On Tue, 18 Mar 2014 18:13:11 -0400 "Eric S. Raymond" <e...@thyrsus.com> wrote:
> * Strange, irregular, archaic-seeming markup design compared to XML or > even TeX. Brian Kernignan called it "rebarbative" in *1979*. Yes, and typeset "D is for Digital" with groff in 2011. Also available for Kindle. More telling is the next paragraph, "My first thought (a thought shared by many others) was that this would be a glorious opportunity to replace TROFF with a new formatting language: better designed, easier to work with, and of course much faster. This remains a desirable goal, but, after quite a bit of thought spread over several years, I am still not really much closer to a better design, let alone an implementation." I likewise have yet to see a better syntax. I've seen different, used DocBook, digested the semantic-markup argument. I've not seen better. I do not understand why anyone would say XML is better. It was not intended as a syntax for manual input, and looks it. It does its level best to hide the prose amid the tags. If that's modern, then modern has much to learn from archaic-seeming. I apologize for going off-topic. It's just that I wouldn't want Kernighan's meaning to be misconstrued. He wasn't condemning troff syntax. He was admitting, however objectionable it might be, that he found it impossible to improve on. As has everyone since, claims to the contrary notwithstanding. --jkl