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1 .\" $Id: mdoc.7,v 1.274 2018/12/23 22:03:32 schwarze Exp $
2 .\"
3 .\" Copyright (c) 2009, 2010, 2011 Kristaps Dzonsons <kristaps@bsd.lv>
4 .\" Copyright (c) 2010, 2011, 2013-2018 Ingo Schwarze <schwarze@openbsd.org>
5 .\"
6 .\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
7 .\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
8 .\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
9 .\"
10 .\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
11 .\" WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
12 .\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
13 .\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
14 .\" WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
15 .\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
16 .\" OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
17 .\"
18 .Dd $Mdocdate: December 23 2018 $
19 .Dt MDOC 7
20 .Os
21 .Sh NAME
22 .Nm mdoc
23 .Nd semantic markup language for formatting manual pages
24 .Sh DESCRIPTION
25 The
26 .Nm mdoc
27 language supports authoring of manual pages for the
28 .Xr man 1
29 utility by allowing semantic annotations of words, phrases,
30 page sections and complete manual pages.
31 Such annotations are used by formatting tools to achieve a uniform
32 presentation across all manuals written in
33 .Nm ,
34 and to support hyperlinking if supported by the output medium.
35 .Pp
36 This reference document describes the structure of manual pages
37 and the syntax and usage of the
38 .Nm
39 language.
40 The reference implementation of a parsing and formatting tool is
41 .Xr mandoc 1 ;
42 the
43 .Sx COMPATIBILITY
44 section describes compatibility with other implementations.
45 .Pp
46 In an
47 .Nm
48 document, lines beginning with the control character
49 .Sq \&.
50 are called
51 .Dq macro lines .
52 The first word is the macro name.
53 It consists of two or three letters.
54 Most macro names begin with a capital letter.
55 For a list of available macros, see
56 .Sx MACRO OVERVIEW .
57 The words following the macro name are arguments to the macro, optionally
58 including the names of other, callable macros; see
59 .Sx MACRO SYNTAX
60 for details.
61 .Pp
62 Lines not beginning with the control character are called
63 .Dq text lines .
64 They provide free-form text to be printed; the formatting of the text
65 depends on the respective processing context:
66 .Bd -literal -offset indent
67 \&.Sh Macro lines change control state.
68 Text lines are interpreted within the current state.
69 .Ed
70 .Pp
71 Many aspects of the basic syntax of the
72 .Nm
73 language are based on the
74 .Xr roff 7
75 language; see the
76 .Em LANGUAGE SYNTAX
77 and
78 .Em MACRO SYNTAX
79 sections in the
80 .Xr roff 7
81 manual for details, in particular regarding
82 comments, escape sequences, whitespace, and quoting.
83 However, using
84 .Xr roff 7
85 requests in
86 .Nm
87 documents is discouraged;
88 .Xr mandoc 1
89 supports some of them merely for backward compatibility.
90 .Sh MANUAL STRUCTURE
91 A well-formed
92 .Nm
93 document consists of a document prologue followed by one or more
94 sections.
95 .Pp
96 The prologue, which consists of the
97 .Ic \&Dd ,
98 .Ic \&Dt ,
99 and
100 .Ic \&Os
101 macros in that order, is required for every document.
102 .Pp
103 The first section (sections are denoted by
104 .Ic \&Sh )
105 must be the NAME section, consisting of at least one
106 .Ic \&Nm
107 followed by
108 .Ic \&Nd .
109 .Pp
110 Following that, convention dictates specifying at least the
111 .Em SYNOPSIS
112 and
113 .Em DESCRIPTION
114 sections, although this varies between manual sections.
115 .Pp
116 The following is a well-formed skeleton
117 .Nm
118 file for a utility
119 .Qq progname :
120 .Bd -literal -offset indent
121 \&.Dd $\&Mdocdate$
122 \&.Dt PROGNAME section
123 \&.Os
124 \&.Sh NAME
125 \&.Nm progname
126 \&.Nd one line about what it does
127 \&.\e\(dq .Sh LIBRARY
128 \&.\e\(dq For sections 2, 3, and 9 only.
129 \&.\e\(dq Not used in OpenBSD.
130 \&.Sh SYNOPSIS
131 \&.Nm progname
132 \&.Op Fl options
133 \&.Ar
134 \&.Sh DESCRIPTION
135 The
136 \&.Nm
137 utility processes files ...
138 \&.\e\(dq .Sh CONTEXT
139 \&.\e\(dq For section 9 functions only.
140 \&.\e\(dq .Sh IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
141 \&.\e\(dq Not used in OpenBSD.
142 \&.\e\(dq .Sh RETURN VALUES
143 \&.\e\(dq For sections 2, 3, and 9 function return values only.
144 \&.\e\(dq .Sh ENVIRONMENT
145 \&.\e\(dq For sections 1, 6, 7, and 8 only.
146 \&.\e\(dq .Sh FILES
147 \&.\e\(dq .Sh EXIT STATUS
148 \&.\e\(dq For sections 1, 6, and 8 only.
149 \&.\e\(dq .Sh EXAMPLES
150 \&.\e\(dq .Sh DIAGNOSTICS
151 \&.\e\(dq For sections 1, 4, 6, 7, 8, and 9 printf/stderr messages only.
152 \&.\e\(dq .Sh ERRORS
153 \&.\e\(dq For sections 2, 3, 4, and 9 errno settings only.
154 \&.\e\(dq .Sh SEE ALSO
155 \&.\e\(dq .Xr foobar 1
156 \&.\e\(dq .Sh STANDARDS
157 \&.\e\(dq .Sh HISTORY
158 \&.\e\(dq .Sh AUTHORS
159 \&.\e\(dq .Sh CAVEATS
160 \&.\e\(dq .Sh BUGS
161 \&.\e\(dq .Sh SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
162 \&.\e\(dq Not used in OpenBSD.
163 .Ed
164 .Pp
165 The sections in an
166 .Nm
167 document are conventionally ordered as they appear above.
168 Sections should be composed as follows:
169 .Bl -ohang -offset Ds
170 .It Em NAME
171 The name(s) and a one line description of the documented material.
172 The syntax for this as follows:
173 .Bd -literal -offset indent
174 \&.Nm name0 ,
175 \&.Nm name1 ,
176 \&.Nm name2
177 \&.Nd a one line description
178 .Ed
179 .Pp
180 Multiple
181 .Sq \&Nm
182 names should be separated by commas.
183 .Pp
184 The
185 .Ic \&Nm
186 macro(s) must precede the
187 .Ic \&Nd
188 macro.
189 .Pp
190 See
191 .Ic \&Nm
192 and
193 .Ic \&Nd .
194 .It Em LIBRARY
195 The name of the library containing the documented material, which is
196 assumed to be a function in a section 2, 3, or 9 manual.
197 The syntax for this is as follows:
198 .Bd -literal -offset indent
199 \&.Lb libarm
200 .Ed
201 .Pp
202 See
203 .Ic \&Lb .
204 .It Em SYNOPSIS
205 Documents the utility invocation syntax, function call syntax, or device
206 configuration.
207 .Pp
208 For the first, utilities (sections 1, 6, and 8), this is
209 generally structured as follows:
210 .Bd -literal -offset indent
211 \&.Nm bar
212 \&.Op Fl v
213 \&.Op Fl o Ar file
214 \&.Op Ar
215 \&.Nm foo
216 \&.Op Fl v
217 \&.Op Fl o Ar file
218 \&.Op Ar
219 .Ed
220 .Pp
221 Commands should be ordered alphabetically.
222 .Pp
223 For the second, function calls (sections 2, 3, 9):
224 .Bd -literal -offset indent
225 \&.In header.h
226 \&.Vt extern const char *global;
227 \&.Ft "char *"
228 \&.Fn foo "const char *src"
229 \&.Ft "char *"
230 \&.Fn bar "const char *src"
231 .Ed
232 .Pp
233 Ordering of
234 .Ic \&In ,
235 .Ic \&Vt ,
236 .Ic \&Fn ,
237 and
238 .Ic \&Fo
239 macros should follow C header-file conventions.
240 .Pp
241 And for the third, configurations (section 4):
242 .Bd -literal -offset indent
243 \&.Cd \(dqit* at isa? port 0x2e\(dq
244 \&.Cd \(dqit* at isa? port 0x4e\(dq
245 .Ed
246 .Pp
247 Manuals not in these sections generally don't need a
248 .Em SYNOPSIS .
249 .Pp
250 Some macros are displayed differently in the
251 .Em SYNOPSIS
252 section, particularly
253 .Ic \&Nm ,
254 .Ic \&Cd ,
255 .Ic \&Fd ,
256 .Ic \&Fn ,
257 .Ic \&Fo ,
258 .Ic \&In ,
259 .Ic \&Vt ,
260 and
261 .Ic \&Ft .
262 All of these macros are output on their own line.
263 If two such dissimilar macros are pairwise invoked (except for
264 .Ic \&Ft
265 before
266 .Ic \&Fo
267 or
268 .Ic \&Fn ) ,
269 they are separated by a vertical space, unless in the case of
270 .Ic \&Fo ,
271 .Ic \&Fn ,
272 and
273 .Ic \&Ft ,
274 which are always separated by vertical space.
275 .Pp
276 When text and macros following an
277 .Ic \&Nm
278 macro starting an input line span multiple output lines,
279 all output lines but the first will be indented to align
280 with the text immediately following the
281 .Ic \&Nm
282 macro, up to the next
283 .Ic \&Nm ,
284 .Ic \&Sh ,
285 or
286 .Ic \&Ss
287 macro or the end of an enclosing block, whichever comes first.
288 .It Em DESCRIPTION
289 This begins with an expansion of the brief, one line description in
290 .Em NAME :
291 .Bd -literal -offset indent
292 The
293 \&.Nm
294 utility does this, that, and the other.
295 .Ed
296 .Pp
297 It usually follows with a breakdown of the options (if documenting a
298 command), such as:
299 .Bd -literal -offset indent
300 The arguments are as follows:
301 \&.Bl \-tag \-width Ds
302 \&.It Fl v
303 Print verbose information.
304 \&.El
305 .Ed
306 .Pp
307 List the options in alphabetical order,
308 uppercase before lowercase for each letter and
309 with no regard to whether an option takes an argument.
310 Put digits in ascending order before all letter options.
311 .Pp
312 Manuals not documenting a command won't include the above fragment.
313 .Pp
314 Since the
315 .Em DESCRIPTION
316 section usually contains most of the text of a manual, longer manuals
317 often use the
318 .Ic \&Ss
319 macro to form subsections.
320 In very long manuals, the
321 .Em DESCRIPTION
322 may be split into multiple sections, each started by an
323 .Ic \&Sh
324 macro followed by a non-standard section name, and each having
325 several subsections, like in the present
326 .Nm
327 manual.
328 .It Em CONTEXT
329 This section lists the contexts in which functions can be called in section 9.
330 The contexts are autoconf, process, or interrupt.
331 .It Em IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
332 Implementation-specific notes should be kept here.
333 This is useful when implementing standard functions that may have side
334 effects or notable algorithmic implications.
335 .It Em RETURN VALUES
336 This section documents the
337 return values of functions in sections 2, 3, and 9.
338 .Pp
339 See
340 .Ic \&Rv .
341 .It Em ENVIRONMENT
342 Lists the environment variables used by the utility,
343 and explains the syntax and semantics of their values.
344 The
345 .Xr environ 7
346 manual provides examples of typical content and formatting.
347 .Pp
348 See
349 .Ic \&Ev .
350 .It Em FILES
351 Documents files used.
352 It's helpful to document both the file name and a short description of how
353 the file is used (created, modified, etc.).
354 .Pp
355 See
356 .Ic \&Pa .
357 .It Em EXIT STATUS
358 This section documents the
359 command exit status for section 1, 6, and 8 utilities.
360 Historically, this information was described in
361 .Em DIAGNOSTICS ,
362 a practise that is now discouraged.
363 .Pp
364 See
365 .Ic \&Ex .
366 .It Em EXAMPLES
367 Example usages.
368 This often contains snippets of well-formed, well-tested invocations.
369 Make sure that examples work properly!
370 .It Em DIAGNOSTICS
371 Documents error messages.
372 In section 4 and 9 manuals, these are usually messages printed by the
373 kernel to the console and to the kernel log.
374 In section 1, 6, 7, and 8, these are usually messages printed by
375 userland programs to the standard error output.
376 .Pp
377 Historically, this section was used in place of
378 .Em EXIT STATUS
379 for manuals in sections 1, 6, and 8; however, this practise is
380 discouraged.
381 .Pp
382 See
383 .Ic \&Bl
384 .Fl diag .
385 .It Em ERRORS
386 Documents
387 .Xr errno 2
388 settings in sections 2, 3, 4, and 9.
389 .Pp
390 See
391 .Ic \&Er .
392 .It Em SEE ALSO
393 References other manuals with related topics.
394 This section should exist for most manuals.
395 Cross-references should conventionally be ordered first by section, then
396 alphabetically (ignoring case).
397 .Pp
398 References to other documentation concerning the topic of the manual page,
399 for example authoritative books or journal articles, may also be
400 provided in this section.
401 .Pp
402 See
403 .Ic \&Rs
404 and
405 .Ic \&Xr .
406 .It Em STANDARDS
407 References any standards implemented or used.
408 If not adhering to any standards, the
409 .Em HISTORY
410 section should be used instead.
411 .Pp
412 See
413 .Ic \&St .
414 .It Em HISTORY
415 A brief history of the subject, including where it was first implemented,
416 and when it was ported to or reimplemented for the operating system at hand.
417 .It Em AUTHORS
418 Credits to the person or persons who wrote the code and/or documentation.
419 Authors should generally be noted by both name and email address.
420 .Pp
421 See
422 .Ic \&An .
423 .It Em CAVEATS
424 Common misuses and misunderstandings should be explained
425 in this section.
426 .It Em BUGS
427 Known bugs, limitations, and work-arounds should be described
428 in this section.
429 .It Em SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
430 Documents any security precautions that operators should consider.
431 .El
432 .Sh MACRO OVERVIEW
433 This overview is sorted such that macros of similar purpose are listed
434 together, to help find the best macro for any given purpose.
435 Deprecated macros are not included in the overview, but can be found below
436 in the alphabetical
437 .Sx MACRO REFERENCE .
438 .Ss Document preamble and NAME section macros
439 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
440 .It Ic \&Dd Ta document date: Cm $\&Mdocdate$ | Ar month day , year
441 .It Ic \&Dt Ta document title: Ar TITLE section Op Ar arch
442 .It Ic \&Os Ta operating system version: Op Ar system Op Ar version
443 .It Ic \&Nm Ta document name (one argument)
444 .It Ic \&Nd Ta document description (one line)
445 .El
446 .Ss Sections and cross references
447 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
448 .It Ic \&Sh Ta section header (one line)
449 .It Ic \&Ss Ta subsection header (one line)
450 .It Ic \&Sx Ta internal cross reference to a section or subsection
451 .It Ic \&Xr Ta cross reference to another manual page: Ar name section
452 .It Ic \&Pp Ta start a text paragraph (no arguments)
453 .El
454 .Ss Displays and lists
455 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
456 .It Ic \&Bd , \&Ed Ta display block:
457 .Fl Ar type
458 .Op Fl offset Ar width
459 .Op Fl compact
460 .It Ic \&D1 Ta indented display (one line)
461 .It Ic \&Dl Ta indented literal display (one line)
462 .It Ic \&Ql Ta in-line literal display: Ql text
463 .It Ic \&Bl , \&El Ta list block:
464 .Fl Ar type
465 .Op Fl width Ar val
466 .Op Fl offset Ar val
467 .Op Fl compact
468 .It Ic \&It Ta list item (syntax depends on Fl Ar type )
469 .It Ic \&Ta Ta table cell separator in Ic \&Bl Fl column No lists
470 .It Ic \&Rs , \&%* , \&Re Ta bibliographic block (references)
471 .El
472 .Ss Spacing control
473 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
474 .It Ic \&Pf Ta prefix, no following horizontal space (one argument)
475 .It Ic \&Ns Ta roman font, no preceding horizontal space (no arguments)
476 .It Ic \&Ap Ta apostrophe without surrounding whitespace (no arguments)
477 .It Ic \&Sm Ta switch horizontal spacing mode: Op Cm on | off
478 .It Ic \&Bk , \&Ek Ta keep block: Fl words
479 .El
480 .Ss Semantic markup for command line utilities
481 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
482 .It Ic \&Nm Ta start a SYNOPSIS block with the name of a utility
483 .It Ic \&Fl Ta command line options (flags) (>=0 arguments)
484 .It Ic \&Cm Ta command modifier (>0 arguments)
485 .It Ic \&Ar Ta command arguments (>=0 arguments)
486 .It Ic \&Op , \&Oo , \&Oc Ta optional syntax elements (enclosure)
487 .It Ic \&Ic Ta internal or interactive command (>0 arguments)
488 .It Ic \&Ev Ta environmental variable (>0 arguments)
489 .It Ic \&Pa Ta file system path (>=0 arguments)
490 .El
491 .Ss Semantic markup for function libraries
492 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
493 .It Ic \&Lb Ta function library (one argument)
494 .It Ic \&In Ta include file (one argument)
495 .It Ic \&Fd Ta other preprocessor directive (>0 arguments)
496 .It Ic \&Ft Ta function type (>0 arguments)
497 .It Ic \&Fo , \&Fc Ta function block: Ar funcname
498 .It Ic \&Fn Ta function name: Ar funcname Op Ar argument ...
499 .It Ic \&Fa Ta function argument (>0 arguments)
500 .It Ic \&Vt Ta variable type (>0 arguments)
501 .It Ic \&Va Ta variable name (>0 arguments)
502 .It Ic \&Dv Ta defined variable or preprocessor constant (>0 arguments)
503 .It Ic \&Er Ta error constant (>0 arguments)
504 .It Ic \&Ev Ta environmental variable (>0 arguments)
505 .El
506 .Ss Various semantic markup
507 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
508 .It Ic \&An Ta author name (>0 arguments)
509 .It Ic \&Lk Ta hyperlink: Ar uri Op Ar display_name
510 .It Ic \&Mt Ta Do mailto Dc hyperlink: Ar localpart Ns @ Ns Ar domain
511 .It Ic \&Cd Ta kernel configuration declaration (>0 arguments)
512 .It Ic \&Ad Ta memory address (>0 arguments)
513 .It Ic \&Ms Ta mathematical symbol (>0 arguments)
514 .El
515 .Ss Physical markup
516 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
517 .It Ic \&Em Ta italic font or underline (emphasis) (>0 arguments)
518 .It Ic \&Sy Ta boldface font (symbolic) (>0 arguments)
519 .It Ic \&No Ta return to roman font (normal) (no arguments)
520 .It Ic \&Bf , \&Ef Ta font block: Fl Ar type | Cm \&Em | \&Li | \&Sy
521 .El
522 .Ss Physical enclosures
523 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
524 .It Ic \&Dq , \&Do , \&Dc Ta enclose in typographic double quotes: Dq text
525 .It Ic \&Qq , \&Qo , \&Qc Ta enclose in typewriter double quotes: Qq text
526 .It Ic \&Sq , \&So , \&Sc Ta enclose in single quotes: Sq text
527 .It Ic \&Pq , \&Po , \&Pc Ta enclose in parentheses: Pq text
528 .It Ic \&Bq , \&Bo , \&Bc Ta enclose in square brackets: Bq text
529 .It Ic \&Brq , \&Bro , \&Brc Ta enclose in curly braces: Brq text
530 .It Ic \&Aq , \&Ao , \&Ac Ta enclose in angle brackets: Aq text
531 .It Ic \&Eo , \&Ec Ta generic enclosure
532 .El
533 .Ss Text production
534 .Bl -column "Brq, Bro, Brc" description
535 .It Ic \&Ex Fl std Ta standard command exit values: Op Ar utility ...
536 .It Ic \&Rv Fl std Ta standard function return values: Op Ar function ...
537 .It Ic \&St Ta reference to a standards document (one argument)
538 .It Ic \&At Ta At
539 .It Ic \&Bx Ta Bx
540 .It Ic \&Bsx Ta Bsx
541 .It Ic \&Nx Ta Nx
542 .It Ic \&Fx Ta Fx
543 .It Ic \&Ox Ta Ox
544 .It Ic \&Dx Ta Dx
545 .El
546 .Sh MACRO REFERENCE
547 This section is a canonical reference of all macros, arranged
548 alphabetically.
549 For the scoping of individual macros, see
550 .Sx MACRO SYNTAX .
551 .Bl -tag -width 3n
552 .It Ic \&%A Ar first_name ... last_name
553 Author name of an
554 .Ic \&Rs
555 block.
556 Multiple authors should each be accorded their own
557 .Ic \%%A
558 line.
559 Author names should be ordered with full or abbreviated forename(s)
560 first, then full surname.
561 .It Ic \&%B Ar title
562 Book title of an
563 .Ic \&Rs
564 block.
565 This macro may also be used in a non-bibliographic context when
566 referring to book titles.
567 .It Ic \&%C Ar location
568 Publication city or location of an
569 .Ic \&Rs
570 block.
571 .It Ic \&%D Oo Ar month day , Oc Ar year
572 Publication date of an
573 .Ic \&Rs
574 block.
575 Provide the full English name of the
576 .Ar month
577 and all four digits of the
578 .Ar year .
579 .It Ic \&%I Ar name
580 Publisher or issuer name of an
581 .Ic \&Rs
582 block.
583 .It Ic \&%J Ar name
584 Journal name of an
585 .Ic \&Rs
586 block.
587 .It Ic \&%N Ar number
588 Issue number (usually for journals) of an
589 .Ic \&Rs
590 block.
591 .It Ic \&%O Ar line
592 Optional information of an
593 .Ic \&Rs
594 block.
595 .It Ic \&%P Ar number
596 Book or journal page number of an
597 .Ic \&Rs
598 block.
599 .It Ic \&%Q Ar name
600 Institutional author (school, government, etc.) of an
601 .Ic \&Rs
602 block.
603 Multiple institutional authors should each be accorded their own
604 .Ic \&%Q
605 line.
606 .It Ic \&%R Ar name
607 Technical report name of an
608 .Ic \&Rs
609 block.
610 .It Ic \&%T Ar title
611 Article title of an
612 .Ic \&Rs
613 block.
614 This macro may also be used in a non-bibliographical context when
615 referring to article titles.
616 .It Ic \&%U Ar protocol Ns :// Ns Ar path
617 URI of reference document.
618 .It Ic \&%V Ar number
619 Volume number of an
620 .Ic \&Rs
621 block.
622 .It Ic \&Ac
623 Close an
624 .Ic \&Ao
625 block.
626 Does not have any tail arguments.
627 .It Ic \&Ad Ar address
628 Memory address.
629 Do not use this for postal addresses.
630 .Pp
631 Examples:
632 .Dl \&.Ad [0,$]
633 .Dl \&.Ad 0x00000000
634 .It Ic \&An Fl split | nosplit | Ar first_name ... last_name
635 Author name.
636 Can be used both for the authors of the program, function, or driver
637 documented in the manual, or for the authors of the manual itself.
638 Requires either the name of an author or one of the following arguments:
639 .Pp
640 .Bl -tag -width "-nosplitX" -offset indent -compact
641 .It Fl split
642 Start a new output line before each subsequent invocation of
643 .Ic \&An .
644 .It Fl nosplit
645 The opposite of
646 .Fl split .
647 .El
648 .Pp
649 The default is
650 .Fl nosplit .
651 The effect of selecting either of the
652 .Fl split
653 modes ends at the beginning of the
654 .Em AUTHORS
655 section.
656 In the
657 .Em AUTHORS
658 section, the default is
659 .Fl nosplit
660 for the first author listing and
661 .Fl split
662 for all other author listings.
663 .Pp
664 Examples:
665 .Dl \&.An -nosplit
666 .Dl \&.An Kristaps Dzonsons \&Aq \&Mt kristaps@bsd.lv
667 .It Ic \&Ao Ar block
668 Begin a block enclosed by angle brackets.
669 Does not have any head arguments.
670 This macro is almost never useful.
671 See
672 .Ic \&Aq
673 for more details.
674 .It Ic \&Ap
675 Inserts an apostrophe without any surrounding whitespace.
676 This is generally used as a grammatical device when referring to the verb
677 form of a function.
678 .Pp
679 Examples:
680 .Dl \&.Fn execve \&Ap d
681 .It Ic \&Aq Ar line
682 Enclose the rest of the input line in angle brackets.
683 The only important use case is for email addresses.
684 See
685 .Ic \&Mt
686 for an example.
687 .Pp
688 Occasionally, it is used for names of characters and keys, for example:
689 .Bd -literal -offset indent
690 Press the
691 \&.Aq escape
692 key to ...
693 .Ed
694 .Pp
695 For URIs, use
696 .Ic \&Lk
697 instead, and
698 .Ic \&In
699 for
700 .Dq #include
701 directives.
702 Never wrap
703 .Ic \&Ar
704 in
705 .Ic \&Aq .
706 .Pp
707 Since
708 .Ic \&Aq
709 usually renders with non-ASCII characters in non-ASCII output modes,
710 do not use it where the ASCII characters
711 .Sq <
712 and
713 .Sq >
714 are required as syntax elements.
715 Instead, use these characters directly in such cases, combining them
716 with the macros
717 .Ic \&Pf ,
718 .Ic \&Ns ,
719 or
720 .Ic \&Eo
721 as needed.
722 .Pp
723 See also
724 .Ic \&Ao .
725 .It Ic \&Ar Op Ar placeholder ...
726 Command arguments.
727 If an argument is not provided, the string
728 .Dq file ...\&
729 is used as a default.
730 .Pp
731 Examples:
732 .Dl ".Fl o Ar file"
733 .Dl ".Ar"
734 .Dl ".Ar arg1 , arg2 ."
735 .Pp
736 The arguments to the
737 .Ic \&Ar
738 macro are names and placeholders for command arguments;
739 for fixed strings to be passed verbatim as arguments, use
740 .Ic \&Fl
741 or
742 .Ic \&Cm .
743 .It Ic \&At Op Ar version
744 Formats an
745 .At
746 version.
747 Accepts one optional argument:
748 .Pp
749 .Bl -tag -width "v[1-7] | 32vX" -offset indent -compact
750 .It Cm v[1-7] | 32v
751 A version of
752 .At .
753 .It Cm III
754 .At III .
755 .It Cm V | V.[1-4]
756 A version of
757 .At V .
758 .El
759 .Pp
760 Note that these arguments do not begin with a hyphen.
761 .Pp
762 Examples:
763 .Dl \&.At
764 .Dl \&.At III
765 .Dl \&.At V.1
766 .Pp
767 See also
768 .Ic \&Bsx ,
769 .Ic \&Bx ,
770 .Ic \&Dx ,
771 .Ic \&Fx ,
772 .Ic \&Nx ,
773 and
774 .Ic \&Ox .
775 .It Ic \&Bc
776 Close a
777 .Ic \&Bo
778 block.
779 Does not have any tail arguments.
780 .It Ic \&Bd Fl Ns Ar type Oo Fl offset Ar width Oc Op Fl compact
781 Begin a display block.
782 Display blocks are used to select a different indentation and
783 justification than the one used by the surrounding text.
784 They may contain both macro lines and text lines.
785 By default, a display block is preceded by a vertical space.
786 .Pp
787 The
788 .Ar type
789 must be one of the following:
790 .Bl -tag -width 13n -offset indent
791 .It Fl centered
792 Produce one output line from each input line, and center-justify each line.
793 Using this display type is not recommended; many
794 .Nm
795 implementations render it poorly.
796 .It Fl filled
797 Change the positions of line breaks to fill each line, and left- and
798 right-justify the resulting block.
799 .It Fl literal
800 Produce one output line from each input line,
801 and do not justify the block at all.
802 Preserve white space as it appears in the input.
803 Always use a constant-width font.
804 Use this for displaying source code.
805 .It Fl ragged
806 Change the positions of line breaks to fill each line, and left-justify
807 the resulting block.
808 .It Fl unfilled
809 The same as
810 .Fl literal ,
811 but using the same font as for normal text, which is a variable width font
812 if supported by the output device.
813 .El
814 .Pp
815 The
816 .Ar type
817 must be provided first.
818 Additional arguments may follow:
819 .Bl -tag -width 13n -offset indent
820 .It Fl offset Ar width
821 Indent the display by the
822 .Ar width ,
823 which may be one of the following:
824 .Bl -item
825 .It
826 One of the pre-defined strings
827 .Cm indent ,
828 the width of a standard indentation (six constant width characters);
829 .Cm indent-two ,
830 twice
831 .Cm indent ;
832 .Cm left ,
833 which has no effect;
834 .Cm right ,
835 which justifies to the right margin; or
836 .Cm center ,
837 which aligns around an imagined center axis.
838 .It
839 A macro invocation, which selects a predefined width
840 associated with that macro.
841 The most popular is the imaginary macro
842 .Ar \&Ds ,
843 which resolves to
844 .Sy 6n .
845 .It
846 A scaling width as described in
847 .Xr roff 7 .
848 .It
849 An arbitrary string, which indents by the length of this string.
850 .El
851 .Pp
852 When the argument is missing,
853 .Fl offset
854 is ignored.
855 .It Fl compact
856 Do not assert vertical space before the display.
857 .El
858 .Pp
859 Examples:
860 .Bd -literal -offset indent
861 \&.Bd \-literal \-offset indent \-compact
862 Hello world.
863 \&.Ed
864 .Ed
865 .Pp
866 See also
867 .Ic \&D1
868 and
869 .Ic \&Dl .
870 .It Ic \&Bf Fl emphasis | literal | symbolic | Cm \&Em | \&Li | \&Sy
871 Change the font mode for a scoped block of text.
872 The
873 .Fl emphasis
874 and
875 .Cm \&Em
876 argument are equivalent, as are
877 .Fl symbolic
878 and
879 .Cm \&Sy ,
880 and
881 .Fl literal
882 and
883 .Cm \&Li .
884 Without an argument, this macro does nothing.
885 The font mode continues until broken by a new font mode in a nested
886 scope or
887 .Ic \&Ef
888 is encountered.
889 .Pp
890 See also
891 .Ic \&Li ,
892 .Ic \&Ef ,
893 .Ic \&Em ,
894 and
895 .Ic \&Sy .
896 .It Ic \&Bk Fl words
897 For each macro, keep its output together on the same output line,
898 until the end of the macro or the end of the input line is reached,
899 whichever comes first.
900 Line breaks in text lines are unaffected.
901 .Pp
902 The
903 .Fl words
904 argument is required; additional arguments are ignored.
905 .Pp
906 The following example will not break within each
907 .Ic \&Op
908 macro line:
909 .Bd -literal -offset indent
910 \&.Bk \-words
911 \&.Op Fl f Ar flags
912 \&.Op Fl o Ar output
913 \&.Ek
914 .Ed
915 .Pp
916 Be careful in using over-long lines within a keep block!
917 Doing so will clobber the right margin.
918 .It Xo
919 .Ic \&Bl
920 .Fl Ns Ar type
921 .Op Fl width Ar val
922 .Op Fl offset Ar val
923 .Op Fl compact
924 .Op Ar col ...
925 .Xc
926 Begin a list.
927 Lists consist of items specified using the
928 .Ic \&It
929 macro, containing a head or a body or both.
930 .Pp
931 The list
932 .Ar type
933 is mandatory and must be specified first.
934 The
935 .Fl width
936 and
937 .Fl offset
938 arguments accept macro names as described for
939 .Ic \&Bd
940 .Fl offset ,
941 scaling widths as described in
942 .Xr roff 7 ,
943 or use the length of the given string.
944 The
945 .Fl offset
946 is a global indentation for the whole list, affecting both item heads
947 and bodies.
948 For those list types supporting it, the
949 .Fl width
950 argument requests an additional indentation of item bodies,
951 to be added to the
952 .Fl offset .
953 Unless the
954 .Fl compact
955 argument is specified, list entries are separated by vertical space.
956 .Pp
957 A list must specify one of the following list types:
958 .Bl -tag -width 12n -offset indent
959 .It Fl bullet
960 No item heads can be specified, but a bullet will be printed at the head
961 of each item.
962 Item bodies start on the same output line as the bullet
963 and are indented according to the
964 .Fl width
965 argument.
966 .It Fl column
967 A columnated list.
968 The
969 .Fl width
970 argument has no effect; instead, the string length of each argument
971 specifies the width of one column.
972 If the first line of the body of a
973 .Fl column
974 list is not an
975 .Ic \&It
976 macro line,
977 .Ic \&It
978 contexts spanning one input line each are implied until an
979 .Ic \&It
980 macro line is encountered, at which point items start being interpreted as
981 described in the
982 .Ic \&It
983 documentation.
984 .It Fl dash
985 Like
986 .Fl bullet ,
987 except that dashes are used in place of bullets.
988 .It Fl diag
989 Like
990 .Fl inset ,
991 except that item heads are not parsed for macro invocations.
992 Most often used in the
993 .Em DIAGNOSTICS
994 section with error constants in the item heads.
995 .It Fl enum
996 A numbered list.
997 No item heads can be specified.
998 Formatted like
999 .Fl bullet ,
1000 except that cardinal numbers are used in place of bullets,
1001 starting at 1.
1002 .It Fl hang
1003 Like
1004 .Fl tag ,
1005 except that the first lines of item bodies are not indented, but follow
1006 the item heads like in
1007 .Fl inset
1008 lists.
1009 .It Fl hyphen
1010 Synonym for
1011 .Fl dash .
1012 .It Fl inset
1013 Item bodies follow items heads on the same line, using normal inter-word
1014 spacing.
1015 Bodies are not indented, and the
1016 .Fl width
1017 argument is ignored.
1018 .It Fl item
1019 No item heads can be specified, and none are printed.
1020 Bodies are not indented, and the
1021 .Fl width
1022 argument is ignored.
1023 .It Fl ohang
1024 Item bodies start on the line following item heads and are not indented.
1025 The
1026 .Fl width
1027 argument is ignored.
1028 .It Fl tag
1029 Item bodies are indented according to the
1030 .Fl width
1031 argument.
1032 When an item head fits inside the indentation, the item body follows
1033 this head on the same output line.
1034 Otherwise, the body starts on the output line following the head.
1035 .El
1036 .Pp
1037 Lists may be nested within lists and displays.
1038 Nesting of
1039 .Fl column
1040 and
1041 .Fl enum
1042 lists may not be portable.
1043 .Pp
1044 See also
1045 .Ic \&El
1046 and
1047 .Ic \&It .
1048 .It Ic \&Bo Ar block
1049 Begin a block enclosed by square brackets.
1050 Does not have any head arguments.
1051 .Pp
1052 Examples:
1053 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1054 \&.Bo 1 ,
1055 \&.Dv BUFSIZ \&Bc
1056 .Ed
1057 .Pp
1058 See also
1059 .Ic \&Bq .
1060 .It Ic \&Bq Ar line
1061 Encloses its arguments in square brackets.
1062 .Pp
1063 Examples:
1064 .Dl \&.Bq 1 , \&Dv BUFSIZ
1065 .Pp
1066 .Em Remarks :
1067 this macro is sometimes abused to emulate optional arguments for
1068 commands; the correct macros to use for this purpose are
1069 .Ic \&Op ,
1070 .Ic \&Oo ,
1071 and
1072 .Ic \&Oc .
1073 .Pp
1074 See also
1075 .Ic \&Bo .
1076 .It Ic \&Brc
1077 Close a
1078 .Ic \&Bro
1079 block.
1080 Does not have any tail arguments.
1081 .It Ic \&Bro Ar block
1082 Begin a block enclosed by curly braces.
1083 Does not have any head arguments.
1084 .Pp
1085 Examples:
1086 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1087 \&.Bro 1 , ... ,
1088 \&.Va n \&Brc
1089 .Ed
1090 .Pp
1091 See also
1092 .Ic \&Brq .
1093 .It Ic \&Brq Ar line
1094 Encloses its arguments in curly braces.
1095 .Pp
1096 Examples:
1097 .Dl \&.Brq 1 , ... , \&Va n
1098 .Pp
1099 See also
1100 .Ic \&Bro .
1101 .It Ic \&Bsx Op Ar version
1102 Format the
1103 .Bsx
1104 version provided as an argument, or a default value if
1105 no argument is provided.
1106 .Pp
1107 Examples:
1108 .Dl \&.Bsx 1.0
1109 .Dl \&.Bsx
1110 .Pp
1111 See also
1112 .Ic \&At ,
1113 .Ic \&Bx ,
1114 .Ic \&Dx ,
1115 .Ic \&Fx ,
1116 .Ic \&Nx ,
1117 and
1118 .Ic \&Ox .
1119 .It Ic \&Bt
1120 Supported only for compatibility, do not use this in new manuals.
1121 Prints
1122 .Dq is currently in beta test.
1123 .It Ic \&Bx Op Ar version Op Ar variant
1124 Format the
1125 .Bx
1126 version provided as an argument, or a default value if no
1127 argument is provided.
1128 .Pp
1129 Examples:
1130 .Dl \&.Bx 4.3 Tahoe
1131 .Dl \&.Bx 4.4
1132 .Dl \&.Bx
1133 .Pp
1134 See also
1135 .Ic \&At ,
1136 .Ic \&Bsx ,
1137 .Ic \&Dx ,
1138 .Ic \&Fx ,
1139 .Ic \&Nx ,
1140 and
1141 .Ic \&Ox .
1142 .It Ic \&Cd Ar line
1143 Kernel configuration declaration.
1144 This denotes strings accepted by
1145 .Xr config 8 .
1146 It is most often used in section 4 manual pages.
1147 .Pp
1148 Examples:
1149 .Dl \&.Cd device le0 at scode?
1150 .Pp
1151 .Em Remarks :
1152 this macro is commonly abused by using quoted literals to retain
1153 whitespace and align consecutive
1154 .Ic \&Cd
1155 declarations.
1156 This practise is discouraged.
1157 .It Ic \&Cm Ar keyword ...
1158 Command modifiers.
1159 Typically used for fixed strings passed as arguments, unless
1160 .Ic \&Fl
1161 is more appropriate.
1162 Also useful when specifying configuration options or keys.
1163 .Pp
1164 Examples:
1165 .Dl ".Nm mt Fl f Ar device Cm rewind"
1166 .Dl ".Nm ps Fl o Cm pid , Ns Cm command"
1167 .Dl ".Nm dd Cm if= Ns Ar file1 Cm of= Ns Ar file2"
1168 .Dl ".Cm IdentityFile Pa ~/.ssh/id_rsa"
1169 .Dl ".Cm LogLevel Dv DEBUG"
1170 .It Ic \&D1 Ar line
1171 One-line indented display.
1172 This is formatted by the default rules and is useful for simple indented
1173 statements.
1174 It is followed by a newline.
1175 .Pp
1176 Examples:
1177 .Dl \&.D1 \&Fl abcdefgh
1178 .Pp
1179 See also
1180 .Ic \&Bd
1181 and
1182 .Ic \&Dl .
1183 .It Ic \&Db
1184 This macro is obsolete.
1185 No replacement is needed.
1186 It is ignored by
1187 .Xr mandoc 1
1188 and groff including its arguments.
1189 It was formerly used to toggle a debugging mode.
1190 .It Ic \&Dc
1191 Close a
1192 .Ic \&Do
1193 block.
1194 Does not have any tail arguments.
1195 .It Ic \&Dd Cm $\&Mdocdate$ | Ar month day , year
1196 Document date for display in the page footer.
1197 This is the mandatory first macro of any
1198 .Nm
1199 manual.
1200 .Pp
1201 The
1202 .Ar month
1203 is the full English month name, the
1204 .Ar day
1205 is an integer number, and the
1206 .Ar year
1207 is the full four-digit year.
1208 .Pp
1209 Other arguments are not portable; the
1210 .Xr mandoc 1
1211 utility handles them as follows:
1212 .Bl -dash -offset 3n -compact
1213 .It
1214 To have the date automatically filled in by the
1215 .Ox
1216 version of
1217 .Xr cvs 1 ,
1218 the special string
1219 .Dq $\&Mdocdate$
1220 can be given as an argument.
1221 .It
1222 The traditional, purely numeric
1223 .Xr man 7
1224 format
1225 .Ar year Ns \(en Ns Ar month Ns \(en Ns Ar day
1226 is accepted, too.
1227 .It
1228 If a date string cannot be parsed, it is used verbatim.
1229 .It
1230 If no date string is given, the current date is used.
1231 .El
1232 .Pp
1233 Examples:
1234 .Dl \&.Dd $\&Mdocdate$
1235 .Dl \&.Dd $\&Mdocdate: July 2 2018$
1236 .Dl \&.Dd July 2, 2018
1237 .Pp
1238 See also
1239 .Ic \&Dt
1240 and
1241 .Ic \&Os .
1242 .It Ic \&Dl Ar line
1243 One-line indented display.
1244 This is formatted as literal text and is useful for commands and
1245 invocations.
1246 It is followed by a newline.
1247 .Pp
1248 Examples:
1249 .Dl \&.Dl % mandoc mdoc.7 \e(ba less
1250 .Pp
1251 See also
1252 .Ic \&Ql ,
1253 .Ic \&Bd Fl literal ,
1254 and
1255 .Ic \&D1 .
1256 .It Ic \&Do Ar block
1257 Begin a block enclosed by double quotes.
1258 Does not have any head arguments.
1259 .Pp
1260 Examples:
1261 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1262 \&.Do
1263 April is the cruellest month
1264 \&.Dc
1265 \e(em T.S. Eliot
1266 .Ed
1267 .Pp
1268 See also
1269 .Ic \&Dq .
1270 .It Ic \&Dq Ar line
1271 Encloses its arguments in
1272 .Dq typographic
1273 double-quotes.
1274 .Pp
1275 Examples:
1276 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1277 \&.Dq April is the cruellest month
1278 \e(em T.S. Eliot
1279 .Ed
1280 .Pp
1281 See also
1282 .Ic \&Qq ,
1283 .Ic \&Sq ,
1284 and
1285 .Ic \&Do .
1286 .It Ic \&Dt Ar TITLE section Op Ar arch
1287 Document title for display in the page header.
1288 This is the mandatory second macro of any
1289 .Nm
1290 file.
1291 .Pp
1292 Its arguments are as follows:
1293 .Bl -tag -width section -offset 2n
1294 .It Ar TITLE
1295 The document's title (name), defaulting to
1296 .Dq UNTITLED
1297 if unspecified.
1298 To achieve a uniform appearance of page header lines,
1299 it should by convention be all caps.
1300 .It Ar section
1301 The manual section.
1302 This may be one of
1303 .Cm 1
1304 .Pq General Commands ,
1305 .Cm 2
1306 .Pq System Calls ,
1307 .Cm 3
1308 .Pq Library Functions ,
1309 .Cm 3p
1310 .Pq Perl Library ,
1311 .Cm 4
1312 .Pq Device Drivers ,
1313 .Cm 5
1314 .Pq File Formats ,
1315 .Cm 6
1316 .Pq Games ,
1317 .Cm 7
1318 .Pq Miscellaneous Information ,
1319 .Cm 8
1320 .Pq System Manager's Manual ,
1321 or
1322 .Cm 9
1323 .Pq Kernel Developer's Manual .
1324 It should correspond to the manual's filename suffix and defaults to
1325 the empty string if unspecified.
1326 .It Ar arch
1327 This specifies the machine architecture a manual page applies to,
1328 where relevant, for example
1329 .Cm alpha ,
1330 .Cm amd64 ,
1331 .Cm i386 ,
1332 or
1333 .Cm sparc64 .
1334 The list of valid architectures varies by operating system.
1335 .El
1336 .Pp
1337 Examples:
1338 .Dl \&.Dt FOO 1
1339 .Dl \&.Dt FOO 9 i386
1340 .Pp
1341 See also
1342 .Ic \&Dd
1343 and
1344 .Ic \&Os .
1345 .It Ic \&Dv Ar identifier ...
1346 Defined variables such as preprocessor constants, constant symbols,
1347 enumeration values, and so on.
1348 .Pp
1349 Examples:
1350 .Dl \&.Dv NULL
1351 .Dl \&.Dv BUFSIZ
1352 .Dl \&.Dv STDOUT_FILENO
1353 .Pp
1354 See also
1355 .Ic \&Er
1356 and
1357 .Ic \&Ev
1358 for special-purpose constants,
1359 .Ic \&Va
1360 for variable symbols, and
1361 .Ic \&Fd
1362 for listing preprocessor variable definitions in the
1363 .Em SYNOPSIS .
1364 .It Ic \&Dx Op Ar version
1365 Format the
1366 .Dx
1367 version provided as an argument, or a default
1368 value if no argument is provided.
1369 .Pp
1370 Examples:
1371 .Dl \&.Dx 2.4.1
1372 .Dl \&.Dx
1373 .Pp
1374 See also
1375 .Ic \&At ,
1376 .Ic \&Bsx ,
1377 .Ic \&Bx ,
1378 .Ic \&Fx ,
1379 .Ic \&Nx ,
1380 and
1381 .Ic \&Ox .
1382 .It Ic \&Ec Op Ar closing_delimiter
1383 Close a scope started by
1384 .Ic \&Eo .
1385 .Pp
1386 The
1387 .Ar closing_delimiter
1388 argument is used as the enclosure tail, for example, specifying \e(rq
1389 will emulate
1390 .Ic \&Dc .
1391 .It Ic \&Ed
1392 End a display context started by
1393 .Ic \&Bd .
1394 .It Ic \&Ef
1395 End a font mode context started by
1396 .Ic \&Bf .
1397 .It Ic \&Ek
1398 End a keep context started by
1399 .Ic \&Bk .
1400 .It Ic \&El
1401 End a list context started by
1402 .Ic \&Bl .
1403 See also
1404 .Ic \&It .
1405 .It Ic \&Em Ar word ...
1406 Request an italic font.
1407 If the output device does not provide that, underline.
1408 .Pp
1409 This is most often used for stress emphasis (not to be confused with
1410 importance, see
1411 .Ic \&Sy ) .
1412 In the rare cases where none of the semantic markup macros fit,
1413 it can also be used for technical terms and placeholders, except
1414 that for syntax elements,
1415 .Ic \&Sy
1416 and
1417 .Ic \&Ar
1418 are preferred, respectively.
1419 .Pp
1420 Examples:
1421 .Bd -literal -compact -offset indent
1422 Selected lines are those
1423 \&.Em not
1424 matching any of the specified patterns.
1425 Some of the functions use a
1426 \&.Em hold space
1427 to save the pattern space for subsequent retrieval.
1428 .Ed
1429 .Pp
1430 See also
1431 .Ic \&No ,
1432 .Ic \&Ql ,
1433 and
1434 .Ic \&Sy .
1435 .It Ic \&En Ar word ...
1436 This macro is obsolete.
1437 Use
1438 .Ic \&Eo
1439 or any of the other enclosure macros.
1440 .Pp
1441 It encloses its argument in the delimiters specified by the last
1442 .Ic \&Es
1443 macro.
1444 .It Ic \&Eo Op Ar opening_delimiter
1445 An arbitrary enclosure.
1446 The
1447 .Ar opening_delimiter
1448 argument is used as the enclosure head, for example, specifying \e(lq
1449 will emulate
1450 .Ic \&Do .
1451 .It Ic \&Er Ar identifier ...
1452 Error constants for definitions of the
1453 .Va errno
1454 libc global variable.
1455 This is most often used in section 2 and 3 manual pages.
1456 .Pp
1457 Examples:
1458 .Dl \&.Er EPERM
1459 .Dl \&.Er ENOENT
1460 .Pp
1461 See also
1462 .Ic \&Dv
1463 for general constants.
1464 .It Ic \&Es Ar opening_delimiter closing_delimiter
1465 This macro is obsolete.
1466 Use
1467 .Ic \&Eo
1468 or any of the other enclosure macros.
1469 .Pp
1470 It takes two arguments, defining the delimiters to be used by subsequent
1471 .Ic \&En
1472 macros.
1473 .It Ic \&Ev Ar identifier ...
1474 Environmental variables such as those specified in
1475 .Xr environ 7 .
1476 .Pp
1477 Examples:
1478 .Dl \&.Ev DISPLAY
1479 .Dl \&.Ev PATH
1480 .Pp
1481 See also
1482 .Ic \&Dv
1483 for general constants.
1484 .It Ic \&Ex Fl std Op Ar utility ...
1485 Insert a standard sentence regarding command exit values of 0 on success
1486 and >0 on failure.
1487 This is most often used in section 1, 6, and 8 manual pages.
1488 .Pp
1489 If
1490 .Ar utility
1491 is not specified, the document's name set by
1492 .Ic \&Nm
1493 is used.
1494 Multiple
1495 .Ar utility
1496 arguments are treated as separate utilities.
1497 .Pp
1498 See also
1499 .Ic \&Rv .
1500 .It Ic \&Fa Ar argument ...
1501 Function argument or parameter.
1502 Each argument may be a name and a type (recommended for the
1503 .Em SYNOPSIS
1504 section), a name alone (for function invocations),
1505 or a type alone (for function prototypes).
1506 If both a type and a name are given or if the type consists of multiple
1507 words, all words belonging to the same function argument have to be
1508 given in a single argument to the
1509 .Ic \&Fa
1510 macro.
1511 .Pp
1512 This macro is also used to specify the field name of a structure.
1513 .Pp
1514 Most often, the
1515 .Ic \&Fa
1516 macro is used in the
1517 .Em SYNOPSIS
1518 within
1519 .Ic \&Fo
1520 blocks when documenting multi-line function prototypes.
1521 If invoked with multiple arguments, the arguments are separated by a
1522 comma.
1523 Furthermore, if the following macro is another
1524 .Ic \&Fa ,
1525 the last argument will also have a trailing comma.
1526 .Pp
1527 Examples:
1528 .Dl \&.Fa \(dqconst char *p\(dq
1529 .Dl \&.Fa \(dqint a\(dq \(dqint b\(dq \(dqint c\(dq
1530 .Dl \&.Fa \(dqchar *\(dq size_t
1531 .Pp
1532 See also
1533 .Ic \&Fo .
1534 .It Ic \&Fc
1535 End a function context started by
1536 .Ic \&Fo .
1537 .It Ic \&Fd Pf # Ar directive Op Ar argument ...
1538 Preprocessor directive, in particular for listing it in the
1539 .Em SYNOPSIS .
1540 Historically, it was also used to document include files.
1541 The latter usage has been deprecated in favour of
1542 .Ic \&In .
1543 .Pp
1544 Examples:
1545 .Dl \&.Fd #define sa_handler __sigaction_u.__sa_handler
1546 .Dl \&.Fd #define SIO_MAXNFDS
1547 .Dl \&.Fd #ifdef FS_DEBUG
1548 .Dl \&.Ft void
1549 .Dl \&.Fn dbg_open \(dqconst char *\(dq
1550 .Dl \&.Fd #endif
1551 .Pp
1552 See also
1553 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE ,
1554 .Ic \&In ,
1555 and
1556 .Ic \&Dv .
1557 .It Ic \&Fl Op Ar word ...
1558 Command-line flag or option.
1559 Used when listing arguments to command-line utilities.
1560 Prints a fixed-width hyphen
1561 .Sq \-
1562 directly followed by each argument.
1563 If no arguments are provided, a hyphen is printed followed by a space.
1564 If the argument is a macro, a hyphen is prefixed to the subsequent macro
1565 output.
1566 .Pp
1567 Examples:
1568 .Dl ".Fl R Op Fl H | L | P"
1569 .Dl ".Op Fl 1AaCcdFfgHhikLlmnopqRrSsTtux"
1570 .Dl ".Fl type Cm d Fl name Pa CVS"
1571 .Dl ".Fl Ar signal_number"
1572 .Dl ".Fl o Fl"
1573 .Pp
1574 See also
1575 .Ic \&Cm .
1576 .It Ic \&Fn Ar funcname Op Ar argument ...
1577 A function name.
1578 .Pp
1579 Function arguments are surrounded in parenthesis and
1580 are delimited by commas.
1581 If no arguments are specified, blank parenthesis are output.
1582 In the
1583 .Em SYNOPSIS
1584 section, this macro starts a new output line,
1585 and a blank line is automatically inserted between function definitions.
1586 .Pp
1587 Examples:
1588 .Dl \&.Fn \(dqint funcname\(dq \(dqint arg0\(dq \(dqint arg1\(dq
1589 .Dl \&.Fn funcname \(dqint arg0\(dq
1590 .Dl \&.Fn funcname arg0
1591 .Pp
1592 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1593 \&.Ft functype
1594 \&.Fn funcname
1595 .Ed
1596 .Pp
1597 When referring to a function documented in another manual page, use
1598 .Ic \&Xr
1599 instead.
1600 See also
1601 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE ,
1602 .Ic \&Fo ,
1603 and
1604 .Ic \&Ft .
1605 .It Ic \&Fo Ar funcname
1606 Begin a function block.
1607 This is a multi-line version of
1608 .Ic \&Fn .
1609 .Pp
1610 Invocations usually occur in the following context:
1611 .Bd -ragged -offset indent
1612 .Pf \. Ic \&Ft Ar functype
1613 .br
1614 .Pf \. Ic \&Fo Ar funcname
1615 .br
1616 .Pf \. Ic \&Fa Qq Ar argtype Ar argname
1617 .br
1618 \&.\.\.
1619 .br
1620 .Pf \. Ic \&Fc
1621 .Ed
1622 .Pp
1623 A
1624 .Ic \&Fo
1625 scope is closed by
1626 .Ic \&Fc .
1627 .Pp
1628 See also
1629 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE ,
1630 .Ic \&Fa ,
1631 .Ic \&Fc ,
1632 and
1633 .Ic \&Ft .
1634 .It Ic \&Fr Ar number
1635 This macro is obsolete.
1636 No replacement markup is needed.
1637 .Pp
1638 It was used to show numerical function return values in an italic font.
1639 .It Ic \&Ft Ar functype
1640 A function type.
1641 .Pp
1642 In the
1643 .Em SYNOPSIS
1644 section, a new output line is started after this macro.
1645 .Pp
1646 Examples:
1647 .Dl \&.Ft int
1648 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1649 \&.Ft functype
1650 \&.Fn funcname
1651 .Ed
1652 .Pp
1653 See also
1654 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE ,
1655 .Ic \&Fn ,
1656 and
1657 .Ic \&Fo .
1658 .It Ic \&Fx Op Ar version
1659 Format the
1660 .Fx
1661 version provided as an argument, or a default value
1662 if no argument is provided.
1663 .Pp
1664 Examples:
1665 .Dl \&.Fx 7.1
1666 .Dl \&.Fx
1667 .Pp
1668 See also
1669 .Ic \&At ,
1670 .Ic \&Bsx ,
1671 .Ic \&Bx ,
1672 .Ic \&Dx ,
1673 .Ic \&Nx ,
1674 and
1675 .Ic \&Ox .
1676 .It Ic \&Hf Ar filename
1677 This macro is not implemented in
1678 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1679 It was used to include the contents of a (header) file literally.
1680 .It Ic \&Ic Ar keyword ...
1681 Designate an internal or interactive command.
1682 This is similar to
1683 .Ic \&Cm
1684 but used for instructions rather than values.
1685 .Pp
1686 Examples:
1687 .Dl \&.Ic :wq
1688 .Dl \&.Ic hash
1689 .Dl \&.Ic alias
1690 .Pp
1691 Note that using
1692 .Ic \&Ql ,
1693 .Ic \&Dl ,
1694 or
1695 .Ic \&Bd Fl literal
1696 is preferred for displaying code samples; the
1697 .Ic \&Ic
1698 macro is used when referring to an individual command name.
1699 .It Ic \&In Ar filename
1700 The name of an include file.
1701 This macro is most often used in section 2, 3, and 9 manual pages.
1702 .Pp
1703 When invoked as the first macro on an input line in the
1704 .Em SYNOPSIS
1705 section, the argument is displayed in angle brackets
1706 and preceded by
1707 .Qq #include ,
1708 and a blank line is inserted in front if there is a preceding
1709 function declaration.
1710 In other sections, it only encloses its argument in angle brackets
1711 and causes no line break.
1712 .Pp
1713 Examples:
1714 .Dl \&.In sys/types.h
1715 .Pp
1716 See also
1717 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE .
1718 .It Ic \&It Op Ar head
1719 A list item.
1720 The syntax of this macro depends on the list type.
1721 .Pp
1722 Lists
1723 of type
1724 .Fl hang ,
1725 .Fl ohang ,
1726 .Fl inset ,
1727 and
1728 .Fl diag
1729 have the following syntax:
1730 .Pp
1731 .D1 Pf \. Ic \&It Ar args
1732 .Pp
1733 Lists of type
1734 .Fl bullet ,
1735 .Fl dash ,
1736 .Fl enum ,
1737 .Fl hyphen
1738 and
1739 .Fl item
1740 have the following syntax:
1741 .Pp
1742 .D1 Pf \. Ic \&It
1743 .Pp
1744 with subsequent lines interpreted within the scope of the
1745 .Ic \&It
1746 until either a closing
1747 .Ic \&El
1748 or another
1749 .Ic \&It .
1750 .Pp
1751 The
1752 .Fl tag
1753 list has the following syntax:
1754 .Pp
1755 .D1 Pf \. Ic \&It Op Cm args
1756 .Pp
1757 Subsequent lines are interpreted as with
1758 .Fl bullet
1759 and family.
1760 The line arguments correspond to the list's left-hand side; body
1761 arguments correspond to the list's contents.
1762 .Pp
1763 The
1764 .Fl column
1765 list is the most complicated.
1766 Its syntax is as follows:
1767 .Pp
1768 .D1 Pf \. Ic \&It Ar cell Op Ic \&Ta Ar cell ...
1769 .D1 Pf \. Ic \&It Ar cell Op <TAB> Ar cell ...
1770 .Pp
1771 The arguments consist of one or more lines of text and macros
1772 representing a complete table line.
1773 Cells within the line are delimited by the special
1774 .Ic \&Ta
1775 block macro or by literal tab characters.
1776 .Pp
1777 Using literal tabs is strongly discouraged because they are very
1778 hard to use correctly and
1779 .Nm
1780 code using them is very hard to read.
1781 In particular, a blank character is syntactically significant
1782 before and after the literal tab character.
1783 If a word precedes or follows the tab without an intervening blank,
1784 that word is never interpreted as a macro call, but always output
1785 literally.
1786 .Pp
1787 The tab cell delimiter may only be used within the
1788 .Ic \&It
1789 line itself; on following lines, only the
1790 .Ic \&Ta
1791 macro can be used to delimit cells, and portability requires that
1792 .Ic \&Ta
1793 is called by other macros: some parsers do not recognize it when
1794 it appears as the first macro on a line.
1795 .Pp
1796 Note that quoted strings may span tab-delimited cells on an
1797 .Ic \&It
1798 line.
1799 For example,
1800 .Pp
1801 .Dl .It \(dqcol1 ,\& <TAB> col2 ,\(dq \&;
1802 .Pp
1803 will preserve the whitespace before both commas,
1804 but not the whitespace before the semicolon.
1805 .Pp
1806 See also
1807 .Ic \&Bl .
1808 .It Ic \&Lb Cm lib Ns Ar name
1809 Specify a library.
1810 .Pp
1811 The
1812 .Ar name
1813 parameter may be a system library, such as
1814 .Cm z
1815 or
1816 .Cm pam ,
1817 in which case a small library description is printed next to the linker
1818 invocation; or a custom library, in which case the library name is
1819 printed in quotes.
1820 This is most commonly used in the
1821 .Em SYNOPSIS
1822 section as described in
1823 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE .
1824 .Pp
1825 Examples:
1826 .Dl \&.Lb libz
1827 .Dl \&.Lb libmandoc
1828 .It Ic \&Li Ar word ...
1829 Request a typewriter (literal) font.
1830 Deprecated because on terminal output devices, this is usually
1831 indistinguishable from normal text.
1832 For literal displays, use
1833 .Ic \&Ql Pq in-line ,
1834 .Ic \&Dl Pq single line ,
1835 or
1836 .Ic \&Bd Fl literal Pq multi-line
1837 instead.
1838 .It Ic \&Lk Ar uri Op Ar display_name
1839 Format a hyperlink.
1840 .Pp
1841 Examples:
1842 .Dl \&.Lk http://bsd.lv \(dqThe BSD.lv Project\(dq
1843 .Dl \&.Lk http://bsd.lv
1844 .Pp
1845 See also
1846 .Ic \&Mt .
1847 .It Ic \&Lp
1848 Deprecated synonym for
1849 .Ic \&Pp .
1850 .It Ic \&Ms Ar name
1851 Display a mathematical symbol.
1852 .Pp
1853 Examples:
1854 .Dl \&.Ms sigma
1855 .Dl \&.Ms aleph
1856 .It Ic \&Mt Ar localpart Ns @ Ns Ar domain
1857 Format a
1858 .Dq mailto:
1859 hyperlink.
1860 .Pp
1861 Examples:
1862 .Dl \&.Mt discuss@manpages.bsd.lv
1863 .Dl \&.An Kristaps Dzonsons \&Aq \&Mt kristaps@bsd.lv
1864 .It Ic \&Nd Ar line
1865 A one line description of the manual's content.
1866 This is the mandatory last macro of the
1867 .Em NAME
1868 section and not appropriate for other sections.
1869 .Pp
1870 Examples:
1871 .Dl Pf . Ic \&Nd mdoc language reference
1872 .Dl Pf . Ic \&Nd format and display UNIX manuals
1873 .Pp
1874 The
1875 .Ic \&Nd
1876 macro technically accepts child macros and terminates with a subsequent
1877 .Ic \&Sh
1878 invocation.
1879 Do not assume this behaviour: some
1880 .Xr whatis 1
1881 database generators are not smart enough to parse more than the line
1882 arguments and will display macros verbatim.
1883 .Pp
1884 See also
1885 .Ic \&Nm .
1886 .It Ic \&Nm Op Ar name
1887 The name of the manual page, or \(em in particular in section 1, 6,
1888 and 8 pages \(em of an additional command or feature documented in
1889 the manual page.
1890 When first invoked, the
1891 .Ic \&Nm
1892 macro expects a single argument, the name of the manual page.
1893 Usually, the first invocation happens in the
1894 .Em NAME
1895 section of the page.
1896 The specified name will be remembered and used whenever the macro is
1897 called again without arguments later in the page.
1898 The
1899 .Ic \&Nm
1900 macro uses
1901 .Sx Block full-implicit
1902 semantics when invoked as the first macro on an input line in the
1903 .Em SYNOPSIS
1904 section; otherwise, it uses ordinary
1905 .Sx In-line
1906 semantics.
1907 .Pp
1908 Examples:
1909 .Bd -literal -offset indent
1910 \&.Sh SYNOPSIS
1911 \&.Nm cat
1912 \&.Op Fl benstuv
1913 \&.Op Ar
1914 .Ed
1915 .Pp
1916 In the
1917 .Em SYNOPSIS
1918 of section 2, 3 and 9 manual pages, use the
1919 .Ic \&Fn
1920 macro rather than
1921 .Ic \&Nm
1922 to mark up the name of the manual page.
1923 .It Ic \&No Ar word ...
1924 Normal text.
1925 Closes the scope of any preceding in-line macro.
1926 When used after physical formatting macros like
1927 .Ic \&Em
1928 or
1929 .Ic \&Sy ,
1930 switches back to the standard font face and weight.
1931 Can also be used to embed plain text strings in macro lines
1932 using semantic annotation macros.
1933 .Pp
1934 Examples:
1935 .Dl ".Em italic , Sy bold , No and roman"
1936 .Pp
1937 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1938 \&.Sm off
1939 \&.Cm :C No / Ar pattern No / Ar replacement No /
1940 \&.Sm on
1941 .Ed
1942 .Pp
1943 See also
1944 .Ic \&Em ,
1945 .Ic \&Ql ,
1946 and
1947 .Ic \&Sy .
1948 .It Ic \&Ns
1949 Suppress a space between the output of the preceding macro
1950 and the following text or macro.
1951 Following invocation, input is interpreted as normal text
1952 just like after an
1953 .Ic \&No
1954 macro.
1955 .Pp
1956 This has no effect when invoked at the start of a macro line.
1957 .Pp
1958 Examples:
1959 .Dl ".Ar name Ns = Ns Ar value"
1960 .Dl ".Cm :M Ns Ar pattern"
1961 .Dl ".Fl o Ns Ar output"
1962 .Pp
1963 See also
1964 .Ic \&No
1965 and
1966 .Ic \&Sm .
1967 .It Ic \&Nx Op Ar version
1968 Format the
1969 .Nx
1970 version provided as an argument, or a default value if
1971 no argument is provided.
1972 .Pp
1973 Examples:
1974 .Dl \&.Nx 5.01
1975 .Dl \&.Nx
1976 .Pp
1977 See also
1978 .Ic \&At ,
1979 .Ic \&Bsx ,
1980 .Ic \&Bx ,
1981 .Ic \&Dx ,
1982 .Ic \&Fx ,
1983 and
1984 .Ic \&Ox .
1985 .It Ic \&Oc
1986 Close multi-line
1987 .Ic \&Oo
1988 context.
1989 .It Ic \&Oo Ar block
1990 Multi-line version of
1991 .Ic \&Op .
1992 .Pp
1993 Examples:
1994 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1995 \&.Oo
1996 \&.Op Fl flag Ns Ar value
1997 \&.Oc
1998 .Ed
1999 .It Ic \&Op Ar line
2000 Optional part of a command line.
2001 Prints the argument(s) in brackets.
2002 This is most often used in the
2003 .Em SYNOPSIS
2004 section of section 1 and 8 manual pages.
2005 .Pp
2006 Examples:
2007 .Dl \&.Op \&Fl a \&Ar b
2008 .Dl \&.Op \&Ar a | b
2009 .Pp
2010 See also
2011 .Ic \&Oo .
2012 .It Ic \&Os Op Ar system Op Ar version
2013 Operating system version for display in the page footer.
2014 This is the mandatory third macro of
2015 any
2016 .Nm
2017 file.
2018 .Pp
2019 The optional
2020 .Ar system
2021 parameter specifies the relevant operating system or environment.
2022 It is suggested to leave it unspecified, in which case
2023 .Xr mandoc 1
2024 uses its
2025 .Fl Ios
2026 argument or, if that isn't specified either,
2027 .Fa sysname
2028 and
2029 .Fa release
2030 as returned by
2031 .Xr uname 3 .
2032 .Pp
2033 Examples:
2034 .Dl \&.Os
2035 .Dl \&.Os KTH/CSC/TCS
2036 .Dl \&.Os BSD 4.3
2037 .Pp
2038 See also
2039 .Ic \&Dd
2040 and
2041 .Ic \&Dt .
2042 .It Ic \&Ot Ar functype
2043 This macro is obsolete.
2044 Use
2045 .Ic \&Ft
2046 instead; with
2047 .Xr mandoc 1 ,
2048 both have the same effect.
2049 .Pp
2050 Historical
2051 .Nm
2052 packages described it as
2053 .Dq "old function type (FORTRAN)" .
2054 .It Ic \&Ox Op Ar version
2055 Format the
2056 .Ox
2057 version provided as an argument, or a default value
2058 if no argument is provided.
2059 .Pp
2060 Examples:
2061 .Dl \&.Ox 4.5
2062 .Dl \&.Ox
2063 .Pp
2064 See also
2065 .Ic \&At ,
2066 .Ic \&Bsx ,
2067 .Ic \&Bx ,
2068 .Ic \&Dx ,
2069 .Ic \&Fx ,
2070 and
2071 .Ic \&Nx .
2072 .It Ic \&Pa Ar name ...
2073 An absolute or relative file system path, or a file or directory name.
2074 If an argument is not provided, the character
2075 .Sq \(ti
2076 is used as a default.
2077 .Pp
2078 Examples:
2079 .Dl \&.Pa /usr/bin/mandoc
2080 .Dl \&.Pa /usr/share/man/man7/mdoc.7
2081 .Pp
2082 See also
2083 .Ic \&Lk .
2084 .It Ic \&Pc
2085 Close parenthesised context opened by
2086 .Ic \&Po .
2087 .It Ic \&Pf Ar prefix macro Op Ar argument ...
2088 Removes the space between its argument and the following macro.
2089 It is equivalent to:
2090 .Pp
2091 .D1 Ic \&No Pf \e& Ar prefix Ic \&Ns Ar macro Op Ar argument ...
2092 .Pp
2093 The
2094 .Ar prefix
2095 argument is not parsed for macro names or delimiters,
2096 but used verbatim as if it were escaped.
2097 .Pp
2098 Examples:
2099 .Dl ".Pf $ Ar variable_name"
2100 .Dl ".Pf . Ar macro_name"
2101 .Dl ".Pf 0x Ar hex_digits"
2102 .Pp
2103 See also
2104 .Ic \&Ns
2105 and
2106 .Ic \&Sm .
2107 .It Ic \&Po Ar block
2108 Multi-line version of
2109 .Ic \&Pq .
2110 .It Ic \&Pp
2111 Break a paragraph.
2112 This will assert vertical space between prior and subsequent macros
2113 and/or text.
2114 .Pp
2115 Paragraph breaks are not needed before or after
2116 .Ic \&Sh
2117 or
2118 .Ic \&Ss
2119 macros or before displays
2120 .Pq Ic \&Bd Ar line
2121 or lists
2122 .Pq Ic \&Bl
2123 unless the
2124 .Fl compact
2125 flag is given.
2126 .It Ic \&Pq Ar line
2127 Parenthesised enclosure.
2128 .Pp
2129 See also
2130 .Ic \&Po .
2131 .It Ic \&Qc
2132 Close quoted context opened by
2133 .Ic \&Qo .
2134 .It Ic \&Ql Ar line
2135 In-line literal display.
2136 This can be used for complete command invocations and for multi-word
2137 code examples when an indented display is not desired.
2138 .Pp
2139 See also
2140 .Ic \&Dl
2141 and
2142 .Ic \&Bd
2143 .Fl literal .
2144 .It Ic \&Qo Ar block
2145 Multi-line version of
2146 .Ic \&Qq .
2147 .It Ic \&Qq Ar line
2148 Encloses its arguments in
2149 .Qq typewriter
2150 double-quotes.
2151 Consider using
2152 .Ic \&Dq .
2153 .Pp
2154 See also
2155 .Ic \&Dq ,
2156 .Ic \&Sq ,
2157 and
2158 .Ic \&Qo .
2159 .It Ic \&Re
2160 Close an
2161 .Ic \&Rs
2162 block.
2163 Does not have any tail arguments.
2164 .It Ic \&Rs
2165 Begin a bibliographic
2166 .Pq Dq reference
2167 block.
2168 Does not have any head arguments.
2169 The block macro may only contain
2170 .Ic \&%A ,
2171 .Ic \&%B ,
2172 .Ic \&%C ,
2173 .Ic \&%D ,
2174 .Ic \&%I ,
2175 .Ic \&%J ,
2176 .Ic \&%N ,
2177 .Ic \&%O ,
2178 .Ic \&%P ,
2179 .Ic \&%Q ,
2180 .Ic \&%R ,
2181 .Ic \&%T ,
2182 .Ic \&%U ,
2183 and
2184 .Ic \&%V
2185 child macros (at least one must be specified).
2186 .Pp
2187 Examples:
2188 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
2189 \&.Rs
2190 \&.%A J. E. Hopcroft
2191 \&.%A J. D. Ullman
2192 \&.%B Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation
2193 \&.%I Addison-Wesley
2194 \&.%C Reading, Massachusetts
2195 \&.%D 1979
2196 \&.Re
2197 .Ed
2198 .Pp
2199 If an
2200 .Ic \&Rs
2201 block is used within a SEE ALSO section, a vertical space is asserted
2202 before the rendered output, else the block continues on the current
2203 line.
2204 .It Ic \&Rv Fl std Op Ar function ...
2205 Insert a standard sentence regarding a function call's return value of 0
2206 on success and \-1 on error, with the
2207 .Va errno
2208 libc global variable set on error.
2209 .Pp
2210 If
2211 .Ar function
2212 is not specified, the document's name set by
2213 .Ic \&Nm
2214 is used.
2215 Multiple
2216 .Ar function
2217 arguments are treated as separate functions.
2218 .Pp
2219 See also
2220 .Ic \&Ex .
2221 .It Ic \&Sc
2222 Close single-quoted context opened by
2223 .Ic \&So .
2224 .It Ic \&Sh Ar TITLE LINE
2225 Begin a new section.
2226 For a list of conventional manual sections, see
2227 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE .
2228 These sections should be used unless it's absolutely necessary that
2229 custom sections be used.
2230 .Pp
2231 Section names should be unique so that they may be keyed by
2232 .Ic \&Sx .
2233 Although this macro is parsed, it should not consist of child node or it
2234 may not be linked with
2235 .Ic \&Sx .
2236 .Pp
2237 See also
2238 .Ic \&Pp ,
2239 .Ic \&Ss ,
2240 and
2241 .Ic \&Sx .
2242 .It Ic \&Sm Op Cm on | off
2243 Switches the spacing mode for output generated from macros.
2244 .Pp
2245 By default, spacing is
2246 .Cm on .
2247 When switched
2248 .Cm off ,
2249 no white space is inserted between macro arguments and between the
2250 output generated from adjacent macros, but text lines
2251 still get normal spacing between words and sentences.
2252 .Pp
2253 When called without an argument, the
2254 .Ic \&Sm
2255 macro toggles the spacing mode.
2256 Using this is not recommended because it makes the code harder to read.
2257 .It Ic \&So Ar block
2258 Multi-line version of
2259 .Ic \&Sq .
2260 .It Ic \&Sq Ar line
2261 Encloses its arguments in
2262 .Sq typewriter
2263 single-quotes.
2264 .Pp
2265 See also
2266 .Ic \&Dq ,
2267 .Ic \&Qq ,
2268 and
2269 .Ic \&So .
2270 .It Ic \&Ss Ar Title line
2271 Begin a new subsection.
2272 Unlike with
2273 .Ic \&Sh ,
2274 there is no convention for the naming of subsections.
2275 Except
2276 .Em DESCRIPTION ,
2277 the conventional sections described in
2278 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE
2279 rarely have subsections.
2280 .Pp
2281 Sub-section names should be unique so that they may be keyed by
2282 .Ic \&Sx .
2283 Although this macro is parsed, it should not consist of child node or it
2284 may not be linked with
2285 .Ic \&Sx .
2286 .Pp
2287 See also
2288 .Ic \&Pp ,
2289 .Ic \&Sh ,
2290 and
2291 .Ic \&Sx .
2292 .It Ic \&St Fl Ns Ar abbreviation
2293 Replace an abbreviation for a standard with the full form.
2294 The following standards are recognised.
2295 Where multiple lines are given without a blank line in between,
2296 they all refer to the same standard, and using the first form
2297 is recommended.
2298 .Bl -tag -width 1n
2299 .It C language standards
2300 .Pp
2301 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1g-2000" -compact
2302 .It \-ansiC
2303 .St -ansiC
2304 .It \-ansiC-89
2305 .St -ansiC-89
2306 .It \-isoC
2307 .St -isoC
2308 .It \-isoC-90
2309 .St -isoC-90
2310 .br
2311 The original C standard.
2312 .Pp
2313 .It \-isoC-amd1
2314 .St -isoC-amd1
2315 .Pp
2316 .It \-isoC-tcor1
2317 .St -isoC-tcor1
2318 .Pp
2319 .It \-isoC-tcor2
2320 .St -isoC-tcor2
2321 .Pp
2322 .It \-isoC-99
2323 .St -isoC-99
2324 .br
2325 The second major version of the C language standard.
2326 .Pp
2327 .It \-isoC-2011
2328 .St -isoC-2011
2329 .br
2330 The third major version of the C language standard.
2331 .El
2332 .It POSIX.1 before the Single UNIX Specification
2333 .Pp
2334 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1g-2000" -compact
2335 .It \-p1003.1-88
2336 .St -p1003.1-88
2337 .It \-p1003.1
2338 .St -p1003.1
2339 .br
2340 The original POSIX standard, based on ANSI C.
2341 .Pp
2342 .It \-p1003.1-90
2343 .St -p1003.1-90
2344 .It \-iso9945-1-90
2345 .St -iso9945-1-90
2346 .br
2347 The first update of POSIX.1.
2348 .Pp
2349 .It \-p1003.1b-93
2350 .St -p1003.1b-93
2351 .It \-p1003.1b
2352 .St -p1003.1b
2353 .br
2354 Real-time extensions.
2355 .Pp
2356 .It \-p1003.1c-95
2357 .St -p1003.1c-95
2358 .br
2359 POSIX thread interfaces.
2360 .Pp
2361 .It \-p1003.1i-95
2362 .St -p1003.1i-95
2363 .br
2364 Technical Corrigendum.
2365 .Pp
2366 .It \-p1003.1-96
2367 .St -p1003.1-96
2368 .It \-iso9945-1-96
2369 .St -iso9945-1-96
2370 .br
2371 Includes POSIX.1-1990, 1b, 1c, and 1i.
2372 .El
2373 .It X/Open Portability Guide version 4 and related standards
2374 .Pp
2375 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1g-2000" -compact
2376 .It \-xpg3
2377 .St -xpg3
2378 .br
2379 An XPG4 precursor, published in 1989.
2380 .Pp
2381 .It \-p1003.2
2382 .St -p1003.2
2383 .It \-p1003.2-92
2384 .St -p1003.2-92
2385 .It \-iso9945-2-93
2386 .St -iso9945-2-93
2387 .br
2388 An XCU4 precursor.
2389 .Pp
2390 .It \-p1003.2a-92
2391 .St -p1003.2a-92
2392 .br
2393 Updates to POSIX.2.
2394 .Pp
2395 .It \-xpg4
2396 .St -xpg4
2397 .br
2398 Based on POSIX.1 and POSIX.2, published in 1992.
2399 .El
2400 .It Single UNIX Specification version 1 and related standards
2401 .Pp
2402 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1g-2000" -compact
2403 .It \-susv1
2404 .St -susv1
2405 .It \-xpg4.2
2406 .St -xpg4.2
2407 .br
2408 This standard was published in 1994.
2409 It was used as the basis for UNIX 95 certification.
2410 The following three refer to parts of it.
2411 .Pp
2412 .It \-xsh4.2
2413 .St -xsh4.2
2414 .Pp
2415 .It \-xcurses4.2
2416 .St -xcurses4.2
2417 .Pp
2418 .It \-p1003.1g-2000
2419 .St -p1003.1g-2000
2420 .br
2421 Networking APIs, including sockets.
2422 .Pp
2423 .It \-svid4
2424 .St -svid4 ,
2425 .br
2426 Published in 1995.
2427 .El
2428 .It Single UNIX Specification version 2 and related standards
2429 .Pp
2430 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1g-2000" -compact
2431 .It \-susv2
2432 .St -susv2
2433 This Standard was published in 1997
2434 and is also called X/Open Portability Guide version 5.
2435 It was used as the basis for UNIX 98 certification.
2436 The following refer to parts of it.
2437 .Pp
2438 .It \-xbd5
2439 .St -xbd5
2440 .Pp
2441 .It \-xsh5
2442 .St -xsh5
2443 .Pp
2444 .It \-xcu5
2445 .St -xcu5
2446 .Pp
2447 .It \-xns5
2448 .St -xns5
2449 .It \-xns5.2
2450 .St -xns5.2
2451 .El
2452 .It Single UNIX Specification version 3
2453 .Pp
2454 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1-2001" -compact
2455 .It \-p1003.1-2001
2456 .St -p1003.1-2001
2457 .It \-susv3
2458 .St -susv3
2459 .br
2460 This standard is based on C99, SUSv2, POSIX.1-1996, 1d, and 1j.
2461 It is also called X/Open Portability Guide version 6.
2462 It is used as the basis for UNIX 03 certification.
2463 .Pp
2464 .It \-p1003.1-2004
2465 .St -p1003.1-2004
2466 .br
2467 The second and last Technical Corrigendum.
2468 .El
2469 .It Single UNIX Specification version 4
2470 .Pp
2471 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1g-2000" -compact
2472 .It \-p1003.1-2008
2473 .St -p1003.1-2008
2474 .It \-susv4
2475 .St -susv4
2476 .br
2477 This standard is also called
2478 X/Open Portability Guide version 7.
2479 .El
2480 .It Other standards
2481 .Pp
2482 .Bl -tag -width "-p1003.1g-2000" -compact
2483 .It \-ieee754
2484 .St -ieee754
2485 .br
2486 Floating-point arithmetic.
2487 .Pp
2488 .It \-iso8601
2489 .St -iso8601
2490 .br
2491 Representation of dates and times, published in 1988.
2492 .Pp
2493 .It \-iso8802-3
2494 .St -iso8802-3
2495 .br
2496 Ethernet local area networks.
2497 .Pp
2498 .It \-ieee1275-94
2499 .St -ieee1275-94
2500 .El
2501 .El
2502 .It Ic \&Sx Ar Title line
2503 Reference a section or subsection in the same manual page.
2504 The referenced section or subsection name must be identical to the
2505 enclosed argument, including whitespace.
2506 .Pp
2507 Examples:
2508 .Dl \&.Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE
2509 .Pp
2510 See also
2511 .Ic \&Sh
2512 and
2513 .Ic \&Ss .
2514 .It Ic \&Sy Ar word ...
2515 Request a boldface font.
2516 .Pp
2517 This is most often used to indicate importance or seriousness (not to be
2518 confused with stress emphasis, see
2519 .Ic \&Em ) .
2520 When none of the semantic macros fit, it is also adequate for syntax
2521 elements that have to be given or that appear verbatim.
2522 .Pp
2523 Examples:
2524 .Bd -literal -compact -offset indent
2525 \&.Sy Warning :
2526 If
2527 \&.Sy s
2528 appears in the owner permissions, set-user-ID mode is set.
2529 This utility replaces the former
2530 \&.Sy dumpdir
2531 program.
2532 .Ed
2533 .Pp
2534 See also
2535 .Ic \&Em ,
2536 .Ic \&No ,
2537 and
2538 .Ic \&Ql .
2539 .It Ic \&Ta
2540 Table cell separator in
2541 .Ic \&Bl Fl column
2542 lists; can only be used below
2543 .Ic \&It .
2544 .It Ic \&Tn Ar word ...
2545 Supported only for compatibility, do not use this in new manuals.
2546 Even though the macro name
2547 .Pq Dq tradename
2548 suggests a semantic function, historic usage is inconsistent, mostly
2549 using it as a presentation-level macro to request a small caps font.
2550 .It Ic \&Ud
2551 Supported only for compatibility, do not use this in new manuals.
2552 Prints out
2553 .Dq currently under development.
2554 .It Ic \&Ux
2555 Supported only for compatibility, do not use this in new manuals.
2556 Prints out
2557 .Dq Ux .
2558 .It Ic \&Va Oo Ar type Oc Ar identifier ...
2559 A variable name.
2560 .Pp
2561 Examples:
2562 .Dl \&.Va foo
2563 .Dl \&.Va const char *bar ;
2564 .Pp
2565 For function arguments and parameters, use
2566 .Ic \&Fa
2567 instead.
2568 For declarations of global variables in the
2569 .Em SYNOPSIS
2570 section, use
2571 .Ic \&Vt .
2572 .It Ic \&Vt Ar type Op Ar identifier
2573 A variable type.
2574 .Pp
2575 This is also used for indicating global variables in the
2576 .Em SYNOPSIS
2577 section, in which case a variable name is also specified.
2578 Note that it accepts
2579 .Sx Block partial-implicit
2580 syntax when invoked as the first macro on an input line in the
2581 .Em SYNOPSIS
2582 section, else it accepts ordinary
2583 .Sx In-line
2584 syntax.
2585 In the former case, this macro starts a new output line,
2586 and a blank line is inserted in front if there is a preceding
2587 function definition or include directive.
2588 .Pp
2589 Examples:
2590 .Dl \&.Vt unsigned char
2591 .Dl \&.Vt extern const char * const sys_signame[] \&;
2592 .Pp
2593 For parameters in function prototypes, use
2594 .Ic \&Fa
2595 instead, for function return types
2596 .Ic \&Ft ,
2597 and for variable names outside the
2598 .Em SYNOPSIS
2599 section
2600 .Ic \&Va ,
2601 even when including a type with the name.
2602 See also
2603 .Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE .
2604 .It Ic \&Xc
2605 Close a scope opened by
2606 .Ic \&Xo .
2607 .It Ic \&Xo Ar block
2608 Extend the header of an
2609 .Ic \&It
2610 macro or the body of a partial-implicit block macro
2611 beyond the end of the input line.
2612 This macro originally existed to work around the 9-argument limit
2613 of historic
2614 .Xr roff 7 .
2615 .It Ic \&Xr Ar name section
2616 Link to another manual
2617 .Pq Qq cross-reference .
2618 .Pp
2619 Cross reference the
2620 .Ar name
2621 and
2622 .Ar section
2623 number of another man page.
2624 .Pp
2625 Examples:
2626 .Dl \&.Xr mandoc 1
2627 .Dl \&.Xr mandoc 1 \&;
2628 .Dl \&.Xr mandoc 1 \&Ns s behaviour
2629 .El
2630 .Sh MACRO SYNTAX
2631 The syntax of a macro depends on its classification.
2632 In this section,
2633 .Sq \-arg
2634 refers to macro arguments, which may be followed by zero or more
2635 .Sq parm
2636 parameters;
2637 .Sq \&Yo
2638 opens the scope of a macro; and if specified,
2639 .Sq \&Yc
2640 closes it out.
2641 .Pp
2642 The
2643 .Em Callable
2644 column indicates that the macro may also be called by passing its name
2645 as an argument to another macro.
2646 For example,
2647 .Sq \&.Op \&Fl O \&Ar file
2648 produces
2649 .Sq Op Fl O Ar file .
2650 To prevent a macro call and render the macro name literally,
2651 escape it by prepending a zero-width space,
2652 .Sq \e& .
2653 For example,
2654 .Sq \&Op \e&Fl O
2655 produces
2656 .Sq Op \&Fl O .
2657 If a macro is not callable but its name appears as an argument
2658 to another macro, it is interpreted as opaque text.
2659 For example,
2660 .Sq \&.Fl \&Sh
2661 produces
2662 .Sq Fl \&Sh .
2663 .Pp
2664 The
2665 .Em Parsed
2666 column indicates whether the macro may call other macros by receiving
2667 their names as arguments.
2668 If a macro is not parsed but the name of another macro appears
2669 as an argument, it is interpreted as opaque text.
2670 .Pp
2671 The
2672 .Em Scope
2673 column, if applicable, describes closure rules.
2674 .Ss Block full-explicit
2675 Multi-line scope closed by an explicit closing macro.
2676 All macros contains bodies; only
2677 .Ic \s&Bf
2678 and
2679 .Pq optionally
2680 .Ic \&Bl
2681 contain a head.
2682 .Bd -literal -offset indent
2683 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBparm...\(rB\(rB \(lBhead...\(rB
2684 \(lBbody...\(rB
2685 \&.Yc
2686 .Ed
2687 .Bl -column "MacroX" "CallableX" "ParsedX" "closed by XXX" -offset indent
2688 .It Em Macro Ta Em Callable Ta Em Parsed Ta Em Scope
2689 .It Ic \&Bd Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta closed by Ic \&Ed
2690 .It Ic \&Bf Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta closed by Ic \&Ef
2691 .It Ic \&Bk Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta closed by Ic \&Ek
2692 .It Ic \&Bl Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta closed by Ic \&El
2693 .It Ic \&Ed Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta opened by Ic \&Bd
2694 .It Ic \&Ef Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta opened by Ic \&Bf
2695 .It Ic \&Ek Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta opened by Ic \&Bk
2696 .It Ic \&El Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta opened by Ic \&Bl
2697 .El
2698 .Ss Block full-implicit
2699 Multi-line scope closed by end-of-file or implicitly by another macro.
2700 All macros have bodies; some
2701 .Po
2702 .Ic \&It Fl bullet ,
2703 .Fl hyphen ,
2704 .Fl dash ,
2705 .Fl enum ,
2706 .Fl item
2707 .Pc
2708 don't have heads; only one
2709 .Po
2710 .Ic \&It
2711 in
2712 .Ic \&Bl Fl column
2713 .Pc
2714 has multiple heads.
2715 .Bd -literal -offset indent
2716 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBparm...\(rB\(rB \(lBhead... \(lBTa head...\(rB\(rB
2717 \(lBbody...\(rB
2718 .Ed
2719 .Bl -column "MacroX" "CallableX" "ParsedX" "closed by XXXXXXXXXXX" -offset indent
2720 .It Em Macro Ta Em Callable Ta Em Parsed Ta Em Scope
2721 .It Ic \&It Ta \&No Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&It , Ic \&El
2722 .It Ic \&Nd Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta closed by Ic \&Sh
2723 .It Ic \&Nm Ta \&No Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Nm , Ic \&Sh , Ic \&Ss
2724 .It Ic \&Sh Ta \&No Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Sh
2725 .It Ic \&Ss Ta \&No Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Sh , Ic \&Ss
2726 .El
2727 .Pp
2728 Note that the
2729 .Ic \&Nm
2730 macro is a
2731 .Sx Block full-implicit
2732 macro only when invoked as the first macro
2733 in a
2734 .Em SYNOPSIS
2735 section line, else it is
2736 .Sx In-line .
2737 .Ss Block partial-explicit
2738 Like block full-explicit, but also with single-line scope.
2739 Each has at least a body and, in limited circumstances, a head
2740 .Po
2741 .Ic \&Fo ,
2742 .Ic \&Eo
2743 .Pc
2744 and/or tail
2745 .Pq Ic \&Ec .
2746 .Bd -literal -offset indent
2747 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBparm...\(rB\(rB \(lBhead...\(rB
2748 \(lBbody...\(rB
2749 \&.Yc \(lBtail...\(rB
2750
2751 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBparm...\(rB\(rB \(lBhead...\(rB \
2752 \(lBbody...\(rB \&Yc \(lBtail...\(rB
2753 .Ed
2754 .Bl -column "MacroX" "CallableX" "ParsedX" "closed by XXXX" -offset indent
2755 .It Em Macro Ta Em Callable Ta Em Parsed Ta Em Scope
2756 .It Ic \&Ac Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Ao
2757 .It Ic \&Ao Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Ac
2758 .It Ic \&Bc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Bo
2759 .It Ic \&Bo Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Bc
2760 .It Ic \&Brc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Bro
2761 .It Ic \&Bro Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Brc
2762 .It Ic \&Dc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Do
2763 .It Ic \&Do Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Dc
2764 .It Ic \&Ec Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Eo
2765 .It Ic \&Eo Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Ec
2766 .It Ic \&Fc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Fo
2767 .It Ic \&Fo Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta closed by Ic \&Fc
2768 .It Ic \&Oc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Oo
2769 .It Ic \&Oo Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Oc
2770 .It Ic \&Pc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Po
2771 .It Ic \&Po Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Pc
2772 .It Ic \&Qc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Oo
2773 .It Ic \&Qo Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Oc
2774 .It Ic \&Re Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta opened by Ic \&Rs
2775 .It Ic \&Rs Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta closed by Ic \&Re
2776 .It Ic \&Sc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&So
2777 .It Ic \&So Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Sc
2778 .It Ic \&Xc Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta opened by Ic \&Xo
2779 .It Ic \&Xo Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Xc
2780 .El
2781 .Ss Block partial-implicit
2782 Like block full-implicit, but with single-line scope closed by the
2783 end of the line.
2784 .Bd -literal -offset indent
2785 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBval...\(rB\(rB \(lBbody...\(rB \(lBres...\(rB
2786 .Ed
2787 .Bl -column "MacroX" "CallableX" "ParsedX" -offset indent
2788 .It Em Macro Ta Em Callable Ta Em Parsed
2789 .It Ic \&Aq Ta Yes Ta Yes
2790 .It Ic \&Bq Ta Yes Ta Yes
2791 .It Ic \&Brq Ta Yes Ta Yes
2792 .It Ic \&D1 Ta \&No Ta \&Yes
2793 .It Ic \&Dl Ta \&No Ta Yes
2794 .It Ic \&Dq Ta Yes Ta Yes
2795 .It Ic \&En Ta Yes Ta Yes
2796 .It Ic \&Op Ta Yes Ta Yes
2797 .It Ic \&Pq Ta Yes Ta Yes
2798 .It Ic \&Ql Ta Yes Ta Yes
2799 .It Ic \&Qq Ta Yes Ta Yes
2800 .It Ic \&Sq Ta Yes Ta Yes
2801 .It Ic \&Vt Ta Yes Ta Yes
2802 .El
2803 .Pp
2804 Note that the
2805 .Ic \&Vt
2806 macro is a
2807 .Sx Block partial-implicit
2808 only when invoked as the first macro
2809 in a
2810 .Em SYNOPSIS
2811 section line, else it is
2812 .Sx In-line .
2813 .Ss Special block macro
2814 The
2815 .Ic \&Ta
2816 macro can only be used below
2817 .Ic \&It
2818 in
2819 .Ic \&Bl Fl column
2820 lists.
2821 It delimits blocks representing table cells;
2822 these blocks have bodies, but no heads.
2823 .Bl -column "MacroX" "CallableX" "ParsedX" "closed by XXXX" -offset indent
2824 .It Em Macro Ta Em Callable Ta Em Parsed Ta Em Scope
2825 .It Ic \&Ta Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta closed by Ic \&Ta , Ic \&It
2826 .El
2827 .Ss In-line
2828 Closed by the end of the line, fixed argument lengths,
2829 and/or subsequent macros.
2830 In-line macros have only text children.
2831 If a number (or inequality) of arguments is
2832 .Pq n ,
2833 then the macro accepts an arbitrary number of arguments.
2834 .Bd -literal -offset indent
2835 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBval...\(rB\(rB \(lBargs...\(rB \(lBres...\(rB
2836
2837 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBval...\(rB\(rB \(lBargs...\(rB Yc...
2838
2839 \&.Yo \(lB\-arg \(lBval...\(rB\(rB arg0 arg1 argN
2840 .Ed
2841 .Bl -column "MacroX" "CallableX" "ParsedX" "Arguments" -offset indent
2842 .It Em Macro Ta Em Callable Ta Em Parsed Ta Em Arguments
2843 .It Ic \&%A Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2844 .It Ic \&%B Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2845 .It Ic \&%C Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2846 .It Ic \&%D Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2847 .It Ic \&%I Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2848 .It Ic \&%J Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2849 .It Ic \&%N Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2850 .It Ic \&%O Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2851 .It Ic \&%P Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2852 .It Ic \&%Q Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2853 .It Ic \&%R Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2854 .It Ic \&%T Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2855 .It Ic \&%U Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2856 .It Ic \&%V Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2857 .It Ic \&Ad Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2858 .It Ic \&An Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2859 .It Ic \&Ap Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta 0
2860 .It Ic \&Ar Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2861 .It Ic \&At Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta 1
2862 .It Ic \&Bsx Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2863 .It Ic \&Bt Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta 0
2864 .It Ic \&Bx Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2865 .It Ic \&Cd Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2866 .It Ic \&Cm Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2867 .It Ic \&Db Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta 1
2868 .It Ic \&Dd Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta n
2869 .It Ic \&Dt Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta n
2870 .It Ic \&Dv Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2871 .It Ic \&Dx Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2872 .It Ic \&Em Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2873 .It Ic \&Er Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2874 .It Ic \&Es Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta 2
2875 .It Ic \&Ev Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2876 .It Ic \&Ex Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta n
2877 .It Ic \&Fa Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2878 .It Ic \&Fd Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta >0
2879 .It Ic \&Fl Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2880 .It Ic \&Fn Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2881 .It Ic \&Fr Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2882 .It Ic \&Ft Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2883 .It Ic \&Fx Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2884 .It Ic \&Hf Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta n
2885 .It Ic \&Ic Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2886 .It Ic \&In Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta 1
2887 .It Ic \&Lb Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta 1
2888 .It Ic \&Li Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2889 .It Ic \&Lk Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2890 .It Ic \&Lp Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta 0
2891 .It Ic \&Ms Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2892 .It Ic \&Mt Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2893 .It Ic \&Nm Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2894 .It Ic \&No Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta 0
2895 .It Ic \&Ns Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta 0
2896 .It Ic \&Nx Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2897 .It Ic \&Os Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta n
2898 .It Ic \&Ot Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2899 .It Ic \&Ox Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2900 .It Ic \&Pa Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2901 .It Ic \&Pf Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta 1
2902 .It Ic \&Pp Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta 0
2903 .It Ic \&Rv Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta n
2904 .It Ic \&Sm Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta <2
2905 .It Ic \&St Ta \&No Ta Yes Ta 1
2906 .It Ic \&Sx Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2907 .It Ic \&Sy Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2908 .It Ic \&Tn Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2909 .It Ic \&Ud Ta \&No Ta \&No Ta 0
2910 .It Ic \&Ux Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2911 .It Ic \&Va Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta n
2912 .It Ic \&Vt Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta >0
2913 .It Ic \&Xr Ta Yes Ta Yes Ta 2
2914 .El
2915 .Ss Delimiters
2916 When a macro argument consists of one single input character
2917 considered as a delimiter, the argument gets special handling.
2918 This does not apply when delimiters appear in arguments containing
2919 more than one character.
2920 Consequently, to prevent special handling and just handle it
2921 like any other argument, a delimiter can be escaped by prepending
2922 a zero-width space
2923 .Pq Sq \e& .
2924 In text lines, delimiters never need escaping, but may be used
2925 as normal punctuation.
2926 .Pp
2927 For many macros, when the leading arguments are opening delimiters,
2928 these delimiters are put before the macro scope,
2929 and when the trailing arguments are closing delimiters,
2930 these delimiters are put after the macro scope.
2931 Spacing is suppressed after opening delimiters
2932 and before closing delimiters.
2933 For example,
2934 .Pp
2935 .D1 Pf \. \&Aq "( [ word ] ) ."
2936 .Pp
2937 renders as:
2938 .Pp
2939 .D1 Aq ( [ word ] ) .
2940 .Pp
2941 Opening delimiters are:
2942 .Pp
2943 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
2944 .It \&(
2945 left parenthesis
2946 .It \&[
2947 left bracket
2948 .El
2949 .Pp
2950 Closing delimiters are:
2951 .Pp
2952 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
2953 .It \&.
2954 period
2955 .It \&,
2956 comma
2957 .It \&:
2958 colon
2959 .It \&;
2960 semicolon
2961 .It \&)
2962 right parenthesis
2963 .It \&]
2964 right bracket
2965 .It \&?
2966 question mark
2967 .It \&!
2968 exclamation mark
2969 .El
2970 .Pp
2971 Note that even a period preceded by a backslash
2972 .Pq Sq \e.\&
2973 gets this special handling; use
2974 .Sq \e&.
2975 to prevent that.
2976 .Pp
2977 Many in-line macros interrupt their scope when they encounter
2978 delimiters, and resume their scope when more arguments follow that
2979 are not delimiters.
2980 For example,
2981 .Pp
2982 .D1 Pf \. \&Fl "a ( b | c \e*(Ba d ) e"
2983 .Pp
2984 renders as:
2985 .Pp
2986 .D1 Fl a ( b | c \*(Ba d ) e
2987 .Pp
2988 This applies to both opening and closing delimiters,
2989 and also to the middle delimiter, which does not suppress spacing:
2990 .Pp
2991 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
2992 .It \&|
2993 vertical bar
2994 .El
2995 .Pp
2996 As a special case, the predefined string \e*(Ba is handled and rendered
2997 in the same way as a plain
2998 .Sq \&|
2999 character.
3000 Using this predefined string is not recommended in new manuals.
3001 .Ss Font handling
3002 In
3003 .Nm
3004 documents, usage of semantic markup is recommended in order to have
3005 proper fonts automatically selected; only when no fitting semantic markup
3006 is available, consider falling back to
3007 .Sx Physical markup
3008 macros.
3009 Whenever any
3010 .Nm
3011 macro switches the
3012 .Xr roff 7
3013 font mode, it will automatically restore the previous font when exiting
3014 its scope.
3015 Manually switching the font using the
3016 .Xr roff 7
3017 .Ql \ef
3018 font escape sequences is never required.
3019 .Sh COMPATIBILITY
3020 This section provides an incomplete list of compatibility issues
3021 between mandoc and GNU troff
3022 .Pq Qq groff .
3023 .Pp
3024 The following problematic behaviour is found in groff:
3025 .Pp
3026 .Bl -dash -compact
3027 .It
3028 .Ic \&Dd
3029 with non-standard arguments behaves very strangely.
3030 When there are three arguments, they are printed verbatim.
3031 Any other number of arguments is replaced by the current date,
3032 but without any arguments the string
3033 .Dq Epoch
3034 is printed.
3035 .It
3036 .Ic \&Lk
3037 only accepts a single link-name argument; the remainder is misformatted.
3038 .It
3039 .Ic \&Pa
3040 does not format its arguments when used in the FILES section under
3041 certain list types.
3042 .It
3043 .Ic \&Ta
3044 can only be called by other macros, but not at the beginning of a line.
3045 .It
3046 .Ic \&%C
3047 is not implemented (up to and including groff-1.22.2).
3048 .It
3049 .Sq \ef
3050 .Pq font face
3051 and
3052 .Sq \eF
3053 .Pq font family face
3054 .Sx Text Decoration
3055 escapes behave irregularly when specified within line-macro scopes.
3056 .It
3057 Negative scaling units return to prior lines.
3058 Instead, mandoc truncates them to zero.
3059 .El
3060 .Pp
3061 The following features are unimplemented in mandoc:
3062 .Pp
3063 .Bl -dash -compact
3064 .It
3065 .Ic \&Bd Fl file Ar file
3066 is unsupported for security reasons.
3067 .It
3068 .Ic \&Bd
3069 .Fl filled
3070 does not adjust the right margin, but is an alias for
3071 .Ic \&Bd
3072 .Fl ragged .
3073 .It
3074 .Ic \&Bd
3075 .Fl literal
3076 does not use a literal font, but is an alias for
3077 .Ic \&Bd
3078 .Fl unfilled .
3079 .It
3080 .Ic \&Bd
3081 .Fl offset Cm center
3082 and
3083 .Fl offset Cm right
3084 don't work.
3085 Groff does not implement centered and flush-right rendering either,
3086 but produces large indentations.
3087 .El
3088 .Sh SEE ALSO
3089 .Xr man 1 ,
3090 .Xr mandoc 1 ,
3091 .Xr eqn 7 ,
3092 .Xr man 7 ,
3093 .Xr mandoc_char 7 ,
3094 .Xr roff 7 ,
3095 .Xr tbl 7
3096 .Pp
3097 The web page
3098 .Lk http://mandoc.bsd.lv/mdoc/ "extended documentation for the mdoc language"
3099 provides a few tutorial-style pages for beginners, an extensive style
3100 guide for advanced authors, and an alphabetic index helping to choose
3101 the best macros for various kinds of content.
3102 .Sh HISTORY
3103 The
3104 .Nm
3105 language first appeared as a troff macro package in
3106 .Bx 4.4 .
3107 It was later significantly updated by Werner Lemberg and Ruslan Ermilov
3108 in groff-1.17.
3109 The standalone implementation that is part of the
3110 .Xr mandoc 1
3111 utility written by Kristaps Dzonsons appeared in
3112 .Ox 4.6 .
3113 .Sh AUTHORS
3114 The
3115 .Nm
3116 reference was written by
3117 .An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq Mt kristaps@bsd.lv .