On Sun, Apr 12, 2020 at 01:27:54PM -0500, Peng Yu wrote:
> { echo ".ll 14.2i"; echo ".nr LL 14.2i"; cat
> '/usr/share/man/man1/man.1'; } | tbl | /usr/bin/groff -Wall -mtty-char
> -Tascii -mandoc -c | less -is
>
> When I use the above command (Mac OS X groff), it works fine.
>
> { echo ".ll 14.2i"; echo ".nr LL 14.2i"; cat
> '/usr/share/man/man1/man.1'; } | tbl | groff -Wall -mtty-char -Tascii
> -mandoc -c | less -is
>
> When I use the above command (GNU groff), I see something like this.
>
> ESC[1m-M pathESC[0m
>
> What options are needed to make GNU groff behave the same as Mac OS X
> groff? Thanks.
>
Using on CentOS release 6.10 (Final)
GNU groff version 1.18.1.4
Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
less 436
Copyright (C) 1984-2009 Mark Nudelman
show no escapes on my terminal.
Maybe you have to add the option -R to "less" to interpret the
escapes.
Directing the output to a file could easy the reading (displaying) it
with different commands,
like an editor, "less -r", "less -R", cat, etc.
N.B.
For the meaning of escapes,
see for example the man page "console_codes(4)" or
look for the term "escape"
in you man database (man -k ...)).
For knowing the diference, you have to read the changelog from your
distribution.
--
Bjarni I. Gislason