Branden, That's a pretty good guide. Thank you for your effort! When you say points are '(about 1/72")', it probably doesn't hurt to go the extra mile (!) in precision and say '(1/72.27")'. It's shorter (no need for 'about') and more correct. Also I would spell out inches here, as the double-prime is used for many things. I could not get \*< ... \*> to generate subscripts in groff 1.22.4. Is this something in the development version? --d On Saturday, October 31, 2020, 05:41:30 AM EDT, G. Branden Robinson <g.branden.robin...@gmail.com> wrote: Happy Halloween!
Ready for something on the gory and disturbing side? I feel like I'm about 40% of my way through a huge update of Larry Kollar's ms.ms document, as promised earlier this year. I've done most of the work over the past 2-3 weekends; the promise of a release kicked my rear into gear. I've got portions of the document to a fairly high degree of polish, particularly toward the start. A good deal of it came pre-polished from Larry, of course. Then I started discovering just how much is of our s.tmac is undocumented, and how much confusion there has historically been over what, _exactly_, constitutes the historical ms interface. Berkeley extensions to it seem to have gone unrecognied as such; I think this may be because DWB troff became promiscuous with respect to what it merged, and AT&T got credit for everything that was stuck in (perhaps true of the DWB man macros as well--but groff's man(7) implementation has always been stripped down relative to that). Anyway, I'd appreciate feedback, positive or negative, on the current state of affairs. You don't have to tell me that the boxed "GBR"s and the comments next to them have no place in a finished manual--they are my TODO markers. :) Also there is an Easter Egg in the document, which seemed apropos for Halloween. (?) Maybe some other surprises, too, depending on your disposition (and level of comfort with ms). Source and PDF are attached. Regards, Branden