NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | USAGE | MACROS TO SET FONTS | MACROS TO DESCRIBE HYPERLINKS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES | MACROS TO DESCRIBE COMMAND SYNOPSES | MISCELLANEOUS | PORTABILITY AND TROFF REQUESTS | FILES | SEE ALSO | COPYING | AUTHORS | COLOPHON

GROFF_MAN(7)          Miscellaneous Information Manual          GROFF_MAN(7)

NAME         top

       groff_man - groff man macros to support generation of man pages

SYNOPSIS         top

       groff -man [options ...] [files ...]
       groff -m man [options ...] [files ...]

DESCRIPTION         top

       The man macros used to generate man pages with groff were written by
       James Clark.  This document provides a brief summary of the use of
       each macro in that package.

OPTIONS         top

       The man macros understand the following command line options (which
       define various registers).
       -rcR=1 This option (the default if in nroff mode) creates a single,
              very long page instead of multiple pages.  Say -rcR=0 to
              disable it.
       -rC1   If more than one manual page is given on the command line,
              number the pages continuously, rather than starting each at 1.
       -rD1   Double-sided printing.  Footers for even and odd pages are
              formatted differently.
       -rFT=dist
              Set distance of the footer relative to the bottom of the page
              if negative or relative to the top if positive.  The default
              is -0.5i.
       -rHY=flags
              Set hyphenation flags.  Possible values are 1 to hyphenate
              without restrictions, 2 to not hyphenate the last word on a
              page, 4 to not hyphenate the last two characters of a word,
              and 8 to not hyphenate the first two characters of a word.
              These values are additive; the default is 14.
       -rIN=width
              Set body text indentation to width.  The default is 7n for
              nroff, 7.2n for troff.  For nroff, this value should always be
              an integer multiple of unit ‘n’ to get consistent indentation.
       -rLL=line-length
              Set line length.  If this option is not given, the line length
              is set to respect any value set by a prior ‘.ll’ request
              (which must be in effect when the ‘.TH’ macro is invoked), if
              this differs from the built-in default for the formatter;
              otherwise it defaults to 78n in nroff mode and 6.5i in troff
              mode.
              Note that the use of a ‘.ll’ request to initialize the line
              length is supported for backward compatibility with some
              versions of the man program; direct initialization of the ‘LL’
              register should always be preferred to the use of such a
              request.  In particular, note that a ‘.ll 65n’ request does
              not preserve the normal nroff default line length, (the man
              default initialization to 78n prevails), whereas, the
              ‘-rLL=65n’ option, or an equivalent ‘.nr LL 65n’ request
              preceding the use of the ‘TH’ macro, does set a line length of
              65n.
       -rLT=title-length
              Set title length.  If this option is not given, the title
              length defaults to the line length.
       -rPnnn Enumeration of pages start with nnn rather than with 1.
       -rSxx  Base document font size is xx points (xx can be 10, 11, or 12)
              rather than 10 points.
       -rSN=width
              Set sub-subheading indentation to width.  The default is 3n.
       -rXnnn After page nnn, number pages as nnna, nnnb, nnnc, etc.  For
              example, the option ‘-rX2’ produces the following page
              numbers: 1, 2, 2a, 2b, 2c, etc.

USAGE         top

       This section describes the available macros for manual pages.  For
       further customization, put additional macros and requests into the
       file man.local, which is loaded immediately after the man package.
       .EX
       .EE    Example/End Example.  After .EX, filling is disabled and the
              font is set to constant-width.  This is useful for formatting
              code, command, and configuration-file examples.  The EE macro
              restores filling and restores the previous font.
              These macros are defined on many (but not all) legacy Unix
              systems running classic troff.  To be certain your page will
              be portable to those systems, copy their definitions from the
              an-ext.tmac file of a groff installation.
       .HP [nnn]
              Set up a paragraph with hanging left indentation.  The
              indentation is set to nnn if that argument is supplied (the
              default unit is ‘n’ if omitted), otherwise it is set to the
              previous indentation value specified with .TP, .IP, or .HP (or
              to the default value if none of them have been used yet).
              Font size and face are reset to its default values.  The
              following paragraph illustrates the effect of this macro with
              hanging indentation set to 4 (enclosed by .RS and .RE to set
              the left margin temporarily to the current indentation):
              This is a paragraph following an invocation of the HP macro.
                  As you can see, it produces a paragraph where all lines
                  but the first are indented.
              Use of this presentation-level macro is deprecated.  While it
              is universally portable to legacy Unix systems, a hanging
              indentation cannot be expressed naturally under HTML, and many
              HTML-based manual viewers simply interpret it as a starter for
              a normal paragraph.  Thus, any information or distinction you
              tried to express with the indentation may be lost.
       .IP [designator] [nnn]
              Set up an indented paragraph, using designator as a tag to
              mark its beginning.  The indentation is set to nnn if that
              argument is supplied (the default unit is ‘n’ if omitted),
              otherwise it is set to the previous indentation value
              specified with .TP, .IP, or .HP (or to the default value if
              none of them have been used yet).  Font size and face of the
              paragraph (but not the designator) are reset to its default
              values.
              To start an indented paragraph with a particular indentation
              but without a designator, use ‘""’ (two doublequotes) as the
              second argument.
              For example, the following paragraphs were all set up with
              bullets as the designator, using ‘.IP \(bu 4’.  The whole
              block has been enclosed with .RS and .RE to set the left
              margin temporarily to the current indentation value.
              ·   IP is one of the three macros used in the man package to
                  format lists.
              ·   HP is another.  This macro produces a paragraph with a
                  left hanging indentation.
              ·   TP is another.  This macro produces an unindented label
                  followed by an indented paragraph.
       .LP
       .PP
       .P     These macros are mutual aliases.  Any of them causes a line
              break at the current position, followed by a vertical space
              downwards by the amount specified by the PD macro.  The font
              size and shape are reset to the default value (normally 10pt
              Roman).  Finally, the current left margin and the indentation
              is reset to the default values.
       .RE [nnn]
              This macro moves the left margin back to level nnn, restoring
              the previous left margin.  If no argument is given, it moves
              one level back.  The first level (i.e., no call to .RS yet)
              has number 1, and each call to .RS increases the level by 1.
       .RS [nnn]
              This macro moves the left margin to the right by the value nnn
              if specified (default unit is ‘n’); otherwise it is set to the
              previous indentation value specified with .TP, .IP, or .HP (or
              to the default value if none of them have been used yet).  The
              indentation value is then set to the default.
              Calls to the RS macro can be nested.
       .SH [text for a heading]
              Set up an unnumbered section heading sticking out to the left.
              Prints out all the text following .SH up to the end of the
              line (or the text in the next input line if there is no
              argument to .SH) in bold face (or the font specified by the
              string HF), one size larger than the base document size.
              Additionally, the left margin and the indentation for the
              following text is reset to the default values.
       .SS [text for a heading]
              Set up a secondary, unnumbered section heading.  Prints out
              all the text following .SS up to the end of the line (or the
              text in the next input line if there is no argument to .SS) in
              bold face (or the font specified by the string HF), at the
              same size as the base document size.  Additionally, the left
              margin and the indentation for the following text is reset to
              the default values.
       .TH title section [extra1] [extra2] [extra3]
              Set the title of the man page to title and the section to
              section, which must take on a value between 1 and 8.  The
              value section may also have a string appended, e.g. ‘.pm’, to
              indicate a specific subsection of the man pages.  Both title
              and section are positioned at the left and right in the header
              line (with section in parentheses immediately appended to
              title.  extra1 is positioned in the middle of the footer line.
              extra2 is positioned at the left in the footer line (or at the
              left on even pages and at the right on odd pages if double-
              sided printing is active).  extra3 is centered in the header
              line.
              For HTML output, headers and footers are completely
              suppressed.
              Additionally, this macro starts a new page; the new line
              number is 1 again (except if the ‘-rC1’ option is given on the
              command line) -- this feature is intended only for formatting
              multiple man pages; a single man page should contain exactly
              one TH macro at the beginning of the file.
       .TP [nnn]
              Set up an indented paragraph with label.  The indentation is
              set to nnn if that argument is supplied (the default unit is
              ‘n’ if omitted), otherwise it is set to the previous
              indentation value specified with .TP, .IP, or .HP (or to the
              default value if none of them have been used yet).
              The first input line of text following this macro is
              interpreted as a string to be printed flush-left, as it is
              appropriate for a label.  It is not interpreted as part of a
              paragraph, so there is no attempt to fill the first line with
              text from the following input lines.  Nevertheless, if the
              label is not as wide as the indentation the paragraph starts
              at the same line (but indented), continuing on the following
              lines.  If the label is wider than the indentation the
              descriptive part of the paragraph begins on the line following
              the label, entirely indented.  Note that neither font shape
              nor font size of the label is set to a default value; on the
              other hand, the rest of the text has default font settings.
              The TP macro is the macro used for the explanations you are
              just reading.
       .TQ    The TQ macro sets up header continuation for a TP macro.  With
              it, you can stack up any number of labels (such as in a
              glossary, or list of commands) before beginning the indented
              paragraph.  For an example, look up the documentation of the
              LP, PP, and P macros.
              This macro is not defined on legacy Unix systems running
              classic troff.  To be certain your page will be portable to
              those systems, copy its definition from the an-ext.tmac file
              of a groff installation.
       To summarize, the following macros cause a line break with the
       insertion of vertical space (which amount can be changed with the PD
       macro): SH, SS, TP, TQ, LP (PP, P), IP, and HP.  The macros RS, RE,
       EX, and EE also cause a break but no insertion of vertical space.

MACROS TO SET FONTS         top

       The standard font is Roman; the default text size is 10 point.
       .B [text]
              Causes text to appear in bold face.  If no text is present on
              the line where the macro is called the text of the next input
              line appears in bold face.
       .BI text
              Causes text on the same line to appear alternately in bold
              face and italic.  The text must be on the same line as the
              macro call.  Thus
                     .BI this "word and" that
              would cause ‘this’ and ‘that’ to appear in bold face, while
              ‘word and’ appears in italics.
       .BR text
              Causes text on the same line to appear alternately in bold
              face and roman.  The text must be on the same line as the
              macro call.
       .I [text]
              Causes text to appear in italic.  If no text is present on the
              line where the macro is called the text of the next input line
              appears in italic.
       .IB text
              Causes text to appear alternately in italic and bold face.
              The text must be on the same line as the macro call.
       .IR text
              Causes text on the same line to appear alternately in italic
              and roman.  The text must be on the same line as the macro
              call.
       .RB text
              Causes text on the same line to appear alternately in roman
              and bold face.  The text must be on the same line as the macro
              call.
       .RI text
              Causes text on the same line to appear alternately in roman
              and italic.  The text must be on the same line as the macro
              call.
       .SB [text]
              Causes the text on the same line or the text on the next input
              line to appear in boldface font, one point size smaller than
              the default font.
       .SM [text]
              Causes the text on the same line or the text on the next input
              line to appear in a font that is one point size smaller than
              the default font.

MACROS TO DESCRIBE HYPERLINKS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES         top

       The following macros are not defined on legacy Unix systems running
       classic troff.  To be certain your page will be portable to those
       systems, copy their definitions from the an-ext.tmac file of a groff
       installation.
       Using these macros helps ensure that you get hyperlinks when your
       manual page is rendered in a browser or other program that is Web-
       enabled.
       .MT address
       .ME [punctuation]
              Wrap an email address.  The argument of .MT is the address;
              text following, until .ME, is a name to be associated with the
              address.  Any argument to the ME macro is pasted to the end of
              the link text.  On a device that is not a browser,
                     contact
                     .MT fred.foonly@\:fubar.net
                     Fred Foonly
                     .ME
                     for more information
              usually displays like this: “contact Fred Foonly <fred.foonly@
              fubar.net> for more information”.
              The use of \: to insert hyphenless breakpoints is a groff
              extension and can be omitted.
       .UR URL
       .UE [punctuation]
              Wrap a World Wide Web hyperlink.  The argument to .UR is the
              URL; thereafter, lines until .UE are collected and used as the
              link text.  Any argument to the UE macro is pasted to the end
              of the text.  On a device that is not a browser,
                     this is a link to
                     .UR http://\:randomsite.org/\:fubar
                     some random site
                     .UE ,
                     given as an example
              usually displays like this: “this is a link to some random
              site <http://randomsite.org/fubar>, given as an example”.
              The use of \: to insert hyphenless breakpoints is a groff
              extension and can be omitted.

MACROS TO DESCRIBE COMMAND SYNOPSES         top

       The following macros are not defined on legacy Unix systems running
       classic troff.  To be certain your page will be portable to those
       systems, copy their definitions from the an-ext.tmac file of a groff
       installation.
       These macros are a convenience for authors.  They also assist
       automated translation tools and help browsers in recognizing command
       synopses and treating them differently from running text.
       .OP key value
              Describe an optional command argument.  The arguments of this
              macro are set surrounded by option braces in the default Roman
              font; the first argument is printed with a bold face, while
              the second argument is typeset as italic.
       .SY command
              Begin synopsis.  Takes a single argument, the name of a
              command.  Text following, until closed by .YS, is set with a
              hanging indentation with the width of command plus a space.
              This produces the traditional look of a Unix command synopsis.
       .YS    This macro restores normal indentation at the end of a command
              synopsis.
       Here is a real example:
              .SY groff
              .OP \-abcegiklpstzCEGNRSUVXZ
              .OP \-d cs
              .OP \-f fam
              .OP \-F dir
              .OP \-I dir
              .OP \-K arg
              .OP \-L arg
              .OP \-m name
              .OP \-M dir
              .OP \-n num
              .OP \-o list
              .OP \-P arg
              .OP \-r cn
              .OP \-T dev
              .OP \-w name
              .OP \-W name
              .RI [ file
              .IR .\|.\|. ]
              .YS
       produces the following output:
              groff [-abcegiklpstzCEGNRSUVXZ] [-d cs] [-f fam] [-F dir]
                    [-I dir] [-K arg] [-L arg] [-m name] [-M dir] [-n num]
                    [-o list] [-P arg] [-r cn] [-T dev] [-w name] [-W name]
                    [file ...]
       If necessary, you might use br requests to control line breaking.
       You can insert plain text as well; this looks like the traditional
       (unornamented) syntax for a required command argument or filename.

MISCELLANEOUS         top

       The default indentation is 7.2n in troff mode and 7n in nroff mode
       except for grohtml, which ignores indentation.
       .AT [system [release]]
              Alter the footer for use with AT&T man pages.  This command
              exists only for compatibility; don't use it.  See the groff
              info manual for more.
       .BT    Print the footer string.  Redefine this macro to get control
              of the footer.
       .DT    Set tabs every 0.5 inches.  Since this macro is always called
              during a TH macro, it makes sense to call it only if the tab
              positions have been changed.
              Use of this presentation-level macro is deprecated.  It
              translates poorly to HTML, under which exact whitespace
              control and tabbing are not readily available.  Thus,
              information or distinctions that you use .DT to express are
              likely to be lost.  If you feel tempted to use it, you should
              probably be composing a table using tbl(1) markup instead.
       .PD [nnn]
              Adjust the empty space before a new paragraph or section.  The
              optional argument gives the amount of space (default unit is
              ‘v’); without parameter, the value is reset to its default
              value (1 line in nroff mode, 0.4v otherwise).  This affects
              the macros SH, SS, TP, LP (resp. PP and P), IP, and HP.
              Use of this presentation-level macro is deprecated.  It
              translates poorly to HTML, under which exact control of inter-
              paragraph spacing is not readily available.  Thus, information
              or distinctions that you use .PD to express are likely to be
              lost.
       .PT    Print the header string.  Redefine this macro to get control
              of the header.
       .UC [version]
              Alter the footer for use with BSD man pages.  This command
              exists only for compatibility; don't use it.  See the groff
              info manual for more.
       The following strings are defined:
       \*R    The ‘registered’ sign.
       \*S    Switch back to the default font size.
       \*(lq
       \*(rq  Left and right quote.  This is equal to ‘\(lq’ and ‘\(rq\[cq],
              respectively.
       \*(HF  The typeface used to print headings and subheadings.  The
              default is ‘B’.
       \*(Tm  The ‘trademark’ sign.
       If a preprocessor like tbl or eqn is needed, it has become common to
       make the first line of the man page look like this:
              '\" word
       Note the single space character after the double quote.  word
       consists of letters for the needed preprocessors: ‘e’ for eqn, ‘r’
       for refer, and ‘t’ for tbl.  Modern implementations of the man
       program read this first line and automatically call the right
       preprocessor(s).

PORTABILITY AND TROFF REQUESTS         top

       Since the man macros consist of groups of groff requests, one can, in
       principle, supplement the functionality of the man macros with
       individual groff requests where necessary.  See the groff info pages
       for a complete reference of all requests.
       Note, however, that using raw troff requests is likely to make your
       page render poorly on the (increasingly common) class of viewers that
       render it to HTML.  Troff requests make implicit assumptions about
       things like character and page sizes that may break in an HTML
       environment; also, many of these viewers don't interpret the full
       troff vocabulary, a problem that can lead to portions of your text
       being silently dropped.
       For portability to modern viewers, it is best to write your page
       entirely in the requests described on this page.  Further, it is best
       to completely avoid those we have described as ‘presentation-level’
       (.HP, .PD, and .DT).
       The macros we have described as extensions (.EX/.EE, .SY/.OP/.YS,
       .UR/.UE, and .MT/.ME) should be used with caution, as they may not
       yet be built in to some viewer that is important to your audience.
       If in doubt, copy the implementation onto your page.

FILES         top

       man.tmac
       an.tmac
              These are wrapper files to call andoc.tmac.
       andoc.tmac
              Use this file in case you don't know whether the man macros or
              the mdoc package should be used.  Multiple man pages (in
              either format) can be handled.
       an-old.tmac
              Most man macros are contained in this file.
       an-ext.tmac
              The extension macro definitions for .SY, .OP, .YS, .TQ,
              .EX/.EE, .UR/.UE, and .MT/.ME are contained in this file.  It
              is written in classic troff, and released for free re-use, and
              not copylefted; manual page authors concerned about
              portability to legacy Unix systems are encouraged to copy
              these definitions into their pages, and maintainers of troff
              or its workalikes are encouraged to re-use them.
              Note that the definitions for these macros are read after the
              call of TH, so they will replace macros of the same names
              given at the beginning of your file.  If you must use your own
              definitions for these macros, they must be given after calling
              TH.
       man.local
              Local changes and customizations should be put into this file.

SEE ALSO         top

       tbl(1), eqn(1), refer(1), man(1), man(7), groff_mdoc(7)

COPYING         top

       Copyright © 1999-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
       Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
       manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
       preserved on all copies.
       Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
       this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that
       the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
       permission notice identical to this one.
       Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
       manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
       versions, except that this permission notice may be included in
       translations approved by the Free Software Foundation instead of in
       the original English.

AUTHORS         top

       This manual page was originally written for the Debian GNU/Linux
       system by Susan G. Kleinmann ⟨sgk@debian.org⟩.
       It was corrected and updated by Werner Lemberg ⟨wl@gnu.org⟩.
       The extension macros were documented (and partly designed) by Eric S.
       Raymond ⟨esr@thyrsus.com⟩; he also wrote the portability advice.

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the groff (GNU troff) project.  Information
       about the project can be found at 
       ⟨http://www.gnu.org/software/groff/⟩.  If you have a bug report for
       this manual page, see ⟨http://www.gnu.org/software/groff/⟩.  This
       page was obtained from the tarball groff-1.22.3.tar.gz fetched from
       ⟨ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/groff/⟩ on 2017-07-05.  If you discover any
       rendering problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe
       there is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
       corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
       (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
       man-pages@man7.org
Groff Version 1.22.3           4 November 2014                  GROFF_MAN(7)

Pages that refer to this page: groff(1)grog(1)groff_tmac(5)man(7)man-pages(7)