groff_out man page on IRIX

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GROFF_OUT(5)					     GROFF_OUT(5)

NAME
       groff_out - groff intermediate output format

DESCRIPTION
       This manual page describes the format output by GNU troff.
       The output format used by GNU troff  is	very  similar  to
       that  used by Unix device-independent troff. Only the dif
       ferences are documented here.

       The argument to the s command is in scaled  points  (units
       of points/n, where n is the argument to the sizescale com
       mand  in the DESC file.)	 The  argument	to  the	 x Height
       command is also in scaled points.

       The first three output commands are guaranteed to be:

	      x T device
	      x res n h v
	      x init

       If  the	tcommand  line is present in the DESC file, troff
       will use the following two commands

       txxx   xxx is any sequence of characters terminated  by	a
	      space  or	 a newline; the first character should be
	      printed at the current position,	the  the  current
	      horizontal  position  should  be	increased  by the
	      width of the first character, and so  on	for  each
	      character.   The	width  of  the	character is that
	      given in the font file,  appropriately  scaled  for
	      the current point size, and rounded so that it is a
	      multiple of  the	horizontal  resolution.	  Special
	      characters cannot be printed using this command.

       un xxx This  is	same  as  the t command except that after
	      printing each  character,	 the  current  horizontal
	      position	is  increased  by the sum of the width of
	      that character and n.

       Note that single characters can have the eighth	bit  set,
       as can the names of fonts and special characters.

       The  names  of  characters  and	fonts can be of arbitrary
       length; drivers should not assume that they will	 be  only
       two characters long.

       When  a	character  is  to be printed, that character will
       always be in the current font.  Unlike  device-independent
       troff,  it  is not necessary for drivers to search special
       fonts to find a character.

       The x device control command has been extended.

       x u n  If n is 1, start underlining of spaces.  If n is 0,
	      stop underlining of spaces.  This is needed for the
	      cu request in nroff mode and is ignored  otherwise.

       The D drawing command has been extended.	 These extensions
       will not be used by GNU pic if the -n option is given.

       Df n\n Set the shade of gray to be used for filling  solid
	      objects  to  n;  n must be an integer between 0 and
	      1000, where 0 corresponds solid white and	 1000  to
	      solid  black,  and  values in between correspond to
	      intermediate shades of gray.  This applies only  to
	      solid  circles,  solid ellipses and solid polygons.
	      By default, a level of 1000 will be used.	 Whatever
	      color  a	solid  object  has,  it should completely
	      obscure everything beneath  it.	A  value  greater
	      than  1000  or  less  than 0 can also be used: this
	      means fill with the shade of gray that is currently
	      being  used for lines and text.  Normally this will
	      be black, but some drivers may  provide  a  way  of
	      changing this.

       DC d\n Draw  a  solid circle with a diameter of d with the
	      leftmost point at the current position.

       DE dx dy\n
	      Draw a solid ellipse with a horizontal diameter  of
	      dx  and a vertical diameter of dy with the leftmost
	      point at the current position.

       Dp dx1 dy1 dx2 dy2 ... dxn dyn\n
	      Draw a polygon with, for i=1,...,n+1, the i-th ver
	      tex  at the current position +j=1(dxj,dyj).  At the
	      moment, GNU pic only uses this command to	 generate
	      triangles and rectangles.

       DP dx1 dy1 dx2 dy2 ... dxn dyn\n
	      Like Dp but draw a solid rather than outlined poly
	      gon.

       Dt n\n Set the current line thickness to n machine  units.
	      Traditionally  Unix troff drivers use a line thick
	      ness  proportional  to  the  current  point   size;
	      drivers should continue to do this if no Dt command
	      has been given, or if a Dt command has  been  given
	      with  a  negative	 value	of  n.	A zero value of n
	      selects the smallest available line thickness.

       A difficulty arises in how the current position should  be
       changed	after  the  execution of these commands.  This is
       not of great importance since the code  generated  by  GNU
       pic  does  not depend on this.  Given a drawing command of
       the form

	      \D'c x1 y1 x2 y2 ... xn yn'

       where c is not one of c, e, l, a or  ~,	Unix  troff  will
       treat each of the xi as a horizontal quantity, and each of
       the yi as a vertical quantity and  will	assume	that  the
       width of the drawn object is i=1xi, and that the height is
       i=1yi.  (The assumption about the height can  be	 seen  by
       examining  the  st  and	sb registers after using such a D
       command in a \w escape sequence.)  This	rule  also  holds
       for  all	 the original drawing commands with the exception
       of De.  For the sake of compatibility GNU troff also  fol
       lows  this rule, even though it produces an ugly result in
       the case of the Df, Dt, and, to a lesser extent,	 DE  com
       mands.  Thus after executing a D command of the form

	      Dc x1 y1 x2 y2 ... xn yn\n

       the current position should be increased by (i=1xi,i=1yi).

       There is a continuation convention which permits the argu
       ment   to  the  x X  command  to	 contain  newlines:  when
       outputting the argument to the x X command, GNU troff will
       follow each newline in the argument with a + character (as
       usual, it will terminate the entire argument with  a  new
       line);  thus if the line after the line containing the x X
       command starts with +, then the newline	ending	the  line
       containing  the	x X  command should be treated as part of
       the argument to the x X command, the + should be	 ignored,
       and the part of the line following the + should be treated
       like the part of the line following the x X command.

SEE ALSO
       groff_font(5)

Groff Version 1.17.2	   6 April 2001		     GROFF_OUT(5)
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