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1 .\" $Id: roff.7,v 1.58 2014/09/07 00:21:53 schwarze Exp $
2 .\"
3 .\" Copyright (c) 2010, 2011, 2012 Kristaps Dzonsons <kristaps@bsd.lv>
4 .\" Copyright (c) 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014 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.
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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: September 7 2014 $
19 .Dt ROFF 7
20 .Os
21 .Sh NAME
22 .Nm roff
23 .Nd roff language reference for mandoc
24 .Sh DESCRIPTION
25 The
26 .Nm roff
27 language is a general purpose text formatting language.
28 Since traditional implementations of the
29 .Xr mdoc 7
30 and
31 .Xr man 7
32 manual formatting languages are based on it,
33 many real-world manuals use small numbers of
34 .Nm
35 requests and escape sequences intermixed with their
36 .Xr mdoc 7
37 or
38 .Xr man 7
39 code.
40 To properly format such manuals, the
41 .Xr mandoc 1
42 utility supports a tiny subset of
43 .Nm
44 requests and escapes.
45 Only these requests and escapes supported by
46 .Xr mandoc 1
47 are documented in the present manual,
48 together with the basic language syntax shared by
49 .Nm ,
50 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
51 and
52 .Xr man 7 .
53 For complete
54 .Nm
55 manuals, consult the
56 .Sx SEE ALSO
57 section.
58 .Pp
59 Input lines beginning with the control character
60 .Sq \&.
61 are parsed for requests and macros.
62 Such lines are called
63 .Dq request lines
64 or
65 .Dq macro lines ,
66 respectively.
67 Requests change the processing state and manipulate the formatting;
68 some macros also define the document structure and produce formatted
69 output.
70 The single quote
71 .Pq Qq \(aq
72 is accepted as an alternative control character,
73 treated by
74 .Xr mandoc 1
75 just like
76 .Ql \&.
77 .Pp
78 Lines not beginning with control characters are called
79 .Dq text lines .
80 They provide free-form text to be printed; the formatting of the text
81 depends on the respective processing context.
82 .Sh LANGUAGE SYNTAX
83 .Nm
84 documents may contain only graphable 7-bit ASCII characters, the space
85 character, and, in certain circumstances, the tab character.
86 The backslash character
87 .Sq \e
88 indicates the start of an escape sequence, used for example for
89 .Sx Comments ,
90 .Sx Special Characters ,
91 .Sx Predefined Strings ,
92 and
93 user-defined strings defined using the
94 .Sx ds
95 request.
96 For a listing of escape sequences, consult the
97 .Sx ESCAPE SEQUENCE REFERENCE
98 below.
99 .Ss Comments
100 Text following an escaped double-quote
101 .Sq \e\(dq ,
102 whether in a request, macro, or text line, is ignored to the end of the line.
103 A request line beginning with a control character and comment escape
104 .Sq \&.\e\(dq
105 is also ignored.
106 Furthermore, request lines with only a control character and optional
107 trailing whitespace are stripped from input.
108 .Pp
109 Examples:
110 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
111 \&.\e\(dq This is a comment line.
112 \&.\e\(dq The next line is ignored:
113 \&.
114 \&.Sh EXAMPLES \e\(dq This is a comment, too.
115 \&example text \e\(dq And so is this.
116 .Ed
117 .Ss Special Characters
118 Special characters are used to encode special glyphs and are rendered
119 differently across output media.
120 They may occur in request, macro, and text lines.
121 Sequences begin with the escape character
122 .Sq \e
123 followed by either an open-parenthesis
124 .Sq \&(
125 for two-character sequences; an open-bracket
126 .Sq \&[
127 for n-character sequences (terminated at a close-bracket
128 .Sq \&] ) ;
129 or a single one character sequence.
130 .Pp
131 Examples:
132 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
133 .It Li \e(em
134 Two-letter em dash escape.
135 .It Li \ee
136 One-letter backslash escape.
137 .El
138 .Pp
139 See
140 .Xr mandoc_char 7
141 for a complete list.
142 .Ss Text Decoration
143 Terms may be text-decorated using the
144 .Sq \ef
145 escape followed by an indicator: B (bold), I (italic), R (regular), or P
146 (revert to previous mode).
147 A numerical representation 3, 2, or 1 (bold, italic, and regular,
148 respectively) may be used instead.
149 The indicator or numerical representative may be preceded by C
150 (constant-width), which is ignored.
151 .Pp
152 The two-character indicator
153 .Sq BI
154 requests a font that is both bold and italic.
155 It may not be portable to old roff implementations.
156 .Pp
157 Examples:
158 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
159 .It Li \efBbold\efR
160 Write in \fBbold\fP, then switch to regular font mode.
161 .It Li \efIitalic\efP
162 Write in \fIitalic\fP, then return to previous font mode.
163 .It Li \ef(BIbold italic\efP
164 Write in \f(BIbold italic\fP, then return to previous font mode.
165 .El
166 .Pp
167 Text decoration is
168 .Em not
169 recommended for
170 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
171 which encourages semantic annotation.
172 .Ss Predefined Strings
173 Predefined strings, like
174 .Sx Special Characters ,
175 mark special output glyphs.
176 Predefined strings are escaped with the slash-asterisk,
177 .Sq \e* :
178 single-character
179 .Sq \e*X ,
180 two-character
181 .Sq \e*(XX ,
182 and N-character
183 .Sq \e*[N] .
184 .Pp
185 Examples:
186 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
187 .It Li \e*(Am
188 Two-letter ampersand predefined string.
189 .It Li \e*q
190 One-letter double-quote predefined string.
191 .El
192 .Pp
193 Predefined strings are not recommended for use,
194 as they differ across implementations.
195 Those supported by
196 .Xr mandoc 1
197 are listed in
198 .Xr mandoc_char 7 .
199 Manuals using these predefined strings are almost certainly not portable.
200 .Ss Whitespace
201 Whitespace consists of the space character.
202 In text lines, whitespace is preserved within a line.
203 In request and macro lines, whitespace delimits arguments and is discarded.
204 .Pp
205 Unescaped trailing spaces are stripped from text line input unless in a
206 literal context.
207 In general, trailing whitespace on any input line is discouraged for
208 reasons of portability.
209 In the rare case that a blank character is needed at the end of an
210 input line, it may be forced by
211 .Sq \e\ \e& .
212 .Pp
213 Literal space characters can be produced in the output
214 using escape sequences.
215 In macro lines, they can also be included in arguments using quotation; see
216 .Sx MACRO SYNTAX
217 for details.
218 .Pp
219 Blank text lines, which may include whitespace, are only permitted
220 within literal contexts.
221 If the first character of a text line is a space, that line is printed
222 with a leading newline.
223 .Ss Scaling Widths
224 Many requests and macros support scaled widths for their arguments.
225 The syntax for a scaled width is
226 .Sq Li [+-]?[0-9]*.[0-9]*[:unit:] ,
227 where a decimal must be preceded or followed by at least one digit.
228 Negative numbers, while accepted, are truncated to zero.
229 .Pp
230 The following scaling units are accepted:
231 .Pp
232 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
233 .It c
234 centimetre
235 .It i
236 inch
237 .It P
238 pica (~1/6 inch)
239 .It p
240 point (~1/72 inch)
241 .It f
242 scale
243 .Sq u
244 by 65536
245 .It v
246 default vertical span
247 .It m
248 width of rendered
249 .Sq m
250 .Pq em
251 character
252 .It n
253 width of rendered
254 .Sq n
255 .Pq en
256 character
257 .It u
258 default horizontal span for the terminal
259 .It M
260 mini-em (~1/100 em)
261 .El
262 .Pp
263 Using anything other than
264 .Sq m ,
265 .Sq n ,
266 or
267 .Sq v
268 is necessarily non-portable across output media.
269 See
270 .Sx COMPATIBILITY .
271 .Pp
272 If a scaling unit is not provided, the numerical value is interpreted
273 under the default rules of
274 .Sq v
275 for vertical spaces and
276 .Sq u
277 for horizontal ones.
278 .Pp
279 Examples:
280 .Bl -tag -width ".Bl -tag -width 2i" -offset indent -compact
281 .It Li \&.Bl -tag -width 2i
282 two-inch tagged list indentation in
283 .Xr mdoc 7
284 .It Li \&.HP 2i
285 two-inch tagged list indentation in
286 .Xr man 7
287 .It Li \&.sp 2v
288 two vertical spaces
289 .El
290 .Ss Sentence Spacing
291 Each sentence should terminate at the end of an input line.
292 By doing this, a formatter will be able to apply the proper amount of
293 spacing after the end of sentence (unescaped) period, exclamation mark,
294 or question mark followed by zero or more non-sentence closing
295 delimiters
296 .Po
297 .Sq \&) ,
298 .Sq \&] ,
299 .Sq \&' ,
300 .Sq \&"
301 .Pc .
302 .Pp
303 The proper spacing is also intelligently preserved if a sentence ends at
304 the boundary of a macro line.
305 .Pp
306 Examples:
307 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
308 Do not end sentences mid-line like this. Instead,
309 end a sentence like this.
310 A macro would end like this:
311 \&.Xr mandoc 1 \&.
312 .Ed
313 .Sh REQUEST SYNTAX
314 A request or macro line consists of:
315 .Pp
316 .Bl -enum -compact
317 .It
318 the control character
319 .Sq \&.
320 or
321 .Sq \(aq
322 at the beginning of the line,
323 .It
324 optionally an arbitrary amount of whitespace,
325 .It
326 the name of the request or the macro, which is one word of arbitrary
327 length, terminated by whitespace,
328 .It
329 and zero or more arguments delimited by whitespace.
330 .El
331 .Pp
332 Thus, the following request lines are all equivalent:
333 .Bd -literal -offset indent
334 \&.ig end
335 \&.ig end
336 \&. ig end
337 .Ed
338 .Sh MACRO SYNTAX
339 Macros are provided by the
340 .Xr mdoc 7
341 and
342 .Xr man 7
343 languages and can be defined by the
344 .Sx \&de
345 request.
346 When called, they follow the same syntax as requests, except that
347 macro arguments may optionally be quoted by enclosing them
348 in double quote characters
349 .Pq Sq \(dq .
350 Quoted text, even if it contains whitespace or would cause
351 a macro invocation when unquoted, is always considered literal text.
352 Inside quoted text, pairs of double quote characters
353 .Pq Sq Qq
354 resolve to single double quote characters.
355 .Pp
356 To be recognised as the beginning of a quoted argument, the opening
357 quote character must be preceded by a space character.
358 A quoted argument extends to the next double quote character that is not
359 part of a pair, or to the end of the input line, whichever comes earlier.
360 Leaving out the terminating double quote character at the end of the line
361 is discouraged.
362 For clarity, if more arguments follow on the same input line,
363 it is recommended to follow the terminating double quote character
364 by a space character; in case the next character after the terminating
365 double quote character is anything else, it is regarded as the beginning
366 of the next, unquoted argument.
367 .Pp
368 Both in quoted and unquoted arguments, pairs of backslashes
369 .Pq Sq \e\e
370 resolve to single backslashes.
371 In unquoted arguments, space characters can alternatively be included
372 by preceding them with a backslash
373 .Pq Sq \e\~ ,
374 but quoting is usually better for clarity.
375 .Pp
376 Examples:
377 .Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent -compact
378 .It Li .Fn strlen \(dqconst char *s\(dq
379 Group arguments
380 .Qq const char *s
381 into one function argument.
382 If unspecified,
383 .Qq const ,
384 .Qq char ,
385 and
386 .Qq *s
387 would be considered separate arguments.
388 .It Li .Op \(dqFl a\(dq
389 Consider
390 .Qq \&Fl a
391 as literal text instead of a flag macro.
392 .El
393 .Sh REQUEST REFERENCE
394 The
395 .Xr mandoc 1
396 .Nm
397 parser recognises the following requests.
398 Note that the
399 .Nm
400 language defines many more requests not implemented in
401 .Xr mandoc 1 .
402 .Ss \&ad
403 Set line adjustment mode.
404 This line-scoped request is intended to have one argument to select
405 normal, left, right, or centre adjustment for subsequent text.
406 Currently, it is ignored including its arguments,
407 and the number of arguments is not checked.
408 .Ss \&am
409 Append to a macro definition.
410 The syntax of this request is the same as that of
411 .Sx \&de .
412 .Ss \&ami
413 Append to a macro definition, specifying the macro name indirectly.
414 The syntax of this request is the same as that of
415 .Sx \&dei .
416 .Ss \&am1
417 Append to a macro definition, switching roff compatibility mode off
418 during macro execution.
419 The syntax of this request is the same as that of
420 .Sx \&de1 .
421 Since
422 .Xr mandoc 1
423 does not implement
424 .Nm
425 compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for
426 .Sx \&am .
427 .Ss \&as
428 Append to a user-defined string.
429 The syntax of this request is the same as that of
430 .Sx \&ds .
431 If a user-defined string with the specified name does not yet exist,
432 it is set to the empty string before appending.
433 .Ss \&cc
434 Changes the control character.
435 Its syntax is as follows:
436 .Bd -literal -offset indent
437 .Pf . Cm \&cc Op Ar c
438 .Ed
439 .Pp
440 If
441 .Ar c
442 is not specified, the control character is reset to
443 .Sq \&. .
444 Trailing characters are ignored.
445 .Ss \&ce
446 Center some lines.
447 This line-scoped request is intended to take one integer argument,
448 specifying how many lines to center.
449 Currently, it is ignored including its arguments, and the number
450 of arguments is not checked.
451 .Ss \&de
452 Define a
453 .Nm
454 macro.
455 Its syntax can be either
456 .Bd -literal -offset indent
457 .Pf . Cm \&de Ar name
458 .Ar macro definition
459 \&..
460 .Ed
461 .Pp
462 or
463 .Bd -literal -offset indent
464 .Pf . Cm \&de Ar name Ar end
465 .Ar macro definition
466 .Pf . Ar end
467 .Ed
468 .Pp
469 Both forms define or redefine the macro
470 .Ar name
471 to represent the
472 .Ar macro definition ,
473 which may consist of one or more input lines, including the newline
474 characters terminating each line, optionally containing calls to
475 .Nm
476 requests,
477 .Nm
478 macros or high-level macros like
479 .Xr man 7
480 or
481 .Xr mdoc 7
482 macros, whichever applies to the document in question.
483 .Pp
484 Specifying a custom
485 .Ar end
486 macro works in the same way as for
487 .Sx \&ig ;
488 namely, the call to
489 .Sq Pf . Ar end
490 first ends the
491 .Ar macro definition ,
492 and after that, it is also evaluated as a
493 .Nm
494 request or
495 .Nm
496 macro, but not as a high-level macro.
497 .Pp
498 The macro can be invoked later using the syntax
499 .Pp
500 .D1 Pf . Ar name Op Ar argument Op Ar argument ...
501 .Pp
502 Regarding argument parsing, see
503 .Sx MACRO SYNTAX
504 above.
505 .Pp
506 The line invoking the macro will be replaced
507 in the input stream by the
508 .Ar macro definition ,
509 replacing all occurrences of
510 .No \e\e$ Ns Ar N ,
511 where
512 .Ar N
513 is a digit, by the
514 .Ar N Ns th Ar argument .
515 For example,
516 .Bd -literal -offset indent
517 \&.de ZN
518 \efI\e^\e\e$1\e^\efP\e\e$2
519 \&..
520 \&.ZN XtFree .
521 .Ed
522 .Pp
523 produces
524 .Pp
525 .D1 \efI\e^XtFree\e^\efP.
526 .Pp
527 in the input stream, and thus in the output: \fI\^XtFree\^\fP.
528 .Pp
529 Since macros and user-defined strings share a common string table,
530 defining a macro
531 .Ar name
532 clobbers the user-defined string
533 .Ar name ,
534 and the
535 .Ar macro definition
536 can also be printed using the
537 .Sq \e*
538 string interpolation syntax described below
539 .Sx ds ,
540 but this is rarely useful because every macro definition contains at least
541 one explicit newline character.
542 .Pp
543 In order to prevent endless recursion, both groff and
544 .Xr mandoc 1
545 limit the stack depth for expanding macros and strings
546 to a large, but finite number.
547 Do not rely on the exact value of this limit.
548 .Ss \&dei
549 Define a
550 .Nm
551 macro, specifying the macro name indirectly.
552 The syntax of this request is the same as that of
553 .Sx \&de .
554 The request
555 .Pp
556 .D1 Pf . Cm \&dei Ar name Op Ar end
557 .Pp
558 has the same effect as:
559 .Pp
560 .D1 Pf . Cm \&de No \e* Ns Bo Ar name Bc Op \e* Ns Bq Ar end
561 .Ss \&de1
562 Define a
563 .Nm
564 macro that will be executed with
565 .Nm
566 compatibility mode switched off during macro execution.
567 This is a GNU extension not available in traditional
568 .Nm
569 implementations and not even in older versions of groff.
570 Since
571 .Xr mandoc 1
572 does not implement
573 .Nm
574 compatibility mode at all, it handles this request as an alias for
575 .Sx \&de .
576 .Ss \&ds
577 Define a user-defined string.
578 Its syntax is as follows:
579 .Pp
580 .D1 Pf . Cm \&ds Ar name Oo \(dq Oc Ns Ar string
581 .Pp
582 The
583 .Ar name
584 and
585 .Ar string
586 arguments are space-separated.
587 If the
588 .Ar string
589 begins with a double-quote character, that character will not be part
590 of the string.
591 All remaining characters on the input line form the
592 .Ar string ,
593 including whitespace and double-quote characters, even trailing ones.
594 .Pp
595 The
596 .Ar string
597 can be interpolated into subsequent text by using
598 .No \e* Ns Bq Ar name
599 for a
600 .Ar name
601 of arbitrary length, or \e*(NN or \e*N if the length of
602 .Ar name
603 is two or one characters, respectively.
604 Interpolation can be prevented by escaping the leading backslash;
605 that is, an asterisk preceded by an even number of backslashes
606 does not trigger string interpolation.
607 .Pp
608 Since user-defined strings and macros share a common string table,
609 defining a string
610 .Ar name
611 clobbers the macro
612 .Ar name ,
613 and the
614 .Ar name
615 used for defining a string can also be invoked as a macro,
616 in which case the following input line will be appended to the
617 .Ar string ,
618 forming a new input line passed to the
619 .Nm
620 parser.
621 For example,
622 .Bd -literal -offset indent
623 \&.ds badidea .S
624 \&.badidea
625 H SYNOPSIS
626 .Ed
627 .Pp
628 invokes the
629 .Cm SH
630 macro when used in a
631 .Xr man 7
632 document.
633 Such abuse is of course strongly discouraged.
634 .Ss \&el
635 The
636 .Qq else
637 half of an if/else conditional.
638 Pops a result off the stack of conditional evaluations pushed by
639 .Sx \&ie
640 and uses it as its conditional.
641 If no stack entries are present (e.g., due to no prior
642 .Sx \&ie
643 calls)
644 then false is assumed.
645 The syntax of this request is similar to
646 .Sx \&if
647 except that the conditional is missing.
648 .Ss \&EN
649 End an equation block.
650 See
651 .Sx \&EQ .
652 .Ss \&EQ
653 Begin an equation block.
654 See
655 .Xr eqn 7
656 for a description of the equation language.
657 .Ss \&fam
658 Change the font family.
659 This line-scoped request is intended to have one argument specifying
660 the font family to be selected.
661 It is a groff extension, and currently, it is ignored including its
662 arguments, and the number of arguments is not checked.
663 .Ss \&ft
664 Change the font.
665 Its syntax is as follows:
666 .Pp
667 .D1 Pf . Cm \&ft Op Ar font
668 .Pp
669 The following
670 .Ar font
671 arguments are supported:
672 .Bl -tag -width 4n -offset indent
673 .It Cm B , BI , 3 , 4
674 switches to
675 .Sy bold
676 font
677 .It Cm I , 2
678 switches to
679 .Em underlined
680 font
681 .It Cm R , CW , 1
682 switches to normal font
683 .It Cm P No "or no argument"
684 switches back to the previous font
685 .El
686 .Pp
687 This request takes effect only locally, may be overridden by macros
688 and escape sequences, and is only supported in
689 .Xr man 7
690 for now.
691 .Ss \&hw
692 Specify hyphenation points in words.
693 This line-scoped request is currently ignored.
694 .Ss \&hy
695 Set automatic hyphenation mode.
696 This line-scoped request is currently ignored.
697 .Ss \&ie
698 The
699 .Qq if
700 half of an if/else conditional.
701 The result of the conditional is pushed into a stack used by subsequent
702 invocations of
703 .Sx \&el ,
704 which may be separated by any intervening input (or not exist at all).
705 Its syntax is equivalent to
706 .Sx \&if .
707 .Ss \&if
708 Begins a conditional.
709 This request has the following syntax:
710 .Bd -literal -offset indent
711 \&.if COND BODY
712 .Ed
713 .Bd -literal -offset indent
714 \&.if COND \e{BODY
715 BODY...\e}
716 .Ed
717 .Bd -literal -offset indent
718 \&.if COND \e{\e
719 BODY...
720 \&.\e}
721 .Ed
722 .Pp
723 COND is a conditional statement.
724 Currently,
725 .Xr mandoc 1
726 supports the following subset of roff conditionals:
727 .Bl -bullet
728 .It
729 If
730 .Sq \&!
731 is prefixed to COND, the condition is logically inverted.
732 .It
733 If the first character of COND is
734 .Sq n
735 .Pq nroff mode
736 or
737 .Sq o
738 .Pq odd page ,
739 COND evaluates to true.
740 .It
741 If the first character of COND is
742 .Sq c
743 .Pq character available ,
744 .Sq d
745 .Pq string defined ,
746 .Sq e
747 .Pq even page ,
748 .Sq r
749 .Pq register accessed ,
750 or
751 .Sq t
752 .Pq troff mode ,
753 COND evaluates to false.
754 .It
755 If COND starts with a parenthesis or with an optionally signed
756 integer number, it is evaluated according to the rules of
757 .Sx Numerical expressions
758 explained below.
759 It evaluates to true if the result is positive,
760 or to false if the result is zero or negative.
761 .It
762 Otherwise, the first character of COND is regarded as a delimiter
763 and COND evaluates to true if the string extending from its first
764 to its second occurrence is equal to the string extending from its
765 second to its third occurrence.
766 .It
767 If COND cannot be parsed, it evaluates to false.
768 .El
769 .Pp
770 If a conditional is false, its children are not processed, but are
771 syntactically interpreted to preserve the integrity of the input
772 document.
773 Thus,
774 .Pp
775 .D1 \&.if t .ig
776 .Pp
777 will discard the
778 .Sq \&.ig ,
779 which may lead to interesting results, but
780 .Pp
781 .D1 \&.if t .if t \e{\e
782 .Pp
783 will continue to syntactically interpret to the block close of the final
784 conditional.
785 Sub-conditionals, in this case, obviously inherit the truth value of
786 the parent.
787 .Pp
788 If the BODY section is begun by an escaped brace
789 .Sq \e{ ,
790 scope continues until the end of the input line containing the
791 matching closing-brace escape sequence
792 .Sq \e} .
793 If the BODY is not enclosed in braces, scope continues until
794 the end of the line.
795 If the COND is followed by a BODY on the same line, whether after a
796 brace or not, then requests and macros
797 .Em must
798 begin with a control character.
799 It is generally more intuitive, in this case, to write
800 .Bd -literal -offset indent
801 \&.if COND \e{\e
802 \&.foo
803 bar
804 \&.\e}
805 .Ed
806 .Pp
807 than having the request or macro follow as
808 .Pp
809 .D1 \&.if COND \e{ .foo
810 .Pp
811 The scope of a conditional is always parsed, but only executed if the
812 conditional evaluates to true.
813 .Pp
814 Note that the
815 .Sq \e}
816 is converted into a zero-width escape sequence if not passed as a
817 standalone macro
818 .Sq \&.\e} .
819 For example,
820 .Pp
821 .D1 \&.Fl a \e} b
822 .Pp
823 will result in
824 .Sq \e}
825 being considered an argument of the
826 .Sq \&Fl
827 macro.
828 .Ss \&ig
829 Ignore input.
830 Its syntax can be either
831 .Bd -literal -offset indent
832 .Pf . Cm \&ig
833 .Ar ignored text
834 \&..
835 .Ed
836 .Pp
837 or
838 .Bd -literal -offset indent
839 .Pf . Cm \&ig Ar end
840 .Ar ignored text
841 .Pf . Ar end
842 .Ed
843 .Pp
844 In the first case, input is ignored until a
845 .Sq \&..
846 request is encountered on its own line.
847 In the second case, input is ignored until the specified
848 .Sq Pf . Ar end
849 macro is encountered.
850 Do not use the escape character
851 .Sq \e
852 anywhere in the definition of
853 .Ar end ;
854 it would cause very strange behaviour.
855 .Pp
856 When the
857 .Ar end
858 macro is a roff request or a roff macro, like in
859 .Pp
860 .D1 \&.ig if
861 .Pp
862 the subsequent invocation of
863 .Sx \&if
864 will first terminate the
865 .Ar ignored text ,
866 then be invoked as usual.
867 Otherwise, it only terminates the
868 .Ar ignored text ,
869 and arguments following it or the
870 .Sq \&..
871 request are discarded.
872 .Ss \&ll
873 Change the output line length.
874 Its syntax is as follows:
875 .Pp
876 .D1 Pf . Cm \&ll Op Oo +|- Oc Ns Ar width
877 .Pp
878 If the
879 .Ar width
880 argument is omitted, the line length is reset to its previous value.
881 The default setting for terminal output is 78n.
882 If a sign is given, the line length is added to or subtracted from;
883 otherwise, it is set to the provided value.
884 Using this request in new manuals is discouraged for several reasons,
885 among others because it overrides the
886 .Xr mandoc 1
887 .Fl O Cm width
888 command line option.
889 .Ss \&ne
890 Declare the need for the specified minimum vertical space
891 before the next trap or the bottom of the page.
892 This line-scoped request is currently ignored.
893 .Ss \&nh
894 Turn off automatic hyphenation mode.
895 This line-scoped request is currently ignored.
896 .Ss \&nr
897 Define or change a register.
898 A register is an arbitrary string value that defines some sort of state,
899 which influences parsing and/or formatting.
900 Its syntax is as follows:
901 .Pp
902 .D1 Pf \. Cm \&nr Ar name Oo +|- Oc Ns Ar expression
903 .Pp
904 For the syntax of
905 .Ar expression ,
906 see
907 .Sx Numerical expressions
908 below.
909 If it is prefixed by a sign, the register will be
910 incremented or decremented instead of assigned to.
911 .Pp
912 The following register
913 .Ar name
914 is handled specially:
915 .Bl -tag -width Ds
916 .It Cm nS
917 If set to a positive integer value, certain
918 .Xr mdoc 7
919 macros will behave in the same way as in the
920 .Em SYNOPSIS
921 section.
922 If set to 0, these macros will behave in the same way as outside the
923 .Em SYNOPSIS
924 section, even when called within the
925 .Em SYNOPSIS
926 section itself.
927 Note that starting a new
928 .Xr mdoc 7
929 section with the
930 .Cm \&Sh
931 macro will reset this register.
932 .El
933 .Ss \&ns
934 Turn on no-space mode.
935 This line-scoped request is intended to take no arguments.
936 Currently, it is ignored including its arguments,
937 and the number of arguments is not checked.
938 .Ss \&pl
939 Change page length.
940 This line-scoped request is intended to take one height argument.
941 Currently, it is ignored including its arguments,
942 and the number of arguments is not checked.
943 .Ss \&ps
944 Change point size.
945 This line-scoped request is intended to take one numerical argument.
946 Currently, it is ignored including its arguments,
947 and the number of arguments is not checked.
948 .Ss \&rm
949 Remove a request, macro or string.
950 Its syntax is as follows:
951 .Pp
952 .D1 Pf \. Cm \&rm Ar name
953 .Ss \&rr
954 Remove a register.
955 Its syntax is as follows:
956 .Pp
957 .D1 Pf \. Cm \&rr Ar name
958 .Ss \&so
959 Include a source file.
960 Its syntax is as follows:
961 .Pp
962 .D1 Pf \. Cm \&so Ar file
963 .Pp
964 The
965 .Ar file
966 will be read and its contents processed as input in place of the
967 .Sq \&.so
968 request line.
969 To avoid inadvertent inclusion of unrelated files,
970 .Xr mandoc 1
971 only accepts relative paths not containing the strings
972 .Qq ../
973 and
974 .Qq /.. .
975 .Pp
976 This request requires
977 .Xr man 1
978 to change to the right directory before calling
979 .Xr mandoc 1 ,
980 per convention to the root of the manual tree.
981 Typical usage looks like:
982 .Pp
983 .Dl \&.so man3/Xcursor.3
984 .Pp
985 As the whole concept is rather fragile, the use of
986 .Sx \&so
987 is discouraged.
988 Use
989 .Xr ln 1
990 instead.
991 .Ss \&ta
992 Set tab stops.
993 This line-scoped request can take an arbitrary number of arguments.
994 Currently, it is ignored including its arguments.
995 .Ss \&tr
996 Output character translation.
997 Its syntax is as follows:
998 .Pp
999 .D1 Pf \. Cm \&tr Ar [ab]+
1000 .Pp
1001 Pairs of
1002 .Ar ab
1003 characters are replaced
1004 .Ar ( a
1005 for
1006 .Ar b ) .
1007 Replacement (or origin) characters may also be character escapes; thus,
1008 .Pp
1009 .Dl tr \e(xx\e(yy
1010 .Pp
1011 replaces all invocations of \e(xx with \e(yy.
1012 .Ss \&T&
1013 Re-start a table layout, retaining the options of the prior table
1014 invocation.
1015 See
1016 .Sx \&TS .
1017 .Ss \&TE
1018 End a table context.
1019 See
1020 .Sx \&TS .
1021 .Ss \&TS
1022 Begin a table, which formats input in aligned rows and columns.
1023 See
1024 .Xr tbl 7
1025 for a description of the tbl language.
1026 .Ss Numerical expressions
1027 The
1028 .Sx \&nr ,
1029 .Sx \&if ,
1030 and
1031 .Sx \&ie
1032 requests accept integer numerical expressions as arguments.
1033 These are always evaluated using the C
1034 .Vt int
1035 type; integer overflow works the same way as in the C language.
1036 Numbers consist of an arbitrary number of digits
1037 .Sq 0
1038 to
1039 .Sq 9
1040 prefixed by an optional sign
1041 .Sq +
1042 or
1043 .Sq - .
1044 .Pp
1045 The following binary operators are implemented.
1046 Unless otherwise stated, they behave as in the C language:
1047 .Pp
1048 .Bl -tag -width 2n -compact
1049 .It Ic +
1050 addition
1051 .It Ic -
1052 subtraction
1053 .It Ic *
1054 multiplication
1055 .It Ic /
1056 division
1057 .It Ic %
1058 remainder of division
1059 .It Ic <
1060 less than
1061 .It Ic >
1062 greater than
1063 .It Ic ==
1064 equal to
1065 .It Ic =
1066 equal to, same effect as
1067 .Ic ==
1068 (this differs from C)
1069 .It Ic <=
1070 less than or equal to
1071 .It Ic >=
1072 greater than or equal to
1073 .It Ic <>
1074 not equal to (corresponds to C
1075 .Ic != ;
1076 this one is of limited portability, it is supported by Heirloom roff,
1077 but not by groff)
1078 .It Ic &
1079 logical and (corresponds to C
1080 .Ic && )
1081 .It Ic \&:
1082 logical or (corresponds to C
1083 .Ic \&|| )
1084 .It Ic <?
1085 minimum (not available in C)
1086 .It Ic >?
1087 maximum (not available in C)
1088 .El
1089 .Pp
1090 There is no concept of precendence; evaluation proceeds from left to right,
1091 except when subexpressions are enclosed in parantheses.
1092 Inside parentheses, whitespace is ignored.
1093 .Sh ESCAPE SEQUENCE REFERENCE
1094 The
1095 .Xr mandoc 1
1096 .Nm
1097 parser recognises the following escape sequences.
1098 Note that the
1099 .Nm
1100 language defines more escape sequences not implemented in
1101 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1102 In
1103 .Xr mdoc 7
1104 and
1105 .Xr man 7
1106 documents, using escape sequences is discouraged except for those
1107 described in the
1108 .Sx LANGUAGE SYNTAX
1109 section above.
1110 .Pp
1111 A backslash followed by any character not listed here
1112 simply prints that character itself.
1113 .Ss \e<newline>
1114 A backslash at the end of an input line can be used to continue the
1115 logical input line on the next physical input line, joining the text
1116 on both lines together as if it were on a single input line.
1117 .Ss \e<space>
1118 The escape sequence backslash-space
1119 .Pq Sq \e\ \&
1120 is an unpaddable space-sized non-breaking space character; see
1121 .Sx Whitespace .
1122 .Ss \e\(dq
1123 The rest of the input line is treated as
1124 .Sx Comments .
1125 .Ss \e%
1126 Hyphenation allowed at this point of the word; ignored by
1127 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1128 .Ss \e&
1129 Non-printing zero-width character; see
1130 .Sx Whitespace .
1131 .Ss \e\(aq
1132 Acute accent special character; use
1133 .Sq \e(aa
1134 instead.
1135 .Ss \e( Ns Ar cc
1136 .Sx Special Characters
1137 with two-letter names, see
1138 .Xr mandoc_char 7 .
1139 .Ss \e*[ Ns Ar name ]
1140 Interpolate the string with the
1141 .Ar name ;
1142 see
1143 .Sx Predefined Strings
1144 and
1145 .Sx ds .
1146 For short names, there are variants
1147 .No \e* Ns Ar c
1148 and
1149 .No \e*( Ns Ar cc .
1150 .Ss \e-
1151 Special character
1152 .Dq mathematical minus sign .
1153 .Ss \e[ Ns Ar name ]
1154 .Sx Special Characters
1155 with names of arbitrary length, see
1156 .Xr mandoc_char 7 .
1157 .Ss \e^
1158 One-twelfth em half-narrow space character, effectively zero-width in
1159 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1160 .Ss \e`
1161 Grave accent special character; use
1162 .Sq \e(ga
1163 instead.
1164 .Ss \e{
1165 Begin conditional input; see
1166 .Sx if .
1167 .Ss \e\(ba
1168 One-sixth em narrow space character, effectively zero-width in
1169 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1170 .Ss \e}
1171 End conditional input; see
1172 .Sx if .
1173 .Ss \e~
1174 Paddable non-breaking space character.
1175 .Ss \e0
1176 Digit width space character.
1177 .Ss \eA\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1178 Anchor definition; ignored by
1179 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1180 .Ss \eB\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1181 Interpolate
1182 .Sq 1
1183 if
1184 .Ar string
1185 conforms to the syntax of
1186 .Sx Numerical expressions
1187 explained above and
1188 .Sq 0
1189 otherwise.
1190 .Ss \eb\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1191 Bracket building function; ignored by
1192 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1193 .Ss \eC\(aq Ns Ar name Ns \(aq
1194 .Sx Special Characters
1195 with names of arbitrary length.
1196 .Ss \ec
1197 Interrupt text processing to insert requests or macros; ignored by
1198 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1199 .Ss \eD\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1200 Draw graphics function; ignored by
1201 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1202 .Ss \ed
1203 Move down by half a line; ignored by
1204 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1205 .Ss \ee
1206 Backslash special character.
1207 .Ss \eF[ Ns Ar name ]
1208 Switch font family (groff extension); ignored by
1209 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1210 For short names, there are variants
1211 .No \eF Ns Ar c
1212 and
1213 .No \eF( Ns Ar cc .
1214 .Ss \ef[ Ns Ar name ]
1215 Switch to the font
1216 .Ar name ,
1217 see
1218 .Sx Text Decoration .
1219 For short names, there are variants
1220 .No \ef Ns Ar c
1221 and
1222 .No \ef( Ns Ar cc .
1223 .Ss \eg[ Ns Ar name ]
1224 Interpolate the format of a number register; ignored by
1225 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1226 For short names, there are variants
1227 .No \eg Ns Ar c
1228 and
1229 .No \eg( Ns Ar cc .
1230 .Ss \eH\(aq Ns Oo +|- Oc Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1231 Set the height of the current font; ignored by
1232 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1233 .Ss \eh\(aq Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1234 Horizontal motion; ignored by
1235 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1236 .Ss \ek[ Ns Ar name ]
1237 Mark horizontal input place in register; ignored by
1238 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1239 For short names, there are variants
1240 .No \ek Ns Ar c
1241 and
1242 .No \ek( Ns Ar cc .
1243 .Ss \eL\(aq Ns Ar number Ns Oo Ar c Oc Ns \(aq
1244 Vertical line drawing function; ignored by
1245 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1246 .Ss \el\(aq Ns Ar number Ns Oo Ar c Oc Ns \(aq
1247 Horizontal line drawing function; ignored by
1248 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1249 .Ss \eM[ Ns Ar name ]
1250 Set fill (background) color (groff extension); ignored by
1251 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1252 For short names, there are variants
1253 .No \eM Ns Ar c
1254 and
1255 .No \eM( Ns Ar cc .
1256 .Ss \em[ Ns Ar name ]
1257 Set glyph drawing color (groff extension); ignored by
1258 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1259 For short names, there are variants
1260 .No \em Ns Ar c
1261 and
1262 .No \em( Ns Ar cc .
1263 .Ss \eN\(aq Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1264 Character
1265 .Ar number
1266 on the current font.
1267 .Ss \en[ Ns Ar name ]
1268 Interpolate the number register
1269 .Ar name .
1270 For short names, there are variants
1271 .No \en Ns Ar c
1272 and
1273 .No \en( Ns Ar cc .
1274 .Ss \eo\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1275 Overstrike
1276 .Ar string ;
1277 ignored by
1278 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1279 .Ss \eR\(aq Ns Ar name Oo +|- Oc Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1280 Set number register; ignored by
1281 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1282 .Ss \eS\(aq Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1283 Slant output; ignored by
1284 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1285 .Ss \es\(aq Ns Oo +|- Oc Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1286 Change point size; ignored by
1287 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1288 Alternative forms
1289 .No \es Ns Oo +|- Oc Ns Ar n ,
1290 .No \es Ns Oo +|- Oc Ns \(aq Ns Ar number Ns \(aq ,
1291 .No \es Ns [ Oo +|- Oc Ns Ar number ] ,
1292 and
1293 .No \es Ns Oo +|- Oc Ns [ Ar number Ns ]
1294 are also parsed and ignored.
1295 .Ss \et
1296 Horizontal tab; ignored by
1297 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1298 .Ss \eu
1299 Move up by half a line; ignored by
1300 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1301 .Ss \eV[ Ns Ar name ]
1302 Interpolate an environment variable; ignored by
1303 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1304 For short names, there are variants
1305 .No \eV Ns Ar c
1306 and
1307 .No \eV( Ns Ar cc .
1308 .Ss \ev\(aq Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1309 Vertical motion; ignored by
1310 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1311 .Ss \ew\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1312 Interpolate the width of the
1313 .Ar string .
1314 The
1315 .Xr mandoc 1
1316 implementation assumes that after expansion of user-defined strings, the
1317 .Ar string
1318 only contains normal characters, no escape sequences, and that each
1319 character has a width of 24 basic units.
1320 .Ss \eX\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1321 Output
1322 .Ar string
1323 as device control function; ignored in nroff mode and by
1324 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1325 .Ss \ex\(aq Ns Ar number Ns \(aq
1326 Extra line space function; ignored by
1327 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1328 .Ss \eY[ Ns Ar name ]
1329 Output a string as a device control function; ignored in nroff mode and by
1330 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1331 For short names, there are variants
1332 .No \eY Ns Ar c
1333 and
1334 .No \eY( Ns Ar cc .
1335 .Ss \eZ\(aq Ns Ar string Ns \(aq
1336 Print
1337 .Ar string
1338 with zero width and height; ignored by
1339 .Xr mandoc 1 .
1340 .Ss \ez
1341 Output the next character without advancing the cursor position;
1342 approximated in
1343 .Xr mandoc 1
1344 by simply skipping the next character.
1345 .Sh COMPATIBILITY
1346 This section documents compatibility between mandoc and other
1347 .Nm
1348 implementations, at this time limited to GNU troff
1349 .Pq Qq groff .
1350 The term
1351 .Qq historic groff
1352 refers to groff version 1.15.
1353 .Pp
1354 .Bl -dash -compact
1355 .It
1356 The
1357 .Sq u
1358 scaling unit is the default terminal unit.
1359 In traditional troff systems, this unit would change depending on the
1360 output media.
1361 .It
1362 In mandoc, the
1363 .Sx \&EQ ,
1364 .Sx \&TE ,
1365 .Sx \&TS ,
1366 and
1367 .Sx \&T& ,
1368 macros are considered regular macros.
1369 In all other
1370 .Nm
1371 implementations, these are special macros that must be specified without
1372 spacing between the control character (which must be a period) and the
1373 macro name.
1374 .It
1375 The
1376 .Cm nS
1377 register is only compatible with OpenBSD's groff-1.15.
1378 .It
1379 Historic groff did not accept white-space before a custom
1380 .Ar end
1381 macro for the
1382 .Sx \&ig
1383 request.
1384 .It
1385 The
1386 .Sx \&if
1387 and family would print funny white-spaces with historic groff when
1388 using the next-line syntax.
1389 .El
1390 .Sh SEE ALSO
1391 .Xr mandoc 1 ,
1392 .Xr eqn 7 ,
1393 .Xr man 7 ,
1394 .Xr mandoc_char 7 ,
1395 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
1396 .Xr tbl 7
1397 .Rs
1398 .%A Joseph F. Ossanna
1399 .%A Brian W. Kernighan
1400 .%I AT&T Bell Laboratories
1401 .%T Troff User's Manual
1402 .%R Computing Science Technical Report
1403 .%N 54
1404 .%C Murray Hill, New Jersey
1405 .%D 1976 and 1992
1406 .%U http://www.kohala.com/start/troff/cstr54.ps
1407 .Re
1408 .Rs
1409 .%A Joseph F. Ossanna
1410 .%A Brian W. Kernighan
1411 .%A Gunnar Ritter
1412 .%T Heirloom Documentation Tools Nroff/Troff User's Manual
1413 .%D September 17, 2007
1414 .%U http://heirloom.sourceforge.net/doctools/troff.pdf
1415 .Re
1416 .Sh HISTORY
1417 The RUNOFF typesetting system, whose input forms the basis for
1418 .Nm ,
1419 was written in MAD and FAP for the CTSS operating system by Jerome E.
1420 Saltzer in 1964.
1421 Doug McIlroy rewrote it in BCPL in 1969, renaming it
1422 .Nm .
1423 Dennis M. Ritchie rewrote McIlroy's
1424 .Nm
1425 in PDP-11 assembly for
1426 .At v1 ,
1427 Joseph F. Ossanna improved roff and renamed it nroff
1428 for
1429 .At v2 ,
1430 then ported nroff to C as troff, which Brian W. Kernighan released with
1431 .At v7 .
1432 In 1989, James Clarke re-implemented troff in C++, naming it groff.
1433 .Sh AUTHORS
1434 .An -nosplit
1435 This
1436 .Nm
1437 reference was written by
1438 .An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq Mt kristaps@bsd.lv
1439 and
1440 .An Ingo Schwarze Aq Mt schwarze@openbsd.org .