ROFF
Section: Environments, Tables, and Troff Macros (7)
Updated: 4 November 2014
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NAME
roff - concepts and history of roff typesetting
DESCRIPTION
roff
is the general name for a set of text formatting programs, known under
names like
troff,
nroff,
ditroff,
groff,
etc.
A
roff
system consists of an extensible text formatting language and a set of
programs for printing and converting to other text formats.
Unix-like operating systems distribute a
roff
system as a core package.
The most common
roff
system today is the free software implementation CR]GNU]
roff,
groff(1).
groff
implements the look-and-feel and functionality of its ancestors, with many
extensions.
The ancestry of
roff
is described in section
HISTORY.
In this document, the term
roff
always refers to the general class of roff programs, not to the
roff
command provided in early UNIX systems.
In spite of its age,
roff
is in wide use today, for example, the manual pages on UNIX systems
(
man~pages),
many software books, system documentation, standards, and corporate
documents are written in roff.
The
roff
output for text devices is still unmatched, and its graphical output
has the same quality as other free type-setting programs and is better
than some of the commercial systems.
roff
is used to format UNIX
manual pages,
(or
man pages),
the standard documentation system on many UNIX-derived operating systems.
This document describes the history of the development of the
roff system;
some usage aspects common to all
roff
versions, details on the
roff
pipeline, which is usually hidden behind front-ends like
groff(1);
a general overview of the formatting language; some tips for editing
roff
files; and many pointers to further readings.
HISTORY
Document formatting by computer dates back to the 1960s.
The
roff
system itself is intimately connected to the Unix operating system, but its
roots go back to the earlier operating systems CTSS and Multics.
The Predecessor RUNOFF
roff[aq]s
ancestor
RUNOFF
was written in the MAD language by
Jerry Saltzer
for the
Compatible Time Sharing System (CTSS),
a project of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in 1963 and
1964 [en] note that CTSS commands were all uppercase.
In 1965, MIT[aq]s Project MAC teamed with Bell Telephone Laboratories
(BTL) and General Electric to begin the
Multics
system
A command called
runoff
was written for Multics in the late 60s in the BCPL language, by
Bob Morris,
Doug McIlroy,
and other members of the Multics team.
Like its CTSS ancestor, Multics
runoff
formatted an input file consisting of text and command lines; commands began
with a period and were two letters.
Output from these commands was to terminal devices such as IBM Selectric
terminals.
Multics
runoff
had additional features added, such as the ability to do two-pass
formatting; it became the main format for Multics documentation and text
processing.
BCPL and
runoff
were ported to the GCOS system at Bell Labs when BTL left the development of
Multics.
There is a free archive about
historical RUNOFF
documents.
You can get it anonymously by the shell command
-
$git clone https://github.com/bwarken/RUNOFF_historical.git
As well, there is a new project for writing a program that can read
RUNOFF files ,
but it does not yet work so far.
You can get an early version anonymously by the shell command
-
$git clone https://github.com/bwarken/runoff.git
The Classical nroff/troff System
At BTL, there was a need to drive the
Graphic Systems CAT
typesetter, a graphical output device from a PDP-11 computer running Unix.
As
runoff
was too limited for this task it was further developed into a more
powerful text formatting system by
Joseph F. Ossanna,
who already programmed several runoff ports.
The name
runoff
was shortened to
roff.
The greatly enlarged language of Ossanna[aq]s version already
included all elements of a full
roff system.
All modern
roff
systems try to implement compatibility to this system.
So Joe Ossanna can be called the father of all
roff
systems.
This first
roff system
had three formatter programs.
- troff
-
(typesetter roff/)
generated a graphical output for the
CAT
typesetter as its only device.
- nroff
-
produced text output suitable for terminals and line printers.
- roff
-
was the reimplementation of the former
runoff
program with its limited features; this program was abandoned in later
versions.
Today, the name
roff
is used to refer to a
troff/:nroff
system as a whole.
Ossanna[aq]s first version was written in the PDP-11 assembly
language and released in 1973.
Brian Kernighan
joined the
roff
development by rewriting it in the C~programming language.
The C~version was released in 1975.
The syntax of the formatting language of the
nroff/:troff
programs was documented in the famous
Troff User[aq]s Manual [CSTR~#54],
first published in 1976, with further revisions up to 1992 by Brian
Kernighan.
This document is the specification of the
classical troff.
All later
roff
systems tried to establish compatibility with this specification.
After Ossanna[aq]s death in 1977, Kernighan went on with developing
troff.
In the late 1970s, Kernighan equipped
troff
with a general interface to support more devices, the intermediate
output format, and the postprocessor system.
This completed the structure of a
roff system
as it is still in use today; see section
USING ROFF.
In 1979, these novelties were described in the paper
[CSTR~#97].
This new
troff
version is the basis for all existing newer troff systems, including
groff.
On some systems, this
device independent troff
got a binary of its own, called
ditroff(7).
All modern
troff
programs already provide the full
ditroff
capabilities automatically.
Availability
The source code of both the ancient Unix and classical
troff
weren[aq]t available for two decades.
Meanwhile, it is accessible again (on-line) for non-commercial use,
cf. section
SEE ALSO.
groff [em] free GNU roff
The most important free
roff
project was the CR]GNU] implementation of
troff,
written from scratch by
James Clark
and put under the
GNU Public License
It was called
groff
(CR]GNU]
roff).
See
groff(1)
for an overview.
The
groff
system is still actively developed.
It is compatible to the classical
troff,
but many extensions were added.
It is the first
roff
system that is available on almost all operating systems [em] and it
is free.
This makes
groff
the de-facto
roff
standard today.
Free Heirloom roff
An alternative is
Gunnar Ritter[aq]s Heirloom roff project
project, started in 2005, which provides enhanced versions of the various
roff tools found in the OpenSolaris and Plan~9 operating systems, now
available under free licenses.
You can get this package with the shell command:
-
[Do] git clone https://github.com/n-t-roff/heirloom-doctools
Moreover, one finds there the
Original Documenter[aq]s Workbench Release 3.3
USING ROFF
Most people won[aq]t even notice that they are actually using
roff.
When you read a system manual page (man page)
roff
is working in the background.
roff
documents can be viewed with a native viewer called
xditview(1x),
a standard program of the X window distribution, see
X(7x).
But using
roff
explicitly isn[aq]t difficult either.
Some
roff
implementations provide wrapper programs that make it easy to use the
roff
system on the shell command line.
For example, the CR]GNU]
roff
implementation
groff(1)
provides command line options to avoid the long command pipes of
classical
troff;
a program
grog(1)
tries to guess from the document which arguments should be used for a
run of
groff;
people who do not like specifying command line options should try the
groffer(1)
program for graphically displaying
groff
files and man pages.
The roff Pipe
Each
roff
system consists of preprocessors,
roff
formatter programs, and a set of device postprocessors.
This concept makes heavy use of the
piping
mechanism, that is, a series of programs is called one after the other,
where the output of each program in the queue is taken as the input
for the next program.
-
cat I]fileP] | ... | I]preprocP] | ... | troff I]optionsP] | I]postprocP]
The preprocessors generate
roff
code that is fed into a
roff
formatter (e.g.
troff),
which in turn generates
intermediate output
that is fed into a device postprocessor program for printing or final
output.
All of these parts use programming languages of their own; each
language is totally unrelated to the other parts.
Moreover,
roff
macro packages that were tailored for special purposes can be
included.
Most
roff
documents use the macros of some package, intermixed with code for one
or more preprocessors, spiced with some elements from the plain
roff
language.
The full power of the
roff
formatting language is seldom needed by users; only programmers of
macro packages need to know about the gory details.
Preprocessors
A
roff
preprocessor is any program that generates output that syntactically
obeys the rules of the
roff
formatting language.
Each preprocessor defines a language of its own that is translated
into
roff
code when run through the preprocessor program.
Parts written in these languages may be included within a
roff
document; they are identified by special
roff
requests or macros.
Each document that is enhanced by preprocessor code must be run
through all corresponding preprocessors before it is fed into the
actual
roff
formatter program, for the formatter just ignores all alien code.
The preprocessor programs extract and transform only the document
parts that are determined for them.
There are a lot of free and commercial
roff
preprocessors.
Some of them aren[aq]t available on each system, but there is a small
set of preprocessors that are considered as an integral part of each
roff
system.
The classical preprocessors are
-
tbl | for tables.
|
eqn | for mathematical formulae.
|
pic | for drawing diagrams.
|
refer | for bibliographic references.
|
soelim | for including macro files from standard locations.
|
chem | for drawing chemical formul[ae].
|
Other known preprocessors that are not available on all systems
include
-
grap | for constructing graphical elements.
|
grn | for including gremlin(1) pictures.
|
Formatter Programs
A
roff formatter
is a program that parses documents written in the
roff
formatting language or uses some of the
roff
macro packages.
It generates
intermediate output,
which is intended to be fed into a single device postprocessor that
must be specified by a command-line option to the formatter program.
The documents must have been run through all necessary preprocessors
before.
The output produced by a
roff
formatter is represented in yet another language, the
intermediate output format
or
troff output.
This language was first specified in
[CSTR~#97];
its CR]GNU] extension is documented in
groff_out(5).
The intermediate output language is a kind of assembly language
compared to the high-level
roff
language.
The generated intermediate output is optimized for a special device,
but the language is the same for every device.
The
roff
formatter is the heart of the
roff
system.
The traditional
roff
had two formatters,
nroff
for text devices and
troff
for graphical devices.
Often, the name
troff
is used as a general term to refer to both formatters.
Devices and Postprocessors
Devices are hardware interfaces like printers, text or graphical
terminals, etc., or software interfaces such as a conversion into a
different text or graphical format.
A
roff
postprocessor is a program that transforms
troff
output into a form suitable for a special device.
The
roff
postprocessors are like device drivers for the output target.
For each device there is a postprocessor program that fits the device
optimally.
The postprocessor parses the generated intermediate output and
generates device-specific code that is sent directly to the device.
The names of the devices and the postprocessor programs are not fixed
because they greatly depend on the software and hardware abilities of
the actual computer.
For example, the classical devices mentioned in
[CSTR~#54]
have greatly changed since the classical times.
The old hardware doesn[aq]t exist any longer and the old graphical
conversions were quite imprecise when compared to their modern
counterparts.
For example, the Postscript device
post
in classical
troff
had a resolution of 720 units per inch, while
groff[aq]s
ps
device has 72000, a refinement of factor 100.
Today the operating systems provide device drivers for most
printer-like hardware, so it isn[aq]t necessary to write a special
hardware postprocessor for each printer.
ROFF PROGRAMMING
Documents using
roff
are normal text files decorated by
roff
formatting elements.
The
roff
formatting language is quite powerful; it is almost a full programming
language and provides elements to enlarge the language.
With these, it became possible to develop macro packages that are
tailored for special applications.
Such macro packages are much handier than plain
roff.
So most people will choose a macro package without worrying about the
internals of the
roff
language.
Macro Packages
Macro packages are collections of macros that are suitable to format a
special kind of documents in a convenient way.
This greatly eases the usage of
roff.
The macro definitions of a package are kept in a file called
name.tmac
(classically
tmac.name).
All tmac files are stored in one or more directories at standardized
positions.
Details on the naming of macro packages and their placement is found
in
groff_tmac(5).
A macro package that is to be used in a document can be announced to
the formatter by the command line option
-m,
see
troff(1),
or it can be specified within a document using the file inclusion
requests of the
roff
language, see
groff(7).
Famous classical macro packages are
man
for traditional man pages,
mdoc
for CR]BSD]-style manual pages;
the macro sets for books, articles, and letters are
me
(probably from the first name of its creator
Eric
Allman),
ms
(from
Manuscript Macros/),
and
mm
(from
Memorandum Macros/).
The roff Formatting Language
The classical
roff
formatting language is documented in the
Troff User[aq]s Manual
[CSTR~#54].
The
roff
language is a full programming language providing requests, definition
of macros, escape sequences, string variables, number or size
registers, and flow controls.
Requests
are the predefined basic formatting commands similar to the commands
at the shell prompt.
The user can define request-like elements using predefined
roff
elements.
These are then called
macros.
A document writer will not note any difference in usage for requests
or macros; both are written on a line on their own starting with a dot.
Escape sequences
are
roff
elements starting with a backslash
They can be inserted anywhere, also in the midst of text in a line.
They are used to implement various features, including the insertion of
non-CR]ASCII] characters with
font changes with
in-line comments with
the escaping of special control characters like
and many other features.
Strings
are variables that can store a string.
A string is stored by the
.ds
request.
The stored string can be retrieved later by the
[rs]*
escape sequence.
Registers
store numbers and sizes.
A register can be set with the request
.nr
and its value can be retrieved by the escape sequence
[rs]n.
FILE NAME EXTENSIONS
Manual pages (man pages) take the section number as a file name
extension, e.g., the filename for this document is
roff.7,
i.e., it is kept in section~7
of the man pages.
The classical macro packages take the package name as an extension, e.g.
file.me
for a document using the
me
macro package,
file.mm
for
mm,
file.ms
for
ms,
file.pic
for
pic
files,
etc.
But there is no general naming scheme for
roff
documents, though
file.tr
for
troff file
is seen now and then.
Maybe there should be a standardization for the filename extensions of
roff
files.
File name extensions can be very handy in conjunction with the
less(1)
pager.
It provides the possibility to feed all input into a command-line pipe
that is specified in the shell environment variable
LESSOPEN.
This process is not well documented, so here an example:
-
LESSOPEN='|lesspipe %s'
where
lesspipe
is either a system supplied command or a shell script of your own.
More details for
file name extensions
can be found at
groff_filenames(7).
EDITING ROFF
The best program for editing a
roff
document is Emacs (or Xemacs), see
emacs(1).
It provides an
nroff
mode that is suitable for all kinds of
roff
dialects.
This mode can be activated by the following methods.
When editing a file within Emacs the mode can be changed by typing
[oq]
M-x nroff-mode[cq],
where
M-x
means to hold down the
Meta
key (or
Alt)
and hitting the
x~key
at the same time.
But it is also possible to have the mode automatically selected when
the file is loaded into the editor.
- *
-
The most general method is to include the following 3 comment lines at
the end of the file.
-
-
.[rs]" Local Variables:.[rs]" mode: nroff.[rs]" End:
- *
-
There is a set of file name extensions, e.g. the man pages that
trigger the automatic activation of the
nroff
mode.
- *
-
Theoretically, it is possible to write the sequence
-
-
.[rs]" -*- nroff -*-
-
as the first line of a file to have it started in
nroff
mode when loaded.
Unfortunately, some applications such as the
man
program are confused by this; so this is deprecated.
All
roff
formatters provide automated line breaks and horizontal and vertical
spacing.
In order to not disturb this, the following tips can be helpful.
- *
-
Never include empty or blank lines in a
roff
document.
Instead, use the empty request (a line consisting of a dot only) or a
line comment
.[rs]if a structuring element is needed.
- *
-
Never start a line with whitespace because this can lead to unexpected
behavior.
Indented paragraphs can be constructed in a controlled way by
roff
requests.
- *
-
Start each sentence on a line of its own, for the spacing after a dot
is handled differently depending on whether it terminates an
abbreviation or a sentence.
To distinguish both cases, do a line break after each sentence.
- *
-
To additionally use the auto-fill mode in Emacs, it is best to insert
an empty
roff
request (a line consisting of a dot only) after each sentence.
The following example shows how optimal
roff
editing could look.
-
This is an example for a .I roff document. .
This is the next sentence in the same paragraph. .
This is a longer sentence stretching over several lines; abbreviations
like [oq]cf.[cq] are easily identified because the dot is not
followed by a line break. . In the output, this will still go to
the same paragraph.
Besides Emacs, some other editors provide
nroff
style files too, e.g.
vim(1),
an extension of the
vi(1)
program.
SEE ALSO
There is a lot of documentation on
roff.
The original papers on classical
troff
are still available, and all aspects of
groff
are documented in great detail.
Internet sites
- troff.org
-
The historical troff site
provides an overview and pointers to all historical aspects of
roff.
- Multics
-
The Multics site
contains a lot of information on the MIT projects, CTSS, Multics,
early Unix, including
runoff;
especially useful are a glossary and the many links to ancient
documents.
- Unix Archive
-
The Ancient Unixes Archive
provides the source code and some binaries of the ancient Unixes
(including the source code of
troff
and its documentation) that were made public by Caldera since 2001,
e.g. of the famous Unix version~7 for PDP-11 at the
Unix V7 site
- Developers at AT&T Bell Labs
-
Bell Labs Computing and Mathematical Sciences Research
provides a search facility for tracking information on the early
developers.
- Plan 9
-
The Plan~9 operating system
by AT&T Bell Labs.
- runoff
-
Jerry Saltzer[aq]s home page
stores some documents using the ancient RUNOFF formatting language.
- CSTR Papers
-
The Bell Labs CSTR site
stores the original
troff
manuals (CSTR #54, #97, #114, #116, #122) and famous historical
documents on programming.
- CR]GNU] I]roff]
-
The groff web site
provides the free
roff
implementation
groff,
the actual standard
roff.
Historical roff Documentation
Many classical
troff
documents are still available on-line.
The two main manuals of the
troff
language are
- [CSTR~#54]
-
J. F. Ossanna,
Nroff/:Troff User[aq]s Manual
Bell Labs, 1976; revised by Brian Kernighan, 1992.
- [CSTR~#97]
-
Brian Kernighan,
A Typesetter-independent TROFF
Bell Labs, 1981, revised March 1982.
The [lq]little language[rq]
roff
papers are
- [CSTR~#114]
-
Jon L. Bentley and Brian W. Kernighan,
GRAP [en] A Language for Typesetting Graphs
Bell Labs, August 1984.
- [CSTR~#116]
-
Brian W. Kernighan,
PIC [en] A Graphics Language for Typesetting
Bell Labs, December 1984.
- [CSTR~#122]
-
J. L. Bentley, L. W. Jelinski, and B. W. Kernighan,
CHEM [en] A Program for Typesetting Chemical Structure Diagrams,
Computers and Chemistry
Bell Labs, April 1986.
You can get an archive with most
classical roff documentation
as reasonable
PDF files
at
github
using the
shell command
-
$ git clone https://github.com/bwarken/roff_classical.git
Manual Pages
Due to its complex structure, a full
roff
system has many man pages, each describing a single aspect of
roff.
Unfortunately, there is no general naming scheme for the documentation
among the different
roff
implementations.
In
groff,
the man page
groff(1)
contains a survey of all documentation available in
groff.
On other systems, you are on your own, but
troff(1)
might be a good starting point.
COPYING
Copyright [co] 2000-2014
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
under the terms of the FDL (GNU Free Documentation License) Version
1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
with the Invariant Sections being the .au and .co macro definitions,
with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts.
A copy of the Free Documentation License is included as a file called
FDL in the main directory of the groff source package.
The license text is also available on-line at the
GNU copyleft site
AUTHORS
This man-page was written by
Bernd Warken
and is maintained by
Werner Lemberg
Index
- NAME
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- HISTORY
-
- The Predecessor RUNOFF
-
- The Classical nroff/troff System
-
- Availability
-
- groff [em] free GNU roff
-
- Free Heirloom roff
-
- USING ROFF
-
- The roff Pipe
-
- Preprocessors
-
- Formatter Programs
-
- Devices and Postprocessors
-
- ROFF PROGRAMMING
-
- Macro Packages
-
- The roff Formatting Language
-
- FILE NAME EXTENSIONS
-
- EDITING ROFF
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- Internet sites
-
- Historical roff Documentation
-
- Manual Pages
-
- COPYING
-
- AUTHORS
-