Xref: utzoo comp.text:8103 comp.unix.questions:29204 comp.sources.wanted:15602 Path: utzoo!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!mcsun!hp4nl!sci.kun.nl!cs.kun.nl!lwj From: lwj@cs.kun.nl (Luc Rooijakkers) Newsgroups: comp.text,comp.unix.questions,comp.sources.wanted Subject: Wanted: di-nroff /usr/lib/nterm documentation, i.e. nterm(5) Summary: Questions about nterm(5) Keywords: ditroff dinroff nterm Message-ID: <2809@wn1.sci.kun.nl> Date: 6 Mar 91 11:18:09 GMT Sender: root@sci.kun.nl Followup-To: comp.text Organization: University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands Lines: 41 I am modifying an nroff(1) clone to be more device-independent. In doing so, I want it to read the new ascii terminal description files which are normally stored in /usr/lib/nterm/tab.* on systems that have them. Does anyone have *authorative* information about those? I do know their general format, but not the details. More specifically, * Is the terminal name required to be on the first line, or can it be preceded by blank lines? * Do the keywords have to be in a particular order? * Are there required keywords, or can they be omitted? * What does nroff do when it is given empty bdon/bdoff or empty iton/itoff strings? Does it revert to the char-backspace-char method of producing bold and italic ? * What kind of escape codes are accepted in strings? I know that \b \n \r \t \ddd are accepted, but what about \e \xdd etc ? * Are embedded nulls allowed in strings ? * How many character definitions are allowed, and are there any required ones? How does nroff react when you use \(xx but character `xx' is not defined in the terminal table? * Do character names have to be two characters long? Most of these should be answered by nterm(5), so if anyone has it, please answer! (Of course, you could just send it to me...). One more question: * What characters are underlined by nroff with .ul ? The new ascii terminal tables do not specify wether or not a character should be underlined, as the old binary ones did. Are there any other differences of di-nroff with plain old nroff? One thing that comes to mind is a settable basic unit size... Please E-mail, as I don't think this is of general interest. Followups have been redirected to `poster'. Thanks in advance. -- Luc Rooijakkers Internet: lwj@cs.kun.nl Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science UUCP: uunet!cs.kun.nl!lwj University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands tel. +3180652271