1 | .so mnx.mac
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2 | .TH M4 9
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3 | .CD "m4 \(en macro processor"
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4 | .SX "m4\fR [\fB\(enD \fIname\fR = \fIvalue\fR]\fR [\fB\(enU \fIname\fR]
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5 | .FL "\(enD" "Define a symbol"
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6 | .FL "\(enU" "Undefine a symbol"
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7 | .EY "m4 <m4test" "Run M4"
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8 | .PP
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9 | \fIM4\fR is a macro processor intended as a front end
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10 | for Ratfor, Pascal, and other languages that do not have a built-in macro
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11 | processing capability. M4 reads standard input, the processed text is
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12 | written on the standard output.
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13 | .PP
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14 | The options and their effects are as follows:
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15 |
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16 | .in +0.5i
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17 | .ta 1.25i
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18 | \(enD name[=val] Defines name to val, or to null in val's absence.
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19 | .br
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20 | \(enU name Undefines name.
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21 | .in -0.5i
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22 |
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23 | .PP
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24 | Macro calls have the form: name(arg1,arg2, ..., argn)
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25 |
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26 | The \*(OQ(\*(CQ must immediately follow the name of the macro.
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27 | If the name of a
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28 | defined macro is not followed by a ( it is taken to be a call of that macro
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29 | with no arguments, i.e. name(). Potential macro names consist of alphabetic
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30 | letters and digits.
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31 | .PP
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32 | Leading unquoted blanks, tabs and newlines are ignored while collecting
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33 | arguments. Left and right single quotes are used to quote strings. The value
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34 | of a quoted string is the string stripped of the quotes.
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35 | .PP
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36 | When a macro name is recognized, its arguments are collected by searching
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37 | for a matching ). If fewer arguments are supplied than are in the macro
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38 | definition, the trailing arguments are taken to be null. Macro evaluation
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39 | proceeds normally during the collection of the arguments, and any commas or
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40 | right parentheses which happen to turn up within the value of a nested call
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41 | are as effective as those in the original input text. (This is typically
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42 | referred as inside-out macro expansion.) After argument collection, the
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43 | value of the macro is pushed back onto the input stream and rescanned.
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44 | .PP
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45 | M4 makes available the following built-in macros. They may be
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46 | redefined, but once this is done the original meaning is lost. Their values
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47 | are null unless otherwise stated.
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48 | .PP
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49 | \fBdefine "(name [, val])"\fR the second argument is installed as the value of
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50 | the macro whose name is the first argument. If there is no second argument,
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51 | the value is null. Each occurrence of $ n in the replacement text, where n is
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52 | a digit, is replaced by the n -th argument. Argument 0 is the name of the
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53 | macro; missing arguments are replaced by the null string.
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54 | .PP
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55 | \fBdefn "(name [, name ...])"\fR returns the quoted definition of its
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56 | argument(s). Useful in renaming macros.
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57 | .PP
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58 | \fBundefine "(name [, name ...])"\fR removes the definition of the macro(s)
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59 | named. If there is more than one definition for the named macro, (due to
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60 | previous use of pushdef) all definitions are removed.
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61 | .PP
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62 | \fBpushdef "(name [, val])"\fR like define, but saves any previous definition
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63 | by stacking the current definition.
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64 | .PP
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65 | \fBpopdef "(name [, name ...])"\fR removes current definition of its
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66 | argument(s), exposing the previous one if any.
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67 | .PP
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68 | \fBifdef "(name, if-def [, ifnot-def])"\fR if the first argument is defined,
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69 | the value is the second argument, otherwise the third. If there is no third
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70 | argument, the value is null. A word indicating the current operating system
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71 | is predefined. (e.g. unix or vms).
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72 | .PP
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73 | \fBshift "(arg, arg, arg, ...)"\fR returns all but its first argument. The
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74 | other arguments are quoted and pushed back with commas in between. The
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75 | quoting nullifies the effect of the extra scan that will subsequently be
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76 | performed.
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77 | .PP
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78 | \fBchangequote "(lqchar, rqchar)"\fR change quote symbols to the first and
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79 | second arguments. With no arguments, the quotes are reset back to the default
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80 | characters. (i.e., `').
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81 | .PP
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82 | \fBchangecom "(lcchar, rcchar)"\fR change left and right comment markers from
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83 | the default # and newline. With no arguments, the comment mechanism is reset
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84 | back to the default characters. With one argument, the left marker becomes
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85 | the argument and the right marker becomes newline. With two arguments, both
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86 | markers are affected.
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87 | .PP
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88 | \fBdivert "(divnum)"\fR maintains 10 output streams, numbered 0-9. Initially
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89 | stream 0 is the current stream. The divert macro changes the current output
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90 | stream to its (digit-string) argument. Output diverted to a stream other than
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91 | 0 through 9 is lost.
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92 | .PP
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93 | \fBundivert "([divnum [, divnum ...]])"\fR causes immediate output of text from
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94 | diversions named as argument(s), or all diversions if no argument. Text may
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95 | be undiverted into another diversion. Undiverting discards the diverted text.
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96 | At the end of input processing, M4 forces an automatic undivert unless is
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97 | defined.
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98 | .PP
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99 | \fBdivnum "()"\fR returns the value of the current output stream.
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100 | .PP
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101 | \fBdnl "()"\fR reads and discards characters up to and including the next
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102 | newline.
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103 | .PP
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104 | \fBifelse "(arg, arg, if-same [, ifnot-same | arg, arg ...])"\fR has three or
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105 | more arguments. If the first argument is the same string as the second, then
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106 | the value is the third argument. If not, and if there are more than four
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107 | arguments, the process is repeated with arguments 4, 5, 6 and 7. Otherwise,
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108 | the value is either the fourth string, or, if it is not present, null.
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109 | .PP
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110 | \fBincr "(num)"\fR returns the value of its argument incremented by 1. The
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111 | value of the argument is calculated by interpreting an initial digit-string as
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112 | a decimal number.
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113 | .PP
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114 | \fBdecr "(num)"\fR returns the value of its argument decremented by 1.
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115 | .PP
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116 | \fBeval "(expression)"\fR evaluates its argument as a constant expression,
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117 | using integer arithmetic. The evaluation mechanism is very similar to that of
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118 | cpp (#if expression). The expression can involve only integer constants and
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119 | character constants, possibly connected by the binary operators
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120 | .HS
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121 | .in +0.5i
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122 | * / % + - >> << < > <= >= == != & ^ | && ||
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123 | .in -0.5i
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124 | .HS
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125 | or the unary operators - ! or tilde or by the ternary operator ? : .
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126 | Parentheses may be used for grouping. Octal numbers may be specified as in C.
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127 | .PP
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128 | \fBlen "(string)"\fR returns the number of characters in its argument.
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129 | .PP
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130 | \fBindex "(search-string, string)"\fR returns the position in its first
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131 | argument where the second argument begins (zero origin), or 1 if the second
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132 | argument does not occur.
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133 | .PP
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134 | \fBsubstr "(string, index [, length])"\fR returns a substring of its first
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135 | argument. The second argument is a zero origin number selecting the first
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136 | character (internally treated as an expression); the third argument indicates
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137 | the length of the substring. A missing third argument is taken to be large
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138 | enough to extend to the end of the first string.
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139 | .PP
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140 | \fBtranslit "(source, from [, to])"\fR transliterates the characters in its
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141 | first argument from the set given by the second argument to the set given by
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142 | the third. If the third argument is shorter than the second, all extra
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143 | characters in the second argument are deleted from the first argument. If the
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144 | third argument is missing altogether, all characters in the second argument
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145 | are deleted from the first argument.
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146 | .PP
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147 | \fBinclude "(filename)"\fR returns the contents of the file that is
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148 | named in the argument.
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149 | .PP
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150 | \fBsinclude "(filename)"\fRis identical to include, except that it says nothing
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151 | if the file is inaccessable.
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152 | .PP
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153 | \fBpaste "(filename)"\fR returns the contents of the file named in the argument
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154 | without any processing, unlike include.
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155 | .PP
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156 | \fBspaste "(filename)"\fR is identical to paste, except that it says nothing if
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157 | the file is inaccessibl[De.
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158 | .PP
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159 | \fBsyscmd "(command)"\fR executes the
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160 | .Ux
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161 | command given in the first argument.
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162 | No value is returned.
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163 | .PP
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164 | \fBsysval "()"\fR is the return code from the last call to syscmd.
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165 | .PP
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166 | \fBmaketemp \*(OQ(string)"\fR fills in a string of XXXXXX in its argument with the
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167 | current process ID.
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168 | .PP
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169 | \fBm4exit "([exitcode])"\fR causes immediate exit from M4. Argument 1, if
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170 | given, is the exit code; the default is 0.
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171 | .PP
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172 | \fBm4wrap "(m4-macro-or-built-n)"\fR argument 1 will be pushed back at final
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173 | EOF; example: m4wrap(`dumptable()').
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174 | .PP
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175 | \fBerrprint "(str [, str, str, ...])"\fR prints its argument(s) on stderr. If
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176 | there is more than one argument, each argument is separated by a space during
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177 | the output. An arbitrary number of arguments may be supplied.
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178 | .PP
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179 | \fBdumpdef "([name, name, ...])"\fR prints current names and definitions, for
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180 | the named items, or for all if no arguments are given.
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181 | .SP 1
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182 | .SS "Author"
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183 | .SP 1
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184 | .PP
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185 | \fIM4\fR was written by Ozan S. Yigif.
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