 1 )
272 \&.\e\*q .SH STANDARDS
273 \&.\e\*q .SH HISTORY
274 \&.\e\*q .SH AUTHORS
275 \&.\e\*q .SH CAVEATS
276 \&.\e\*q .SH BUGS
277 \&.\e\*q .SH SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
278 .Ed
279 .Pp
280 The sections in a
281 .Nm
282 document are conventionally ordered as they appear above. Sections
283 should be composed as follows:
284 .Bl -ohang -offset indent
285 .It Em NAME
286 The name(s) and a short description of the documented material. The
287 syntax for this is generally as follows:
288 .Pp
289 .D1 \efBname\efR \e(en description
290 .It Em LIBRARY
291 The name of the library containing the documented material, which is
292 assumed to be a function in a section 2 or 3 manual. For functions in
293 the C library, this may be as follows:
294 .Pp
295 .D1 Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
296 .It Em SYNOPSIS
297 Documents the utility invocation syntax, function call syntax, or device
298 configuration.
299 .Pp
300 For the first, utilities (sections 1, 6, and 8), this is
301 generally structured as follows:
302 .Pp
303 .D1 \efBname\efR [-\efBab\efR] [-\efBc\efR\efIarg\efR] \efBpath\efR...
304 .Pp
305 For the second, function calls (sections 2, 3, 9):
306 .Pp
307 .D1 \&.B char *name(char *\efIarg\efR);
308 .Pp
309 And for the third, configurations (section 4):
310 .Pp
311 .D1 \&.B name* at cardbus ? function ?
312 .Pp
313 Manuals not in these sections generally don't need a
314 .Em SYNOPSIS .
315 .It Em DESCRIPTION
316 This expands upon the brief, one-line description in
317 .Em NAME .
318 It usually contains a break-down of the options (if documenting a
319 command).
320 .It Em IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
321 Implementation-specific notes should be kept here. This is useful when
322 implementing standard functions that may have side effects or notable
323 algorithmic implications.
324 .It Em EXIT STATUS
325 Command exit status for section 1, 6, and 8 manuals. This section is
326 the dual of
327 .Em RETURN VALUES ,
328 which is used for functions. Historically, this information was
329 described in
330 .Em DIAGNOSTICS ,
331 a practise that is now discouraged.
332 .
333 .It Em RETURN VALUES
334 This section is the dual of
335 .Em EXIT STATUS ,
336 which is used for commands. It documents the return values of functions
337 in sections 2, 3, and 9.
338 .
339 .It Em ENVIRONMENT
340 Documents any usages of environment variables, e.g.,
341 .Xr environ 7 .
342 .
343 .It Em FILES
344 Documents files used. It's helpful to document both the file and a
345 short description of how the file is used (created, modified, etc.).
346 .
347 .It Em EXAMPLES
348 Example usages. This often contains snippets of well-formed,
349 well-tested invocations. Make doubly sure that your examples work
350 properly!
351 .
352 .It Em DIAGNOSTICS
353 Documents error conditions. This is most useful in section 4 manuals.
354 Historically, this section was used in place of
355 .Em EXIT STATUS
356 for manuals in sections 1, 6, and 8; however, this practise is
357 discouraged.
358 .
359 .It Em ERRORS
360 Documents error handling in sections 2, 3, and 9.
361 .
362 .It Em SEE ALSO
363 References other manuals with related topics. This section should exist
364 for most manuals.
365 .Pp
366 .D1 \&.BR bar \&( 1 \&),
367 .Pp
368 Cross-references should conventionally be ordered
369 first by section, then alphabetically.
370 .
371 .It Em STANDARDS
372 References any standards implemented or used, such as
373 .Pp
374 .D1 IEEE Std 1003.2 (\e(lqPOSIX.2\e(rq)
375 .Pp
376 If not adhering to any standards, the
377 .Em HISTORY
378 section should be used.
379 .
380 .It Em HISTORY
381 The history of any manual without a
382 .Em STANDARDS
383 section should be described in this section.
384 .
385 .It Em AUTHORS
386 Credits to authors, if applicable, should appear in this section.
387 Authors should generally be noted by both name and an e-mail address.
388 .
389 .It Em CAVEATS
390 Explanations of common misuses and misunderstandings should be explained
391 in this section.
392 .
393 .It Em BUGS
394 Extant bugs should be described in this section.
395 .
396 .It Em SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
397 Documents any security precautions that operators should consider.
398 .
399 .El
400 .
401 .
402 .Sh MACRO SYNTAX
403 Macros are one to three three characters in length and begin with a
404 control character ,
405 .Sq \&. ,
406 at the beginning of the line. An arbitrary amount of whitespace may
407 sit between the control character and the macro name. Thus, the
408 following are equivalent:
409 .Bd -literal -offset indent
410 \&.PP
411 \&.\ \ \ PP
412 .Ed
413 .
414 .Pp
415 The
416 .Nm
417 macros are classified by scope: line scope or block scope. Line
418 macros are only scoped to the current line (and, in some situations,
419 the subsequent line). Block macros are scoped to the current line and
420 subsequent lines until closed by another block macro.
421 .
422 .
423 .Ss Line Macros
424 Line macros are generally scoped to the current line, with the body
425 consisting of zero or more arguments. If a macro is scoped to the next
426 line and the line arguments are empty, the next line, which must be
427 text, is used instead. Thus:
428 .Bd -literal -offset indent
429 \&.I
430 foo
431 .Ed
432 .
433 .Pp
434 is equivalent to
435 .Sq \&.I foo .
436 If next-line macros are invoked consecutively, only the last is used.
437 If a next-line macro is followed by a non-next-line macro, an error is
438 raised (unless in the case of
439 .Sx \&br ,
440 .Sx \&sp ,
441 .Sx \&Sp ,
442 or
443 .Sx \&na ) .
444 .Pp
445 The syntax is as follows:
446 .Bd -literal -offset indent
447 \&.YO \(lBbody...\(rB
448 \(lBbody...\(rB
449 .Ed
450 .
451 .Pp
452 .Bl -column -compact -offset indent "MacroX" "ArgumentsX" "ScopeXXXXX" "CompatX"
453 .It Em Macro Ta Em Arguments Ta Em Scope Ta Em Notes
454 .It Sx \&B Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
455 .It Sx \&BI Ta n Ta current Ta \&
456 .It Sx \&BR Ta n Ta current Ta \&
457 .It Sx \&DT Ta 0 Ta current Ta \&
458 .It Sx \&I Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
459 .It Sx \&IB Ta n Ta current Ta \&
460 .It Sx \&IR Ta n Ta current Ta \&
461 .\" .It Sx \&PD Ta n Ta current Ta compat
462 .It Sx \&R Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
463 .It Sx \&RB Ta n Ta current Ta \&
464 .It Sx \&RI Ta n Ta current Ta \&
465 .It Sx \&SB Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
466 .It Sx \&SM Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
467 .It Sx \&TH Ta >1, <6 Ta current Ta \&
468 .\" .It Sx \&UC Ta n Ta current Ta compat
469 .It Sx \&br Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
470 .It Sx \&fi Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
471 .It Sx \&i Ta n Ta current Ta compat
472 .It Sx \&na Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
473 .It Sx \&nf Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
474 .It Sx \&r Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
475 .It Sx \&sp Ta 1 Ta current Ta compat
476 .\" .It Sx \&Sp Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
477 .\" .It Sx \&Vb Ta <1 Ta current Ta compat
478 .\" .It Sx \&Ve Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
479 .El
480 .
481 .Pp
482 Macros marked as
483 .Qq compat
484 are included for compatibility with the significant corpus of existing
485 manuals that mix dialects of roff. These macros should not be used for
486 portable
487 .Nm
488 manuals.
489 .
490 .
491 .Ss Block Macros
492 Block macros are comprised of a head and body. Like for in-line macros,
493 the head is scoped to the current line and, in one circumstance, the
494 next line (the next-line stipulations as in
495 .Sx Line Macros
496 apply here as well).
497 .Pp
498 The syntax is as follows:
499 .Bd -literal -offset indent
500 \&.YO \(lBhead...\(rB
501 \(lBhead...\(rB
502 \(lBbody...\(rB
503 .Ed
504 .
505 .Pp
506 The closure of body scope may be to the section, where a macro is closed
507 by
508 .Sx \&SH ;
509 sub-section, closed by a section or
510 .Sx \&SS ;
511 part, closed by a section, sub-section, or
512 .Sx \&RE ;
513 or paragraph, closed by a section, sub-section, part,
514 .Sx \&HP ,
515 .Sx \&IP ,
516 .Sx \&LP ,
517 .Sx \&P ,
518 .Sx \&PP ,
519 or
520 .Sx \&TP .
521 No closure refers to an explicit block closing macro.
522 .
523 .Pp
524 As a rule, block macros may not be nested; thus, calling a block macro
525 while another block macro scope is open, and the open scope is not
526 implicitly closed, is syntactically incorrect.
527 .
528 .Pp
529 .Bl -column -compact -offset indent "MacroX" "ArgumentsX" "Head ScopeX" "sub-sectionX" "compatX"
530 .It Em Macro Ta Em Arguments Ta Em Head Scope Ta Em Body Scope Ta Em Notes
531 .It Sx \&HP Ta <2 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
532 .It Sx \&IP Ta <3 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
533 .It Sx \&LP Ta 0 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
534 .It Sx \&P Ta 0 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
535 .It Sx \&PP Ta 0 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
536 .It Sx \&RE Ta 0 Ta current Ta none Ta compat
537 .It Sx \&RS Ta 1 Ta current Ta part Ta compat
538 .It Sx \&SH Ta >0 Ta next-line Ta section Ta \&
539 .It Sx \&SS Ta >0 Ta next-line Ta sub-section Ta \&
540 .It Sx \&TP Ta n Ta next-line Ta paragraph Ta \&
541 .El
542 .Pp
543 .
544 Macros marked
545 .Qq compat
546 are as mentioned in
547 .Sx Line Macros .
548 .
549 .Pp
550 If a block macro is next-line scoped, it may only be followed by in-line
551 macros for decorating text.
552 .
553 .
554 .Sh REFERENCE
555 This section is a canonical reference to all macros, arranged
556 alphabetically. For the scoping of individual macros, see
557 .Sx MACRO SYNTAX .
558 .
559 .
560 .Ss \&B
561 Text is rendered in bold face.
562 .Pp
563 See also
564 .Sx \&I ,
565 .Sx \&R ,
566 .Sx \&b ,
567 .Sx \&i ,
568 and
569 .Sx \&r .
570 .
571 .
572 .Ss \&BI
573 Text is rendered alternately in bold face and italic. Thus,
574 .Sq .BI this word and that
575 causes
576 .Sq this
577 and
578 .Sq and
579 to render in bold face, while
580 .Sq word
581 and
582 .Sq that
583 render in italics. Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
584 .Pp
585 Examples:
586 .Pp
587 .D1 \&.BI bold italic bold italic
588 .Pp
589 The output of this example will be emboldened
590 .Dq bold
591 and italicised
592 .Dq italic ,
593 with spaces stripped between arguments.
594 .Pp
595 See also
596 .Sx \&IB ,
597 .Sx \&BR ,
598 .Sx \&RB ,
599 .Sx \&RI ,
600 and
601 .Sx \&IR .
602 .
603 .
604 .Ss \&BR
605 Text is rendered alternately in bold face and roman (the default font).
606 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
607 .Pp
608 See
609 .Sx \&BI
610 for an equivalent example.
611 .Pp
612 See also
613 .Sx \&BI ,
614 .Sx \&IB ,
615 .Sx \&RB ,
616 .Sx \&RI ,
617 and
618 .Sx \&IR .
619 .
620 .
621 .Ss \&DT
622 Has no effect. Included for compatibility.
623 .
624 .
625 .Ss \&HP
626 Begin a paragraph whose initial output line is left-justified, but
627 subsequent output lines are indented, with the following syntax:
628 .Bd -filled -offset indent
629 .Pf \. Sx \&HP
630 .Op Cm width
631 .Ed
632 .Pp
633 The
634 .Cm width
635 argument must conform to
636 .Sx Scaling Widths .
637 If specified, it's saved for later paragraph left-margins; if unspecified, the
638 saved or default width is used.
639 .Pp
640 See also
641 .Sx \&IP ,
642 .Sx \&LP ,
643 .Sx \&P ,
644 .Sx \&PP ,
645 and
646 .Sx \&TP .
647 .
648 .
649 .Ss \&I
650 Text is rendered in italics.
651 .Pp
652 See also
653 .Sx \&B ,
654 .Sx \&R ,
655 .Sx \&b ,
656 .Sx \&i ,
657 and
658 .Sx \&r .
659 .
660 .
661 .Ss \&IB
662 Text is rendered alternately in italics and bold face. Whitespace
663 between arguments is omitted in output.
664 .Pp
665 See
666 .Sx \&BI
667 for an equivalent example.
668 .Pp
669 See also
670 .Sx \&BI ,
671 .Sx \&BR ,
672 .Sx \&RB ,
673 .Sx \&RI ,
674 and
675 .Sx \&IR .
676 .
677 .
678 .Ss \&IP
679 Begin an indented paragraph with the following syntax:
680 .Bd -filled -offset indent
681 .Pf \. Sx \&IP
682 .Op Cm head Op Cm width
683 .Ed
684 .Pp
685 The
686 .Cm width
687 argument defines the width of the left margin and is defined by
688 .Sx Scaling Widths ,
689 It's saved for later paragraph left-margins; if unspecified, the saved or
690 default width is used.
691 .Pp
692 The
693 .Cm head
694 argument is used as a leading term, flushed to the left margin. This is
695 useful for bulleted paragraphs and so on.
696 .Pp
697 See also
698 .Sx \&HP ,
699 .Sx \&LP ,
700 .Sx \&P ,
701 .Sx \&PP ,
702 and
703 .Sx \&TP .
704 .
705 .
706 .Ss \&IR
707 Text is rendered alternately in italics and roman (the default font).
708 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
709 .Pp
710 See
711 .Sx \&BI
712 for an equivalent example.
713 .Pp
714 See also
715 .Sx \&BI ,
716 .Sx \&IB ,
717 .Sx \&BR ,
718 .Sx \&RB ,
719 and
720 .Sx \&RI .
721 .
722 .
723 .Ss \&LP
724 Begin an undecorated paragraph. The scope of a paragraph is closed by a
725 subsequent paragraph, sub-section, section, or end of file. The saved
726 paragraph left-margin width is re-set to the default.
727 .Pp
728 See also
729 .Sx \&HP ,
730 .Sx \&IP ,
731 .Sx \&P ,
732 .Sx \&PP ,
733 and
734 .Sx \&TP .
735 .
736 .
737 .Ss \&P
738 Synonym for
739 .Sx \&LP .
740 .Pp
741 See also
742 .Sx \&HP ,
743 .Sx \&IP ,
744 .Sx \&LP ,
745 .Sx \&PP ,
746 and
747 .Sx \&TP .
748 .
749 .
750 .Ss \&PP
751 Synonym for
752 .Sx \&LP .
753 .Pp
754 See also
755 .Sx \&HP ,
756 .Sx \&IP ,
757 .Sx \&LP ,
758 .Sx \&P ,
759 and
760 .Sx \&TP .
761 .
762 .
763 .Ss \&R
764 Text is rendered in roman (the default font).
765 .Pp
766 See also
767 .Sx \&I ,
768 .Sx \&B ,
769 .Sx \&b ,
770 .Sx \&i ,
771 and
772 .Sx \&r .
773 .
774 .
775 .Ss \&RB
776 Text is rendered alternately in roman (the default font) and bold face.
777 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
778 .Pp
779 See
780 .Sx \&BI
781 for an equivalent example.
782 .Pp
783 See also
784 .Sx \&BI ,
785 .Sx \&IB ,
786 .Sx \&BR ,
787 .Sx \&RI ,
788 and
789 .Sx \&IR .
790 .
791 .
792 .Ss \&RE
793 Explicitly close out the scope of a prior
794 .Sx \&RS .
795 .
796 .
797 .Ss \&RI
798 Text is rendered alternately in roman (the default font) and italics.
799 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
800 .Pp
801 See
802 .Sx \&BI
803 for an equivalent example.
804 .Pp
805 See also
806 .Sx \&BI ,
807 .Sx \&IB ,
808 .Sx \&BR ,
809 .Sx \&RB ,
810 and
811 .Sx \&IR .
812 .
813 .
814 .Ss \&RS
815 Begin a part setting the left margin. The left margin controls the
816 offset, following an initial indentation, to un-indented text such as
817 that of
818 .Sx \&PP .
819 This has the following syntax:
820 .Bd -filled -offset indent
821 .Pf \. Sx \&Rs
822 .Op Cm width
823 .Ed
824 .Pp
825 The
826 .Cm width
827 argument must conform to
828 .Sx Scaling Widths .
829 If not specified, the saved or default width is used.
830 .
831 .
832 .Ss \&SB
833 Text is rendered in small size (one point smaller than the default font)
834 bold face.
835 .
836 .
837 .Ss \&SH
838 Begin a section. The scope of a section is only closed by another
839 section or the end of file. The paragraph left-margin width is re-set
840 to the default.
841 .
842 .
843 .Ss \&SM
844 Text is rendered in small size (one point smaller than the default
845 font).
846 .
847 .
848 .Ss \&SS
849 Begin a sub-section. The scope of a sub-section is closed by a
850 subsequent sub-section, section, or end of file. The paragraph
851 left-margin width is re-set to the default.
852 .
853 .
854 .Ss \&TH
855 Sets the title of the manual page with the following syntax:
856 .Bd -filled -offset indent
857 .Pf \. Sx \&TH
858 .Cm title section
859 .Op Cm date Op Cm source Op Cm volume
860 .Ed
861 .Pp
862 At least the upper-case document title
863 .Cm title
864 and numeric manual section
865 .Cm section
866 arguments must be provided. The
867 .Cm date
868 argument should be formatted as described in
869 .Sx Dates :
870 if it does not conform, the current date is used instead. The
871 .Cm source
872 string specifies the organisation providing the utility. The
873 .Cm volume
874 string replaces the default rendered volume, which is dictated by the
875 manual section.
876 .Pp
877 Examples:
878 .Pp
879 .D1 \&.TH CVS 5 "1992-02-12" GNU
880 .
881 .
882 .Ss \&TP
883 Begin a paragraph where the head, if exceeding the indentation width, is
884 followed by a newline; if not, the body follows on the same line after a
885 buffer to the indentation width. Subsequent output lines are indented.
886 The syntax is as follows:
887 .Bd -filled -offset indent
888 .Pf \. Sx \&TP
889 .Op Cm width
890 .Ed
891 .Pp
892 The
893 .Cm width
894 argument must conform to
895 .Sx Scaling Widths .
896 If specified, it's saved for later paragraph left-margins; if
897 unspecified, the saved or default width is used.
898 .Pp
899 See also
900 .Sx \&HP ,
901 .Sx \&IP ,
902 .Sx \&LP ,
903 .Sx \&P ,
904 and
905 .Sx \&PP .
906 .\" .
907 .\" .
908 .\" .Ss \&PD
909 .\" Has no effect. Included for compatibility.
910 .\" .
911 .\" .
912 .\" .Ss \&UC
913 .\" Has no effect. Included for compatibility.
914 .
915 .
916 .Ss \&br
917 Breaks the current line. Consecutive invocations have no further effect.
918 .Pp
919 See also
920 .Sx \&sp .
921 .
922 .
923 .Ss \&fi
924 End literal mode begun by
925 .Sx \&nf .
926 .
927 .
928 .Ss \&i
929 Italicise arguments. Synonym for
930 .Sx \&I .
931 .Pp
932 See also
933 .Sx \&B ,
934 .Sx \&I ,
935 .Sx \&R .
936 .Sx \&b ,
937 and
938 .Sx \&r .
939 .
940 .
941 .Ss \&na
942 Don't align to the right margin.
943 .
944 .
945 .Ss \&nf
946 Begin literal mode: all subsequent free-form lines have their end of
947 line boundaries preserved. May be ended by
948 .Sx \&fi .
949 .
950 .
951 .Ss \&r
952 Fonts and styles (bold face, italics) reset to roman (default font).
953 .Pp
954 See also
955 .Sx \&B ,
956 .Sx \&I ,
957 .Sx \&R ,
958 .Sx \&b ,
959 and
960 .Sx \&i .
961 .
962 .
963 .Ss \&sp
964 Insert vertical spaces into output with the following syntax:
965 .Bd -filled -offset indent
966 .Pf \. Sx \&sp
967 .Op Cm height
968 .Ed
969 .Pp
970 Insert
971 .Cm height
972 spaces, which must conform to
973 .Sx Scaling Widths .
974 If 0, this is equivalent to the
975 .Sx \&br
976 macro. Defaults to 1, if unspecified.
977 .Pp
978 See also
979 .Sx \&br .
980 .
981 .\" .Ss \&Sp
982 .\" A synonym for
983 .\" .Sx \&sp
984 .\" .Cm 0.5v .
985 .\" .
986 .\" .Ss \&Vb
987 .\" A synonym for
988 .\" .Sx \&nf .
989 .\" Accepts an argument (the height of the formatted space) which is
990 .\" disregarded.
991 .\" .
992 .\" .Ss \&Ve
993 .\" A synonym for
994 .\" .Sx \&fi .
995 .\" .
996 .
997 .Sh COMPATIBILITY
998 This section documents areas of questionable portability between
999 implementations of the
1000 .Nm
1001 language.
1002 .Pp
1003 .Bl -dash -compact
1004 .It
1005 In quoted literals, GNU troff allowed pair-wise double-quotes to produce
1006 a standalone double-quote in formatted output. It is not known whether
1007 this behaviour is exhibited by other formatters.
1008 .It
1009 Blocks of whitespace are stripped from macro and free-form text lines
1010 (except when in literal mode) in mandoc. This is not the case for GNU
1011 troff: for maximum portability, whitespace sensitive blocks should be
1012 enclosed in literal contexts.
1013 .It
1014 The
1015 .Sx \&sp
1016 macro does not accept negative values in mandoc. In GNU troff, this
1017 would result in strange behaviour.
1018 .El
1019 .
1020 .
1021 .Sh SEE ALSO
1022 .Xr mandoc 1 ,
1023 .Xr mandoc_char 7
1024 .
1025 .
1026 .Sh AUTHORS
1027 The
1028 .Nm
1029 reference was written by
1030 .An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq kristaps@kth.se .
1031 .
1032 .
1033 .Sh CAVEATS
1034 Do not use this language. Use
1035 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
1036 instead.
1037 .