VGRIND(1) BSD Reference Manual VGRIND(1)NAMEvgrind - grind nice listings of programs
SYNOPSISvgrind [-] [-T dev] [-d file] [-f] [-h header] [-l language] [-n] [-sn]
[-x] name ...
DESCRIPTION
The vgrind program formats the named program sources in a nice style us-
ing groff(1). Comments are placed in italics, keywords in bold face, and
the name of the current function is listed down the margin of each page
as it is encountered.
The vgrind program runs in two basic modes, filter mode (see the -f op-
tion) or regular mode. In filter mode vgrind acts as a filter in a man-
ner similar to tbl(1). The standard input is passed directly to the
standard output except for lines bracketed by the groff-like macros:
.vS starts processing
.vE ends processing
These lines are formatted as described above. The output from this fil-
ter can be passed to groff or troff for output. There need be no partic-
ular ordering with eqn(1) or tbl(1).
In regular mode vgrind accepts input files, processes them, and passes
them to groff(1) for output.
In both modes vgrind passes any lines beginning with a decimal point
without conversion.
The options are:
- forces input to be taken from standard input (default if -f
is specified)
-T dev prepares output for the specified device (the default de-
vice is the default groff output device)
-d file specifies an alternate language definitions file (default
is /usr/share/misc/vgrindefs)
-f forces filter mode
-h header specifies a particular header to put on every output page
(default is the file name)
-l specifies the language to use. Currently known are PASCAL
(-lp), MODEL (-lm), C (-lc or the default), CSH (-lcsh),
SHELL (-lsh), RATFOR (-lr), MODULA2 (-lmod2), YACC
(-lyacc), LDL (-lldl), LISP (-lisp), C++ (-lc++), PERL
(-lperl), and ICON (-lI).
-n forces no keyword bolding
-s specifies a point size to use on output (exactly the same
as the argument of a .ps)
-x outputs the index file in a ``pretty'' format. The index
file itself is produced whenever vgrind is run with a file
called index in the current directory. The index of func-
tion definitions can then be run off by giving vgrind the
-x option and the file index as argument.
FILES
index file where source for index is created
/usr/share/tmac/tmac.vgrind macro package
/usr/libexec/vfontedpr preprocessor
/usr/share/misc/vgrindefs language descriptions
SEE ALSOgroff(1), troff(1), getcap(3), vgrindefs(5)BUGS
Vfontedpr assumes that a certain programming style is followed:
For C - function names can be preceded on a line only by spaces, tabs, or
an asterisk. The parenthesized arguments must also be on the same line.
For PASCAL - function names need to appear on the same line as the key-
words function or procedure.
For MODEL - function names need to appear on the same line as the key-
words is beginproc.
If these conventions are not followed, the indexing and marginal function
name comment mechanisms will fail.
More generally, arbitrary formatting styles for programs mostly look bad.
The use of spaces to align source code fails miserably; if you plan to
vgrind your program you should use tabs. This is somewhat inevitable
since the font used by vgrind is variable width.
The mechanism of ctags(1) in recognizing functions should be used here.
Filter mode does not work in documents using the -me or -ms macros. (So
what use is it anyway?)
HISTORY
The vgrind command appeared in 3.0BSD.
4th Berkeley Distribution June 6, 1993 2