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Re: [Groff] man makro oddity
From: |
Clarke Echols |
Subject: |
Re: [Groff] man makro oddity |
Date: |
Fri, 19 Feb 2010 08:49:40 -0700 |
User-agent: |
Thunderbird 2.0.0.23 (X11/20090817) |
If you read the .TH macro code carefully, you'll discover its role is to
set up the printing for that file (or group of files). It initializes
page dimensions, type faces, size and spacing, etc.
Any empty lines before it result in a break (.br), and
producegroff/troff's default behavior before initialization occurs.
True, you can insert program code or anything else that doesn't cause
actual page motions before .TH, but empty lines (or lines containing
only whitespace will not produce desirable results.
At least that's what I recall from back in my man page days from 1989
to 1992 when I worked on the HP-UX Reference manual.
And it's the approach I still use on some of my other work when I use
macros for producing white papers, technical manuals, etc. I write my
own macros instead of using MM, MS, etc. I prefer doing it "my way".
:-)
Clarke
walter harms wrote:
hi,
i was playing with man pages and found by chance that empty lines before .TH
seems to confuse groff.
<code>
./"
./"
./"
.TH The header
....
</code>
works fine (no warnings what so ever) but has am empty page in front and
changes in page numbering are
ignored.
<code>
./"
./"
./"
.TH The header
....
</code>
But this produces the desired output. Is is possible to have a warning, when
accidentally empty lines in front are found ?
re,
wh