[9] | 1 | .\" man(7) manpage by rosenkra@hall.cray.com (Bill Rosenkranz)
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| 2 | .\" Modified a bit for MINIX 3 by Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl)
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| 3 | .\"
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| 4 | .TH MAN 7
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| 5 | .SH NAME
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| 6 | man - nroff macro package for manual pages
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| 7 | .SH SYNOPSIS
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| 8 | .B nroff \-man
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| 9 | .IR file " ..."
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| 10 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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| 11 | .de SP
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| 12 | .if t .sp 0.4
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| 13 | .if n .sp
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| 14 | ..
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| 15 | These macros are used to lay out reference pages for manuals.
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| 16 | .PP
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| 17 | Any text argument
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| 18 | .I t
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| 19 | may be zero to six words. Quotes may be used to include blanks in a 'word'.
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| 20 | .I Text
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| 21 | can be empty, but unlike normal \s-2UNIX\s+2 macros, the next line is not used.
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| 22 | .PP
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| 23 | A prevailing indent distance is remembered between successive
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| 24 | indented paragraphs, and is reset to default value upon
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| 25 | reaching a non-indented paragraph (i.e. at .SH or .SS).
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| 26 | .SH FILES
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| 27 | .TP 25n
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| 28 | /usr/lib/tmac/tmac.an
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| 29 | For standard MINIX 3 nroff.
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| 30 | .TP
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| 31 | /usr/lib/cawf/man.mac
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| 32 | For cawf.
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| 33 | .SH SEE ALSO
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| 34 | .BR nroff (1),
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| 35 | .BR man (1).
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| 36 | .SH "REQUEST SUMMARY"
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| 37 | .nf
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| 38 | .ta +15n +9n
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| 39 | Request Cause Explanation
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| 40 | Break?
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| 41 |
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| 42 | \&.B t no Text t is bold. Quote to imbed blanks.
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| 43 | \&.I t no Text t is italic. Quote to imbed blanks.
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| 44 | \&.IP x yes Set prevailing indent to 5. Begin
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| 45 | indented paragraph with hanging tag
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| 46 | given by first argument. Tag x is
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| 47 | always placed on a separate line.
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| 48 | \&.LP yes Same as .PP.
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| 49 | \&.PP yes Begin paragraph. Set prevailing
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| 50 | indent to 5.
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| 51 | \&.RE yes End of relative indent. Set prevailing
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| 52 | indent to amount of starting .RS.
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| 53 | \&.RS yes Start relative indent, move left margin
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| 54 | in distance 5.
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| 55 | \&.SH t yes Subhead. Quote to imbed blanks.
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| 56 | \&.SS t yes Subsection. Quote to imbed blanks. No
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| 57 | indent for t.
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| 58 | \&.TH n s c v d yes Begin page named n of chapter s; c is
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| 59 | the chapter name; d is the date of the
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| 60 | most recent change; v is version number.
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| 61 | Sets prevailing indent and tabs to 5.
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| 62 | .fi
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| 63 | .SH EXAMPLE
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| 64 | The following illustrates some of the requests available
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| 65 | with this macro package:
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| 66 | .RS
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| 67 | .nf
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| 68 | \&.\e" this is a comment
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| 69 | \&.TH DEMO 1
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| 70 | \&.SH NAME
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| 71 | demo \e- show how to use \e-man package
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| 72 | \&.SH SYNOPSIS
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| 73 | \&.B demo
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| 74 | \&.RI [ options ]
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| 75 | \&.IR file " ..."
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| 76 | \&.SH DESCRIPTION
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| 77 | This is a test for showing how to use the
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| 78 | \&.BR nroff (1)
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| 79 | man package. It shows how to use .TH, .SH, .PP, .B, .I, and .IP
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| 80 | commands.
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| 81 | \&.PP
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| 82 | This will be a new paragraph. You can also use normal
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| 83 | \&.BR nroff (1)
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| 84 | commands in the text.
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| 85 | \&.SS Nroff Commands
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| 86 | \&.IP '\ee"'
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| 87 | This is the comment command. \e" You won't see this.
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| 88 | \&.IP nf
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| 89 | No fill mode (the normal mode is fill mode where things
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| 90 | get justified right and left).
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| 91 | \&.IP fi
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| 92 | Re-enter fill mode.
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| 93 | \&.IP br
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| 94 | Break line here no matter what.
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| 95 | \&.IP sp
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| 96 | Vertical space (also causes a break to occur).
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| 97 | \&.sp
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| 98 | Note that to continue an indent and make a new paragraph (as
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| 99 | is the case here), just put in a space (.sp).
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| 100 | \&.PP
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| 101 | Now we should be at a new paragraph.
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| 102 | .fi
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| 103 | .RE
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| 104 | .PP
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| 105 | Executing
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| 106 | .B nroff \-man demo.man
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| 107 | results in the following output: (Ignoring page headers and footers)
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| 108 | .PP
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| 109 | .RS
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| 110 | .B NAME
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| 111 | .RS
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| 112 | demo \e- show how to use \e-man package
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| 113 | .RE
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| 114 | .SP
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| 115 | .B SYNOPSIS
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| 116 | .RS
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| 117 | .B demo
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| 118 | .RI [ options ]
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| 119 | .IR file " ..."
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| 120 | .RE
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| 121 | .SP
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| 122 | .B DESCRIPTION
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| 123 | .RS
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| 124 | This is a test for showing how to use the
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| 125 | .BR nroff (1)
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| 126 | man package. It shows how to use .TH, .SH, .PP, .B, .I, and .IP
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| 127 | commands.
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| 128 | .SP
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| 129 | This will be a new paragraph. You can also use normal
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| 130 | .BR nroff (1)
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| 131 | commands in the text.
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| 132 | .RE
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| 133 | .SP
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| 134 | .ti +2n
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| 135 | .B Nroff Commands
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| 136 | .RS
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| 137 | .RS
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| 138 | .ta +5n
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| 139 | .SP
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| 140 | .ti -5n
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| 141 | \&'\e"' This is the comment command.
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| 142 | .SP
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| 143 | .ti -5n
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| 144 | nf No fill mode (the normal mode is fill mode where things
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| 145 | get justified right and left).
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| 146 | .SP
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| 147 | .ti -5n
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| 148 | fi Re-enter fill mode.
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| 149 | .SP
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| 150 | .ti -5n
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| 151 | br Break line here no matter what.
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| 152 | .SP
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| 153 | .ti -5n
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| 154 | sp Vertical space (also causes a break to occur).
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| 155 | .sp
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| 156 | Note that to continue an indent and make a new paragraph (as
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| 157 | is the case here), just put in a space (.sp).
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| 158 | .RE
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| 159 | .SP
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| 160 | Now we should be at a new paragraph.
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| 161 | .RE
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| 162 | .RE
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| 163 | .SH CONVENTIONS
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| 164 | A typical manual page for a command or function is laid out as follows:
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| 165 | .nf
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| 166 |
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| 167 | .TH TITLE [1-8]
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| 168 | The name of the command or function in upper-case,
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| 169 | which serves as the title of the manual page. This is
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| 170 | followed by the number of the section in which it
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| 171 | appears.
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| 172 |
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| 173 | .SH NAME
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| 174 | name - one-line summary
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| 175 |
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| 176 | The name, or list of names, by which the command is
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| 177 | called, followed by a dash and then a one-line summary
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| 178 | of the action performed. All in roman font, this sec-
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| 179 | tion contains no troff(1) commands or escapes, and no
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| 180 | macro requests. It is used to generate the whatis(1)
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| 181 | database.
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| 182 |
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| 183 | .SH SYNOPSIS
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| 184 |
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| 185 | Commands:
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| 186 |
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| 187 | The syntax of the command and its arguments as
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| 188 | typed on the command line. When in boldface, a
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| 189 | word must be typed exactly as printed. When in
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| 190 | italics, a word can be replaced with text that you
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| 191 | supply. Syntactic symbols appear in roman face:
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| 192 |
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| 193 | [ ] An argument, when surrounded by brackets is
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| 194 | optional.
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| 195 |
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| 196 | | Arguments separated by a vertical bar are
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| 197 | exclusive. You can supply only item from
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| 198 | such a list.
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| 199 |
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| 200 | ... Arguments followed by an elipsis can be
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| 201 | repeated. When an elipsis follows a brack-
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| 202 | eted set, the expression within the brackets
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| 203 | can be repeated.
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| 204 |
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| 205 | Functions:
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| 206 |
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| 207 | If required, the data declaration, or #include
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| 208 | directive, is shown first, followed by the func-
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| 209 | tion declaration. Otherwise, the function declara-
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| 210 | tion is shown.
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| 211 |
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| 212 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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| 213 | A narrative description of the command or function in
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| 214 | detail, including how it interacts with files or data,
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| 215 | and how it handles the standard input, standard output
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| 216 | and standard error.
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| 217 |
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| 218 | Filenames, and references to commands or functions
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| 219 | described elswhere in the manual, are italicised. The
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| 220 | names of options, variables and other literal terms are
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| 221 | in boldface.
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| 222 |
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| 223 | .SH OPTIONS
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| 224 | The list of options along with a description of how
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| 225 | each affects the commands operation.
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| 226 |
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| 227 | .SH ENVIRONMENT
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| 228 | Environment variables used.
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| 229 |
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| 230 | .SH FILES
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| 231 | A list of files associated with the command or func-
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| 232 | tion.
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| 233 |
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| 234 | .SH "SEE ALSO"
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| 235 | A comma-separated list of related manual pages,
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| 236 | followed by references to other published materials.
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| 237 | This section contains no troff(1) escapes or commands,
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| 238 | and no macro requests.
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| 239 |
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| 240 | .SH DIAGNOSTICS
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| 241 | A list of diagnostic messages and an explanation of
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| 242 | each.
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| 243 |
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| 244 | .SH NOTES
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| 245 | Any additional notes such as installation-dependent
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| 246 | functionality.
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| 247 |
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| 248 | .SH BUGS
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| 249 | A description of limitations, known defects, and possi-
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| 250 | ble problems associated with the command or function.
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| 251 |
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| 252 | .SH AUTHOR
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| 253 | The program's author and any pertinent release info.
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| 254 |
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| 255 | .SH VERSION
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| 256 | The program's current version number and release date.
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| 257 | .fi
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| 258 | .SH BUGS
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| 259 | Even though
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| 260 | .BR cawf (1)
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| 261 | has a better chance at formatting a random manual page then the standard
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| 262 | MINIX 3 nroff, it has two annoying bugs in its macro set. Both .PP and .IP
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| 263 | reset the indentation level to the level set by .SH. This means that
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| 264 | you can't use them in a piece of text indented by .RS. For .IP this is
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| 265 | troublesome, you can see why in the unformatted source of this text. .PP
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| 266 | can simply be replaced by .sp, or better yet, by .SP with the following
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| 267 | macro defined somewhere in your text:
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| 268 | .PP
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| 269 | .RS
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| 270 | .nf
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| 271 | \&.de SP
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| 272 | \&.if t .sp 0.4
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| 273 | \&.if n .sp
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| 274 | \&..
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| 275 | .fi
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| 276 | .RE
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| 277 | .PP
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| 278 | This will make .SP use 4/10 of a line if formatted by troff, just like .PP.
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