On Sun, Apr 04, 2021, G. Branden Robinson wrote:
> I think the sentence
>
>Explicitly hyphenated words such as "mother-in-law" are eligible for
>breaking after each of their hyphens when GNU 'troff' fills lines.
>
> does most of the work you're asking for...
It does, but for clarity and
Am Sonntag, 4. April 2021, 08:37:02 CEST schrieb G. Branden Robinson:
> At 2021-04-02T17:16:28-0400, Cool Kiwi wrote:
> > Hello! I am new to GNU troff and I would like to try it. But, when I
> > went to download it, I couldn't find a 64 bit version of groff to use.
> > Do you have 64 bit version (e
Hi, Jim!
At 2021-03-26T15:20:11-0700, Jim Avera wrote:
> I'm trying to use .substring to remove the first character of a
> string, leaving behind whatever follows, even if that is nothing (i.e.
> the string had only one character).
>
> .substring str 1
>
> or
>
> .length n2 "\*[str]
> .nr