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* integrate preconv(1) into mandoc(1);Ingo Schwarze2014-10-251-3/+3
| | | | enhances functionality and reduces code and docs by more than 300 lines
* Implement the traditional -h option for man(1): show the SYNOPSIS only.Ingo Schwarze2014-09-031-6/+5
| | | | | | | As usual, we get mandoc -h and apropos -h for free. Try stuff like "apropos -h In=dirent" or "apropos -h Fa=timespec". Only useful for terminal output, so -Tps, -Tpdf, -Thtml ignore -h for now.
* Introduce a man(1) -l option as an alias for mandoc -a.Ingo Schwarze2014-08-301-3/+35
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Basically, this does the same as man -l in Linux man-db. The point is that now all functionality of the combined tool is reachable from the man(1) command name: apropos = man -k, whatis = man -f, mandoc = man -cl. Originally suggested by Carsten dot Kunze at arcor dot de, current maintainer of the Heirloom Documentation Tools. While here, add various missing information to the usage() and to the manuals.
* man -I -O -T -W now work, tooIngo Schwarze2014-08-211-1/+9
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* * remove pointless separate -f and -k synopses, they take almost all argsIngo Schwarze2014-08-211-50/+17
| | | | | | | * fix up descriptions of -f and -k * remove excessive example for -k * remove explicit BSD references * add CVS Id
* Now that we have man(1) functionality, add a man(1) manual page.Ingo Schwarze2014-08-211-0/+394
I'm importing the totally unchanged OpenBSD version such that all changes can easily be tracked in CVS.