1GROFF_TMAC(5)                 File Formats Manual                GROFF_TMAC(5)
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3
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NAME

6       groff_tmac - macro files in the roff typesetting system
7

DESCRIPTION

9       The  roff(7) type-setting system provides a set of macro packages suit‐
10       able for special kinds of documents.  Each  macro  package  stores  its
11       macros  and  definitions in a file called the package's tmac file.  The
12       name is deduced from `TroffMACros'.
13
14       The tmac files are normal roff source documents, except that they  usu‐
15       ally  contain  only  definitions  and setup commands, but no text.  All
16       tmac files are kept in a single or a small number of  directories,  the
17       tmac directories.
18

GROFF MACRO PACKAGES

20       groff  provides  all classical macro packages, some more full packages,
21       and some secondary packages for special purposes.
22
23   Man Pages
24       man    This is the  classical  macro  package  for  UNIX  manual  pages
25              (man   pages);   it   is  quite  handy  and  easy  to  use;  see
26              groff_man(7).
27
28       doc
29       mdoc   An alternative macro package for man pages mainly  used  in  BSD
30              systems;  it provides many new features, but it is not the stan‐
31              dard for man pages; see groff_mdoc(7).
32
33   Full Packages
34       The packages in this section provide a complete set of macros for writ‐
35       ing  documents  of  any  kind,  up to whole books.  They are similar in
36       functionality; it is a matter of taste which one to use.
37
38       me     The classical me macro package; see groff_me(7).
39
40       mm     The semi-classical mm macro package; see groff_mm(7).
41
42       mom    The new mom macro package, only available in groff.  As this  is
43              not  based  on other packages, it can be freely designed.  So it
44              is expected to become quite a nice, modern macro  package.   See
45              groff_mom(7).
46
47       ms     The classical ms macro package; see groff_ms(7).
48
49   Special Packages
50       The  macro  packages  in  this section are not intended for stand-alone
51       usage, but can be used to add special functionality to any other  macro
52       package or to plain groff.
53
54       tty-char
55              Overrides  the  definition of standard troff characters and some
56              groff characters for tty devices.   The  optical  appearance  is
57              intentionally inferior compared to that of normal tty formatting
58              to allow processing with critical equipment.
59
60       www    Additions of elements known from the html format, as being  used
61              in  the internet (World Wide Web) pages; this includes URL links
62              and mail addresses; see groff_www(7).
63

NAMING

65       In classical roff systems, there was a funny naming  scheme  for  macro
66       packages, due to a simplistic design in option parsing.  Macro packages
67       were always included by option -m; when this option was  directly  fol‐
68       lowed  by its argument without an intervening space, this looked like a
69       long option preceded by a single minus — a sensation  in  the  computer
70       stone age.  To make this optically working for macro package names, all
71       classical macro packages choose a name that  started  with  the  letter
72       `m', which was omitted in the naming of the macro file.
73
74       For  example, the macro package for the man pages was called man, while
75       its macro file tmac.an.  So it could be activated by the argument an to
76       option -m, or -man for short.
77
78       For  similar reasons, macro packages that did not start with an `m' had
79       a leading `m' added in the documentation and in talking;  for  example,
80       the package corresponding to tmac.doc was called mdoc in the documenta‐
81       tion, although a more suitable name would be doc.  For,  when  omitting
82       the  space between the option and its argument, the command line option
83       for activating this package reads -mdoc.
84
85       To cope with all situations, actual  versions  of  groff(1)  are  smart
86       about  both  naming  schemes  by  providing  two  macro  files  for the
87       inflicted macro packages; one with a leading `m', the other one without
88       it.   So  in groff, the man macro package may be specified as on of the
89       following four methods:
90
91              sh# groff -m man
92              sh# groff -man
93              sh# groff -mman
94              sh# groff -m an
95
96       Recent packages that do not start with `m' do not use an additional `m'
97       in the documentation.  For example, the www macro package may be speci‐
98       fied only as one of the two methods:
99
100              sh# groff -m www
101              sh# groff -mwww
102
103       Obviously, variants like -mmwww would not make much sense.
104
105       A second strange feature of classical troff was to name macro files ac‐
106       cording  to tmac.name.  In modern operating systems, the type of a file
107       is specified as postfix, the file name extension.  Again,  groff  copes
108       with  this  situation by searching both anything.tmac and tmac.anything
109       if only anything is specified.
110
111       The easiest way to find out which macro packages  are  available  on  a
112       system  is  to check the man page groff(1), or the contents of the tmac
113       directories.
114
115       In groff, most  macro  packages  are  described  in  man  pages  called
116       groff_name(7), with a leading `m' for the classical packages.
117

INCLUSION

119       There are several ways to use a macro package in a document.  The clas‐
120       sical way is to specify the troff/groff option  -m  name  at  run-time;
121       this makes the contents of the macro package name available.  In groff,
122       the file name.tmac is searched within the  tmac  path;  if  not  found,
123       tmac.name will be searched for instead.
124
125       Alternatively,  it  is  also possible to include a macro file by adding
126       the request .so filename into the document; the argument  must  be  the
127       full  file  name of an existing file, possibly with the directory where
128       it is kept.  In groff, this was improved by the  similar  request  .mso
129       package,  which  added  searching in the tmac path, just like option -m
130       does.
131
132       Note that in order to resolve the .so and .mso requests, the roff  pre‐
133       processor  soelim(1)  must  be  called if the files to be included need
134       preprocessing.  This can be done either directly by a pipeline  on  the
135       command  line  or by using the troff/groff option -s.  man calls soelim
136       automatically.
137
138       For    example,    suppose    a    macro    file    is    stored     as
139       /usr/share/groff/1.18.1.4/tmac/macros.tmac and is used in some document
140       called docu.roff.
141
142       At run-time, the formatter call for this is
143
144              sh# groff -m macrofile document.roff
145
146       To include the macro file directly in the document either
147
148              .mso macrofile.tmac
149
150       is used or
151
152              .so /usr/share/groff/1.18.1.4/tmac/macros.tmac
153
154       In both cases, the formatter is called with
155
156              sh# troff -s docu.roff
157
158       If you want to write your own groff macro file, call  it  whatever.tmac
159       and put it in some directory of the tmac path, see section FILES.  Then
160       documents can include it with the .mso request or the option -m.
161

WRITING MACROS

163       A roff(7) document is a text file that is enriched by  predefined  for‐
164       matting constructs, such as requests, escape sequences, strings, numer‐
165       ic registers, and macros from a macro package.  These elements are  de‐
166       scribed in roff(7).
167
168       To  give  a  document a personal style, it is most useful to extend the
169       existing elements by defining some macros for repeating tasks; the best
170       place  for  this is near the beginning of the document or in a separate
171       file.
172
173       Macros without arguments are just like strings.  But the full power  of
174       macros reveals when arguments are passed with a macro call.  Within the
175       macro definition, the arguments are available as the  escape  sequences
176       $1,  ...,  $9,  $[...],  $*, and $@, the name under which the macro was
177       called is in $0, and the number of arguments  is  in  register  0;  see
178       groff(7).
179
180   Copy-in Mode
181       The phase when groff reads a macro is called copy-in mode in roff-talk.
182       This is comparable to the C preprocessing phase during the  development
183       of a program written in the C language.
184
185       In  this  phase,  groff interprets all backslashes; that means that all
186       escape sequences in the macro body  are  interpreted  and  replaced  by
187       their  value.  For constant expression, this is wanted, but strings and
188       registers that might change between calls of the macro must be protect‐
189       ed  from  being  evaluated.   This  is most easily done by doubling the
190       backslash that introduces the escape sequence.  This doubling  is  most
191       important  for the positional parameters.  For example, to print infor‐
192       mation on the arguments that were passed to the macro to the  terminal,
193       define a macro named `.print_args', say.
194
195              .ds midpart was called with
196              .de print_args
197              .  tm \f[I]\\$0\f[] \\*[midpart] \\n[.$] arguments:
198              .  tm \\$*
199              ..
200
201       When calling this macro by
202
203              .print_args arg1 arg2
204
205       the following text is printed to the terminal:
206              print_args was called with the following 2 arguments:
207              arg1 arg2
208
209       Let's analyze each backslash in the macro definition.  As the position‐
210       al parameters and the number of arguments will change with each call of
211       the  macro  their  leading  backslash must be doubled, which results in
212       \\$* and \\[.$].  The same applies to the macro name because  it  could
213       be called with an alias name, so \\$0.
214
215       On the other hand, midpart is a constant string, it will not change, so
216       no doubling for \*[midpart].  The \f escape  sequences  are  predefined
217       groff  elements  for setting the font within the text.  Of course, this
218       behavior will not change, so no doubling with \f[I] and \f[].
219
220   Draft Mode
221       Writing groff macros is easy when the escaping mechanism is temporarily
222       disabled.   In groff, this is done by enclosing the macro definition(s)
223       into a pair of .eo and .ec requests.  Then the body in the macro  defi‐
224       nition  is  just  like a normal part of the document — text enhanced by
225       calls of requests, macros, strings, registers, etc.  For  example,  the
226       code above can be written in a simpler way by
227
228              .eo
229              .ds midpart was called with
230              .de print_args
231              .  tm \f[I]\$0\f[] \*[midpart] \n[.$] arguments:
232              .  tm \$*
233              ..
234              .ec
235
236       Unfortunately,  draft  mode cannot be used universally.  Although it is
237       good enough for defining normal macros, draft mode will fail  with  ad‐
238       vanced  applications,  such  as  indirectly defined strings, registers,
239       etc.  An optimal way is to define and test all macros in draft mode and
240       then do the backslash doubling as a final step; do not forget to remove
241       the .eo request.
242
243   Tips for Macro Definitions
244       · Start every line with a dot, for example, by using the groff  request
245         .nop  for  text lines, or write your own macro that handles also text
246         lines with a leading dot.
247
248         .de Text
249         .  if (\\n[.$] == 0) \
250         .    return
251         . nop \)\\$*[rs]
252         ..
253
254       · Write a comment macro that works both for copy-in and draft mode; for
255         as  escaping  is  off  in draft mode, trouble might occur when normal
256         comments are used.  For example, the following macro just ignores its
257         arguments, so it acts like a comment line:
258
259         .de c
260         ..
261         .c This is like a comment line.
262
263       · In  long  macro definitions, make ample use of comment lines or empty
264         lines for a better structuring.
265
266       · To increase readability, use groff's  indentation  facility  for  re‐
267         quests and macro calls (arbitrary whitespace after the leading dot).
268
269   Diversions
270       Diversions  can  be  used  to  realize  quite advanced programming con‐
271       structs.  They are comparable to pointers to large data  structures  in
272       the C programming language, but their usage is quite different.
273
274       In their simplest form, diversions are multi-line strings, but they get
275       their power when diversions are used dynamically  within  macros.   The
276       information  stored  in a diversion can be retrieved by calling the di‐
277       version just like a macro.
278
279       Most of the problems arising with diversions can be avoided if you  are
280       conscious  about  the  fact  that  diversions always deal with complete
281       lines.  If diversions are used  when  the  line  buffer  has  not  been
282       flashed,  strange  results  are produced; not knowing this, many people
283       get desperate about diversions.  To ensure that a diversion works, line
284       breaks  should be added at the right places.  To be on the secure side,
285       enclose everything that has to do with diversions into a pair  of  line
286       breaks;  for example, by amply using .br requests.  This rule should be
287       applied to diversion definition, both inside and outside,  and  to  all
288       calls of diversions.  This is a bit of overkill, but it works nicely.
289
290       [If  you really need diversions which should ignore the current partial
291       line, use environments to save the current partial line and/or use  the
292       .box request.]
293
294       The  most  powerful  feature  using  diversions is to start a diversion
295       within a macro definition and end it within another macro.  Then every‐
296       thing  between each call of this macro pair is stored within the diver‐
297       sion and can be manipulated from within the macros.
298

FILES

300       All macro names must be named name.tmac to fully use  the  tmac  mecha‐
301       nism.   tmac.name as with   classical packages is possible as well, but
302       deprecated.
303
304       The macro files are kept in the tmac  directories;  a  colon  separated
305       list of these constitutes the tmac path.
306
307       The search sequence for macro files is (in that order):
308
309       · the directories specified with troff/groff's -M command line option
310
311       · the directories given in the $GROFF_TMAC_PATH environment variable
312
313       · the  current  directory  (only if in unsafe mode, which is enabled by
314         the -U command line switch)
315
316       · the home directory
317
318       · a platform-specific directory,  being  /usr/lib64/groff/site-tmac  in
319         this installation
320
321       · a     site-specific     (platform-independent)    directory,    being
322         /usr/share/groff/site-tmac in this installation
323
324       · the main tmac directory, being /usr/share/groff/1.18.1.4/tmac in this
325         installation
326

ENVIRONMENT

328       $GROFF_TMAC_PATH
329              A  colon  separated list of additional tmac directories in which
330              to search for macro files.  See the previous section for  a  de‐
331              tailed description.
332

AUTHOR

334       Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
335
336       This document is distributed under the terms of the FDL (GNU Free Docu‐
337       mentation License) version 1.1 or later.  You should  have  received  a
338       copy of the FDL on your system, it is also available on-line at the GNU
339       copyleft site ⟨http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html⟩.
340
341       This document is part of groff, the  GNU  roff  distribution.   It  was
342       written  by  Bernd Warken ⟨bwarken@mayn.de⟩; it is maintained by Werner
343       Lemberg ⟨wl@gnu.org⟩.
344

SEE ALSO

346       A complete reference for all parts of the groff system is found in  the
347       groff info(1) file.
348
349       groff(1)
350              an overview of the groff system.
351
352       groff_man(7),
353       groff_mdoc(7),
354       groff_me(7),
355       groff_mm(7),
356       groff_mom(7),
357       groff_ms(7),
358       groff_www(7).
359              the groff tmac macro packages.
360
361       groff(7)
362              the groff language.
363
364       The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard is available at the FHS web site
365http://www.pathname.com/fhs/⟩.
366
367
368
369Groff Version 1.18.1.4          21 August 2002                   GROFF_TMAC(5)
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