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3 .\" Copyright (c) 2009, 2010 Kristaps Dzonsons <kristaps@bsd.lv>
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17 .Dd $Mdocdate: December 6 2010 $
18 .Dt MAN 7
19 .Os
20 .Sh NAME
21 .Nm man
22 .Nd man language reference
23 .Sh DESCRIPTION
24 The
25 .Nm man
26 language was historically used to format
27 .Ux
28 manuals.
29 This reference document describes its syntax, structure, and usage.
30 .Pp
31 .Bf -emphasis
32 Do not use
33 .Nm
34 to write your manuals.
35 .Ef
36 Use the
37 .Xr mdoc 7
38 language, instead.
39 .Pp
40 A
41 .Nm
42 document follows simple rules: lines beginning with the control
43 character
44 .Sq \&.
45 are parsed for macros.
46 Other lines are interpreted within the scope of
47 prior macros:
48 .Bd -literal -offset indent
49 \&.SH Macro lines change control state.
50 Other lines are interpreted within the current state.
51 .Ed
52 .Sh INPUT ENCODING
53 .Nm
54 documents may contain only graphable 7-bit ASCII characters, the
55 space character, and the tab character.
56 All manuals must have
57 .Ux
58 line termination.
59 .Pp
60 Blank lines are acceptable; where found, the output will assert a
61 vertical space.
62 .Ss Comments
63 Text following a
64 .Sq \e\*q ,
65 whether in a macro or free-form text line, is ignored to the end of
66 line.
67 A macro line with only a control character and comment escape,
68 .Sq \&.\e\*q ,
69 is also ignored.
70 Macro lines with only a control character and optionally whitespace are
71 stripped from input.
72 .Ss Special Characters
73 Special characters may occur in both macro and free-form lines.
74 Sequences begin with the escape character
75 .Sq \e
76 followed by either an open-parenthesis
77 .Sq \&(
78 for two-character sequences; an open-bracket
79 .Sq \&[
80 for n-character sequences (terminated at a close-bracket
81 .Sq \&] ) ;
82 or a single one-character sequence.
83 See
84 .Xr mandoc_char 7
85 for a complete list.
86 Examples include
87 .Sq \e(em
88 .Pq em-dash
89 and
90 .Sq \ee
91 .Pq back-slash .
92 .Ss Text Decoration
93 Terms may be text-decorated using the
94 .Sq \ef
95 escape followed by an indicator: B (bold), I (italic), R (Roman), or P
96 (revert to previous mode):
97 .Pp
98 .D1 \efBbold\efR \efIitalic\efP
99 .Pp
100 A numerical representation 3, 2, or 1 (bold, italic, and Roman,
101 respectively) may be used instead.
102 A text decoration is only valid, if specified in free-form text, until
103 the next macro invocation; if specified within a macro, it's only valid
104 until the macro closes scope.
105 Note that macros like
106 .Sx \&BR
107 open and close a font scope with each argument.
108 .Pp
109 The
110 .Sq \ef
111 attribute is forgotten when entering or exiting a macro block.
112 .Ss Whitespace
113 Whitespace consists of the space character.
114 In free-form lines, whitespace is preserved within a line; unescaped
115 trailing spaces are stripped from input (unless in a literal context).
116 Blank free-form lines, which may include spaces, are permitted and
117 rendered as an empty line.
118 .Pp
119 In macro lines, whitespace delimits arguments and is discarded.
120 If arguments are quoted, whitespace within the quotes is retained.
121 .Ss Dates
122 The
123 .Sx \&TH
124 macro is the only
125 .Nm
126 macro that requires a date.
127 The form for this date is the ISO-8601
128 standard
129 .Cm YYYY-MM-DD .
130 .Ss Scaling Widths
131 Many macros support scaled widths for their arguments, such as
132 stipulating a two-inch paragraph indentation with the following:
133 .Bd -literal -offset indent
134 \&.HP 2i
135 .Ed
136 .Pp
137 The syntax for scaled widths is
138 .Sq Li [+-]?[0-9]*.[0-9]*[:unit:]? ,
139 where a decimal must be preceded or proceeded by at least one digit.
140 Negative numbers, while accepted, are truncated to zero.
141 The following scaling units are accepted:
142 .Pp
143 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
144 .It c
145 centimetre
146 .It i
147 inch
148 .It P
149 pica (~1/6 inch)
150 .It p
151 point (~1/72 inch)
152 .It f
153 synonym for
154 .Sq u
155 .It v
156 default vertical span
157 .It m
158 width of rendered
159 .Sq m
160 .Pq em
161 character
162 .It n
163 width of rendered
164 .Sq n
165 .Pq en
166 character
167 .It u
168 default horizontal span
169 .It M
170 mini-em (~1/100 em)
171 .El
172 .Pp
173 Using anything other than
174 .Sq m ,
175 .Sq n ,
176 .Sq u ,
177 or
178 .Sq v
179 is necessarily non-portable across output media.
180 .Pp
181 If a scaling unit is not provided, the numerical value is interpreted
182 under the default rules of
183 .Sq v
184 for vertical spaces and
185 .Sq u
186 for horizontal ones.
187 .Em Note :
188 this differs from
189 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
190 which, if a unit is not provided, will instead interpret the string as
191 literal text.
192 .Ss Sentence Spacing
193 When composing a manual, make sure that sentences end at the end of
194 a line.
195 By doing so, front-ends will be able to apply the proper amount of
196 spacing after the end of sentence (unescaped) period, exclamation mark,
197 or question mark followed by zero or more non-sentence closing
198 delimiters
199 .Po
200 .Sq \&) ,
201 .Sq \&] ,
202 .Sq \&' ,
203 .Sq \&"
204 .Pc .
205 .Sh MANUAL STRUCTURE
206 Each
207 .Nm
208 document must contain the
209 .Sx \&TH
210 macro describing the document's section and title.
211 It may occur anywhere in the document, although conventionally it
212 appears as the first macro.
213 .Pp
214 Beyond
215 .Sx \&TH ,
216 at least one macro or text node must appear in the document.
217 Documents are generally structured as follows:
218 .Bd -literal -offset indent
219 \&.TH FOO 1 2009-10-10
220 \&.SH NAME
221 \efBfoo\efR \e(en a description goes here
222 \&.\e\*q .SH LIBRARY
223 \&.\e\*q For sections 2 & 3 only.
224 \&.\e\*q Not used in OpenBSD.
225 \&.SH SYNOPSIS
226 \efBfoo\efR [\efB\e-options\efR] arguments...
227 \&.SH DESCRIPTION
228 The \efBfoo\efR utility processes files...
229 \&.\e\*q .SH IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
230 \&.\e\*q Not used in OpenBSD.
231 \&.\e\*q .SH RETURN VALUES
232 \&.\e\*q For sections 2, 3, & 9 only.
233 \&.\e\*q .SH ENVIRONMENT
234 \&.\e\*q For sections 1, 6, 7, & 8 only.
235 \&.\e\*q .SH FILES
236 \&.\e\*q .SH EXIT STATUS
237 \&.\e\*q For sections 1, 6, & 8 only.
238 \&.\e\*q .SH EXAMPLES
239 \&.\e\*q .SH DIAGNOSTICS
240 \&.\e\*q For sections 1, 4, 6, 7, & 8 only.
241 \&.\e\*q .SH ERRORS
242 \&.\e\*q For sections 2, 3, & 9 only.
243 \&.\e\*q .SH SEE ALSO
244 \&.\e\*q .BR foo ( 1 )
245 \&.\e\*q .SH STANDARDS
246 \&.\e\*q .SH HISTORY
247 \&.\e\*q .SH AUTHORS
248 \&.\e\*q .SH CAVEATS
249 \&.\e\*q .SH BUGS
250 \&.\e\*q .SH SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
251 \&.\e\*q Not used in OpenBSD.
252 .Ed
253 .Pp
254 The sections in a
255 .Nm
256 document are conventionally ordered as they appear above.
257 Sections should be composed as follows:
258 .Bl -ohang -offset indent
259 .It Em NAME
260 The name(s) and a short description of the documented material.
261 The syntax for this is generally as follows:
262 .Pp
263 .D1 \efBname\efR \e(en description
264 .It Em LIBRARY
265 The name of the library containing the documented material, which is
266 assumed to be a function in a section 2 or 3 manual.
267 For functions in the C library, this may be as follows:
268 .Pp
269 .D1 Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
270 .It Em SYNOPSIS
271 Documents the utility invocation syntax, function call syntax, or device
272 configuration.
273 .Pp
274 For the first, utilities (sections 1, 6, and 8), this is
275 generally structured as follows:
276 .Pp
277 .D1 \efBname\efR [-\efBab\efR] [-\efBc\efR\efIarg\efR] \efBpath\efR...
278 .Pp
279 For the second, function calls (sections 2, 3, 9):
280 .Pp
281 .D1 \&.B char *name(char *\efIarg\efR);
282 .Pp
283 And for the third, configurations (section 4):
284 .Pp
285 .D1 \&.B name* at cardbus ? function ?
286 .Pp
287 Manuals not in these sections generally don't need a
288 .Em SYNOPSIS .
289 .It Em DESCRIPTION
290 This expands upon the brief, one-line description in
291 .Em NAME .
292 It usually contains a break-down of the options (if documenting a
293 command).
294 .It Em IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
295 Implementation-specific notes should be kept here.
296 This is useful when implementing standard functions that may have side
297 effects or notable algorithmic implications.
298 .It Em RETURN VALUES
299 This section documents the return values of functions in sections 2, 3, and 9.
300 .It Em ENVIRONMENT
301 Documents any usages of environment variables, e.g.,
302 .Xr environ 7 .
303 .It Em FILES
304 Documents files used.
305 It's helpful to document both the file name and a short description of how
306 the file is used (created, modified, etc.).
307 .It Em EXIT STATUS
308 This section documents the command exit status for
309 section 1, 6, and 8 utilities.
310 Historically, this information was described in
311 .Em DIAGNOSTICS ,
312 a practise that is now discouraged.
313 .It Em EXAMPLES
314 Example usages.
315 This often contains snippets of well-formed,
316 well-tested invocations.
317 Make sure that examples work properly!
318 .It Em DIAGNOSTICS
319 Documents error conditions.
320 This is most useful in section 4 manuals.
321 Historically, this section was used in place of
322 .Em EXIT STATUS
323 for manuals in sections 1, 6, and 8; however, this practise is
324 discouraged.
325 .It Em ERRORS
326 Documents error handling in sections 2, 3, and 9.
327 .It Em SEE ALSO
328 References other manuals with related topics.
329 This section should exist for most manuals.
330 .Pp
331 .D1 \&.BR bar \&( 1 \&),
332 .Pp
333 Cross-references should conventionally be ordered
334 first by section, then alphabetically.
335 .It Em STANDARDS
336 References any standards implemented or used, such as
337 .Pp
338 .D1 IEEE Std 1003.2 (\e(lqPOSIX.2\e(rq)
339 .Pp
340 If not adhering to any standards, the
341 .Em HISTORY
342 section should be used.
343 .It Em HISTORY
344 A brief history of the subject, including where support first appeared.
345 .It Em AUTHORS
346 Credits to the person or persons who wrote the code and/or documentation.
347 Authors should generally be noted by both name and email address.
348 .It Em CAVEATS
349 Common misuses and misunderstandings should be explained
350 in this section.
351 .It Em BUGS
352 Known bugs, limitations, and work-arounds should be described
353 in this section.
354 .It Em SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
355 Documents any security precautions that operators should consider.
356 .El
357 .Sh MACRO SYNTAX
358 Macros are one to three characters in length and begin with a
359 control character,
360 .Sq \&. ,
361 at the beginning of the line.
362 The
363 .Sq \(aq
364 macro control character is also accepted.
365 An arbitrary amount of whitespace (spaces or tabs) may sit between the
366 control character and the macro name.
367 Thus, the following are equivalent:
368 .Bd -literal -offset indent
369 \&.PP
370 \&.\ \ \ PP
371 .Ed
372 .Pp
373 The
374 .Nm
375 macros are classified by scope: line scope or block scope.
376 Line macros are only scoped to the current line (and, in some
377 situations, the subsequent line).
378 Block macros are scoped to the current line and subsequent lines until
379 closed by another block macro.
380 .Ss Line Macros
381 Line macros are generally scoped to the current line, with the body
382 consisting of zero or more arguments.
383 If a macro is scoped to the next line and the line arguments are empty,
384 the next line, which must be text, is used instead.
385 Thus:
386 .Bd -literal -offset indent
387 \&.I
388 foo
389 .Ed
390 .Pp
391 is equivalent to
392 .Sq \&.I foo .
393 If next-line macros are invoked consecutively, only the last is used.
394 If a next-line macro is followed by a non-next-line macro, an error is
395 raised, except for
396 .Sx \&br ,
397 .Sx \&sp ,
398 and
399 .Sx \&na .
400 .Pp
401 The syntax is as follows:
402 .Bd -literal -offset indent
403 \&.YO \(lBbody...\(rB
404 \(lBbody...\(rB
405 .Ed
406 .Pp
407 .Bl -column -compact -offset indent "MacroX" "ArgumentsX" "ScopeXXXXX" "CompatX"
408 .It Em Macro Ta Em Arguments Ta Em Scope Ta Em Notes
409 .It Sx \&AT Ta <=1 Ta current Ta \&
410 .It Sx \&B Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
411 .It Sx \&BI Ta n Ta current Ta \&
412 .It Sx \&BR Ta n Ta current Ta \&
413 .It Sx \&DT Ta 0 Ta current Ta \&
414 .It Sx \&I Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
415 .It Sx \&IB Ta n Ta current Ta \&
416 .It Sx \&IR Ta n Ta current Ta \&
417 .It Sx \&R Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
418 .It Sx \&RB Ta n Ta current Ta \&
419 .It Sx \&RI Ta n Ta current Ta \&
420 .It Sx \&SB Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
421 .It Sx \&SM Ta n Ta next-line Ta \&
422 .It Sx \&TH Ta >1, <6 Ta current Ta \&
423 .It Sx \&UC Ta <=1 Ta current Ta \&
424 .It Sx \&br Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
425 .It Sx \&fi Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
426 .It Sx \&ft Ta 1 Ta current Ta compat
427 .It Sx \&i Ta n Ta current Ta compat
428 .It Sx \&in Ta 1 Ta current Ta compat
429 .It Sx \&na Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
430 .It Sx \&nf Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
431 .It Sx \&r Ta 0 Ta current Ta compat
432 .It Sx \&sp Ta 1 Ta current Ta compat
433 .El
434 .Pp
435 Macros marked as
436 .Qq compat
437 are included for compatibility with the significant corpus of existing
438 manuals that mix dialects of roff.
439 These macros should not be used for portable
440 .Nm
441 manuals.
442 .Ss Block Macros
443 Block macros comprise a head and body.
444 As with in-line macros, the head is scoped to the current line and, in
445 one circumstance, the next line (the next-line stipulations as in
446 .Sx Line Macros
447 apply here as well).
448 .Pp
449 The syntax is as follows:
450 .Bd -literal -offset indent
451 \&.YO \(lBhead...\(rB
452 \(lBhead...\(rB
453 \(lBbody...\(rB
454 .Ed
455 .Pp
456 The closure of body scope may be to the section, where a macro is closed
457 by
458 .Sx \&SH ;
459 sub-section, closed by a section or
460 .Sx \&SS ;
461 part, closed by a section, sub-section, or
462 .Sx \&RE ;
463 or paragraph, closed by a section, sub-section, part,
464 .Sx \&HP ,
465 .Sx \&IP ,
466 .Sx \&LP ,
467 .Sx \&P ,
468 .Sx \&PP ,
469 or
470 .Sx \&TP .
471 No closure refers to an explicit block closing macro.
472 .Pp
473 As a rule, block macros may not be nested; thus, calling a block macro
474 while another block macro scope is open, and the open scope is not
475 implicitly closed, is syntactically incorrect.
476 .Pp
477 .Bl -column -compact -offset indent "MacroX" "ArgumentsX" "Head ScopeX" "sub-sectionX" "compatX"
478 .It Em Macro Ta Em Arguments Ta Em Head Scope Ta Em Body Scope Ta Em Notes
479 .It Sx \&HP Ta <2 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
480 .It Sx \&IP Ta <3 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
481 .It Sx \&LP Ta 0 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
482 .It Sx \&P Ta 0 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
483 .It Sx \&PP Ta 0 Ta current Ta paragraph Ta \&
484 .It Sx \&RE Ta 0 Ta current Ta none Ta compat
485 .It Sx \&RS Ta 1 Ta current Ta part Ta compat
486 .It Sx \&SH Ta >0 Ta next-line Ta section Ta \&
487 .It Sx \&SS Ta >0 Ta next-line Ta sub-section Ta \&
488 .It Sx \&TP Ta n Ta next-line Ta paragraph Ta \&
489 .El
490 .Pp
491 Macros marked
492 .Qq compat
493 are as mentioned in
494 .Sx Line Macros .
495 .Pp
496 If a block macro is next-line scoped, it may only be followed by in-line
497 macros for decorating text.
498 .Sh REFERENCE
499 This section is a canonical reference to all macros, arranged
500 alphabetically.
501 For the scoping of individual macros, see
502 .Sx MACRO SYNTAX .
503 .Ss \&AT
504 Sets the volume for the footer for compatibility with man pages from
505 .Tn AT&T UNIX
506 releases.
507 The optional arguments specify which release it is from.
508 .Ss \&B
509 Text is rendered in bold face.
510 .Pp
511 See also
512 .Sx \&I ,
513 .Sx \&R ,
514 .Sx \&b ,
515 .Sx \&i ,
516 and
517 .Sx \&r .
518 .Ss \&BI
519 Text is rendered alternately in bold face and italic.
520 Thus,
521 .Sq .BI this word and that
522 causes
523 .Sq this
524 and
525 .Sq and
526 to render in bold face, while
527 .Sq word
528 and
529 .Sq that
530 render in italics.
531 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
532 .Pp
533 Examples:
534 .Pp
535 .D1 \&.BI bold italic bold italic
536 .Pp
537 The output of this example will be emboldened
538 .Dq bold
539 and italicised
540 .Dq italic ,
541 with spaces stripped between arguments.
542 .Pp
543 See also
544 .Sx \&IB ,
545 .Sx \&BR ,
546 .Sx \&RB ,
547 .Sx \&RI ,
548 and
549 .Sx \&IR .
550 .Ss \&BR
551 Text is rendered alternately in bold face and roman (the default font).
552 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
553 .Pp
554 See
555 .Sx \&BI
556 for an equivalent example.
557 .Pp
558 See also
559 .Sx \&BI ,
560 .Sx \&IB ,
561 .Sx \&RB ,
562 .Sx \&RI ,
563 and
564 .Sx \&IR .
565 .Ss \&DT
566 Has no effect.
567 Included for compatibility.
568 .Ss \&HP
569 Begin a paragraph whose initial output line is left-justified, but
570 subsequent output lines are indented, with the following syntax:
571 .Bd -filled -offset indent
572 .Pf \. Sx \&HP
573 .Op Cm width
574 .Ed
575 .Pp
576 The
577 .Cm width
578 argument must conform to
579 .Sx Scaling Widths .
580 If specified, it's saved for later paragraph left-margins; if unspecified, the
581 saved or default width is used.
582 .Pp
583 See also
584 .Sx \&IP ,
585 .Sx \&LP ,
586 .Sx \&P ,
587 .Sx \&PP ,
588 and
589 .Sx \&TP .
590 .Ss \&I
591 Text is rendered in italics.
592 .Pp
593 See also
594 .Sx \&B ,
595 .Sx \&R ,
596 .Sx \&b ,
597 .Sx \&i ,
598 and
599 .Sx \&r .
600 .Ss \&IB
601 Text is rendered alternately in italics and bold face.
602 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
603 .Pp
604 See
605 .Sx \&BI
606 for an equivalent example.
607 .Pp
608 See also
609 .Sx \&BI ,
610 .Sx \&BR ,
611 .Sx \&RB ,
612 .Sx \&RI ,
613 and
614 .Sx \&IR .
615 .Ss \&IP
616 Begin an indented paragraph with the following syntax:
617 .Bd -filled -offset indent
618 .Pf \. Sx \&IP
619 .Op Cm head Op Cm width
620 .Ed
621 .Pp
622 The
623 .Cm width
624 argument defines the width of the left margin and is defined by
625 .Sx Scaling Widths .
626 It's saved for later paragraph left-margins; if unspecified, the saved or
627 default width is used.
628 .Pp
629 The
630 .Cm head
631 argument is used as a leading term, flushed to the left margin.
632 This is useful for bulleted paragraphs and so on.
633 .Pp
634 See also
635 .Sx \&HP ,
636 .Sx \&LP ,
637 .Sx \&P ,
638 .Sx \&PP ,
639 and
640 .Sx \&TP .
641 .Ss \&IR
642 Text is rendered alternately in italics and roman (the default font).
643 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
644 .Pp
645 See
646 .Sx \&BI
647 for an equivalent example.
648 .Pp
649 See also
650 .Sx \&BI ,
651 .Sx \&IB ,
652 .Sx \&BR ,
653 .Sx \&RB ,
654 and
655 .Sx \&RI .
656 .Ss \&LP
657 Begin an undecorated paragraph.
658 The scope of a paragraph is closed by a subsequent paragraph,
659 sub-section, section, or end of file.
660 The saved paragraph left-margin width is reset to the default.
661 .Pp
662 See also
663 .Sx \&HP ,
664 .Sx \&IP ,
665 .Sx \&P ,
666 .Sx \&PP ,
667 and
668 .Sx \&TP .
669 .Ss \&P
670 Synonym for
671 .Sx \&LP .
672 .Pp
673 See also
674 .Sx \&HP ,
675 .Sx \&IP ,
676 .Sx \&LP ,
677 .Sx \&PP ,
678 and
679 .Sx \&TP .
680 .Ss \&PP
681 Synonym for
682 .Sx \&LP .
683 .Pp
684 See also
685 .Sx \&HP ,
686 .Sx \&IP ,
687 .Sx \&LP ,
688 .Sx \&P ,
689 and
690 .Sx \&TP .
691 .Ss \&R
692 Text is rendered in roman (the default font).
693 .Pp
694 See also
695 .Sx \&I ,
696 .Sx \&B ,
697 .Sx \&b ,
698 .Sx \&i ,
699 and
700 .Sx \&r .
701 .Ss \&RB
702 Text is rendered alternately in roman (the default font) and bold face.
703 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
704 .Pp
705 See
706 .Sx \&BI
707 for an equivalent example.
708 .Pp
709 See also
710 .Sx \&BI ,
711 .Sx \&IB ,
712 .Sx \&BR ,
713 .Sx \&RI ,
714 and
715 .Sx \&IR .
716 .Ss \&RE
717 Explicitly close out the scope of a prior
718 .Sx \&RS .
719 .Ss \&RI
720 Text is rendered alternately in roman (the default font) and italics.
721 Whitespace between arguments is omitted in output.
722 .Pp
723 See
724 .Sx \&BI
725 for an equivalent example.
726 .Pp
727 See also
728 .Sx \&BI ,
729 .Sx \&IB ,
730 .Sx \&BR ,
731 .Sx \&RB ,
732 and
733 .Sx \&IR .
734 .Ss \&RS
735 Begin a part setting the left margin.
736 The left margin controls the offset, following an initial indentation,
737 to un-indented text such as that of
738 .Sx \&PP .
739 This has the following syntax:
740 .Bd -filled -offset indent
741 .Pf \. Sx \&Rs
742 .Op Cm width
743 .Ed
744 .Pp
745 The
746 .Cm width
747 argument must conform to
748 .Sx Scaling Widths .
749 If not specified, the saved or default width is used.
750 .Ss \&SB
751 Text is rendered in small size (one point smaller than the default font)
752 bold face.
753 .Ss \&SH
754 Begin a section.
755 The scope of a section is only closed by another section or the end of
756 file.
757 The paragraph left-margin width is reset to the default.
758 .Ss \&SM
759 Text is rendered in small size (one point smaller than the default
760 font).
761 .Ss \&SS
762 Begin a sub-section.
763 The scope of a sub-section is closed by a subsequent sub-section,
764 section, or end of file.
765 The paragraph left-margin width is reset to the default.
766 .Ss \&TH
767 Sets the title of the manual page with the following syntax:
768 .Bd -filled -offset indent
769 .Pf \. Sx \&TH
770 .Cm title section
771 .Op Cm date Op Cm source Op Cm volume
772 .Ed
773 .Pp
774 At least the upper-case document
775 .Cm title
776 and the manual
777 .Cm section
778 arguments must be provided.
779 The
780 .Cm date
781 argument should be formatted as described in
782 .Sx Dates ,
783 but will be printed verbatim if it is not.
784 If the date is not specified, the current date is used.
785 The
786 .Cm source
787 string specifies the organisation providing the utility.
788 The
789 .Cm volume
790 string replaces the default rendered volume, which is dictated by the
791 manual section.
792 .Pp
793 Examples:
794 .Pp
795 .D1 \&.TH CVS 5 "1992-02-12" GNU
796 .Ss \&TP
797 Begin a paragraph where the head, if exceeding the indentation width, is
798 followed by a newline; if not, the body follows on the same line after a
799 buffer to the indentation width.
800 Subsequent output lines are indented.
801 The syntax is as follows:
802 .Bd -filled -offset indent
803 .Pf \. Sx \&TP
804 .Op Cm width
805 .Ed
806 .Pp
807 The
808 .Cm width
809 argument must conform to
810 .Sx Scaling Widths .
811 If specified, it's saved for later paragraph left-margins; if
812 unspecified, the saved or default width is used.
813 .Pp
814 See also
815 .Sx \&HP ,
816 .Sx \&IP ,
817 .Sx \&LP ,
818 .Sx \&P ,
819 and
820 .Sx \&PP .
821 .Ss \&UC
822 Sets the volume for the footer for compatibility with man pages from
823 BSD releases.
824 The optional first argument specifies which release it is from.
825 .Ss \&br
826 Breaks the current line.
827 Consecutive invocations have no further effect.
828 .Pp
829 See also
830 .Sx \&sp .
831 .Ss \&fi
832 End literal mode begun by
833 .Sx \&nf .
834 .Ss \&ft
835 Change the current font mode.
836 See
837 .Sx Text Decoration
838 for a listing of available font modes.
839 .Ss \&i
840 Italicise arguments.
841 Synonym for
842 .Sx \&I .
843 .Pp
844 See also
845 .Sx \&B ,
846 .Sx \&I ,
847 .Sx \&R .
848 .Sx \&b ,
849 and
850 .Sx \&r .
851 .Ss \&in
852 Indent relative to the current indentation:
853 .Pp
854 .D1 Pf \. Sx \&in Op Cm width
855 .Pp
856 If
857 .Cm width
858 is signed, the new offset is relative.
859 Otherwise, it is absolute.
860 This value is reset upon the next paragraph, section, or sub-section.
861 .Ss \&na
862 Don't align to the right margin.
863 .Ss \&nf
864 Begin literal mode: all subsequent free-form lines have their end of
865 line boundaries preserved.
866 May be ended by
867 .Sx \&fi .
868 .Ss \&r
869 Fonts and styles (bold face, italics) reset to roman (default font).
870 .Pp
871 See also
872 .Sx \&B ,
873 .Sx \&I ,
874 .Sx \&R ,
875 .Sx \&b ,
876 and
877 .Sx \&i .
878 .Ss \&sp
879 Insert vertical spaces into output with the following syntax:
880 .Bd -filled -offset indent
881 .Pf \. Sx \&sp
882 .Op Cm height
883 .Ed
884 .Pp
885 Insert
886 .Cm height
887 spaces, which must conform to
888 .Sx Scaling Widths .
889 If 0, this is equivalent to the
890 .Sx \&br
891 macro.
892 Defaults to 1, if unspecified.
893 .Pp
894 See also
895 .Sx \&br .
896 .Sh COMPATIBILITY
897 This section documents areas of questionable portability between
898 implementations of the
899 .Nm
900 language.
901 .Pp
902 .Bl -dash -compact
903 .It
904 In quoted literals, GNU troff allowed pair-wise double-quotes to produce
905 a standalone double-quote in formatted output.
906 It is not known whether this behaviour is exhibited by other formatters.
907 .It
908 troff suppresses a newline before
909 .Sq \(aq
910 macro output; in mandoc, it is an alias for the standard
911 .Sq \&.
912 control character.
913 .It
914 The
915 .Sq \eh
916 .Pq horizontal position ,
917 .Sq \ev
918 .Pq vertical position ,
919 .Sq \em
920 .Pq text colour ,
921 .Sq \eM
922 .Pq text filling colour ,
923 .Sq \ez
924 .Pq zero-length character ,
925 .Sq \ew
926 .Pq string length ,
927 .Sq \ek
928 .Pq horizontal position marker ,
929 .Sq \eo
930 .Pq text overstrike ,
931 and
932 .Sq \es
933 .Pq text size
934 escape sequences are all discarded in mandoc.
935 .It
936 The
937 .Sq \ef
938 scaling unit is accepted by mandoc, but rendered as the default unit.
939 .It
940 The
941 .Sx \&sp
942 macro does not accept negative values in mandoc.
943 In GNU troff, this would result in strange behaviour.
944 .El
945 .Sh SEE ALSO
946 .Xr man 1 ,
947 .Xr mandoc 1 ,
948 .Xr mandoc_char 7 ,
949 .Xr mdoc 7
950 .Sh HISTORY
951 The
952 .Nm
953 language first appeared as a macro package for the roff typesetting
954 system in
955 .At v7 .
956 It was later rewritten by James Clark as a macro package for groff.
957 The stand-alone implementation that is part of the
958 .Xr mandoc 1
959 utility written by Kristaps Dzonsons appeared in
960 .Ox 4.6 .
961 .Sh AUTHORS
962 This
963 .Nm
964 reference was written by
965 .An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq kristaps@bsd.lv .
966 .Sh CAVEATS
967 Do not use this language.
968 Use
969 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
970 instead.