. \" comments start with: \" . \" lines containing only a point: ignored by troff . \" empty lines = paragraph separator, produce vertical space .so macros.ms \" First, let's import some macros. .so header.ms .TWO_COLUMNS .NH \" new section Before we start .PP .QUESTION "Why a PDF instead of a website?" Documentation is about providing information in a comprehensive manner. There are different ways, roughly summarised in the following as .I website and .I book (maybe as a PDF document and not a physical book, but you get the idea). .TS allbox tab(:); c | c c | lew(2.8i). Doc. : Perks Web :T{ Quick and easy to create and share, very small contributions are shared, easily updated T} Book :T{ All related informations in a single place, collectible, very little updates T} .TE From the constraint of having to deliver a final document that cannot be updated, comes one of the biggest perks of books. Authors are forced to write to the best of their abilities. .TS allbox tab(:); c | c c | lew(2.8i). Doc. : Flaws Web :T{ All differents, perishable, non easily collectible for backups, scattered information (articles), often not pedagogical or with little effort put in explanations, hard to follow updates T} Book :T{ Way harder to write T} .TE Books can be written using a lot of different tools, including \fILaTeX\f[] or WYSIWYG editors such as \fILibreoffice\f[]. None are simpler or withstood the test of time better than troff. Troff still works almost as its debuts in 1972, and as of today, it produces high quality documents with little effort or complexity. .NH \" new section Sections and paragraphs .PP \" new paragraph (with indentation on first line) Some indented paragraph. As you can see, contrary to the first one you encountered in the previous section. .NH 2 \" new inner section, goes from 1 to 4 Sub-section .LP Some unindented paragraph. Basics of sections and paragraphs in troff (ms macros): .METAINFO1 .NH Section .PP Some indented paragraph. .NH 2 Sub-section .LP Some unindented paragraph. .METAINFO2 .NH Some highlights: the basics .LP .I "Combining" \" italics .UL "several" \" underlined .B "ways" \" bold to .BX highlight \" box .ft CW \" changing font: constant width some text. .ft \" reverting to previous font .METAINFO1 .I "Combining" \\" italics .UL "several" \\" underlined .B "ways" \\" bold to .BX highlight \\" box .ft CW \\" changing font: constant width some text. .ft \\" reverting to previous font .METAINFO2 Avoiding underlining the .UL "final point" . .METAINFO1 .UL "final point" . \\" point is a second parameter .METAINFO2 .I "Again, in italics but surrounded" ) ( \" order: text-in-italics after before .METAINFO1 .I "Again, in italics but surrounded" ) ( \\" order: text-in-italics after before .METAINFO2 .NH Brief overview of custom macros (in macros.ms) .LP The file .ft CW macros.ms .ft includes many small contributions to easily make nice PDF outputs. For example, the following code and its result: .METAINFO1 .EXPLANATION1 Very important sentence. .EXPLANATION2 .METAINFO2 .EXPLANATION1 Very important sentence. .EXPLANATION2 .HORIZONTALLINE There is also an helper to make citations. .METAINFO1 .CITATION1 Seriously, these macros are awesome guys. .CITATION2 .NAMECITATION "Albert Einstein" .METAINFO2 .CITATION1 Seriously, these macros are awesome guys. .CITATION2 .NAMECITATION "Albert Einstein" .HORIZONTALLINE (Temporary name for the following macro) .ft CW .FRAC 5.5 20 .ft .br Produces: .FRAC 5.5 20 .HORIZONTALLINE Meta informations are in smaller text size and in constant width, with this code: .METAINFO1 .METAINFO1 Some text. .METAINFO2 .METAINFO2 Example: .br .METAINFO1 This is how I put meta informations in my documents: the text is smaller and in constant width. .METAINFO2 .HORIZONTALLINE These horizontal lines are produced by .METAINFO1 .HORIZONTALLINE .METAINFO2 .HORIZONTALLINE Listing stuff .BULLET with .BULLET bullet .BULLET points .ENDBULLET .METAINFO1 .BULLET with .BULLET bullet .BULLET points .ENDBULLET .METAINFO2 .HORIZONTALLINE Numbered lists .ENUM Orange .ENUM Apple .ENUM Pear .ENDENUM .METAINFO1 .ENUM Orange .ENUM Apple .ENUM Pear .ENDENUM .METAINFO2 .NH Source code syntax highlighting .PP Source code for a number of languages can be colored with the following code\*[*]: .FS \" footnote starts (\*[*] is its reference) Under the hood, this involves the .ft CW source-highlight .ft software and the script .ft CW ghighlight .ft in the \f(CW./bin/\f[] directory (see the Makefile for more information). .FE \" footnote ends .METAINFO1 .SOURCE C int main(int argc, char **argv) { return 0; } .SOURCE .METAINFO2 .SOURCE C int main(int argc, char **argv) { return 0; } .SOURCE .NH \" new section Some figures with pic. .LP \" new paragraph (without indentation on first line) This is a paragraph before the picture. .PS \" this starts a 'pic' section, to draw figures .defcolor lightgreen rgb 0.9 1.0 0.9 box "A box." shaded "lightgreen" line circle "A circle." rad 0.4 .PE \" this ends the 'pic' section This is written in the code this way: .METAINFO1 .PS .defcolor lightgreen rgb 0.9 1.0 0.9 box "A box." shaded "lightgreen" line circle "A circle." rad 0.4 .PE .METAINFO2 .NH Some graphs with grap. .LP .G1 GROWTHFACTOR=0.07 grid bot dotted from 0 to 100 by 10 grid left dotted from 0 to 800 by 50 frame ht 2.5 wid 2.8 define expo { $1+$1*GROWTHFACTOR } value = 1 draw LINEAR solid for i from 1 to 100 by 1 do { next LINEAR at i, i times at i, value value = expo(value) } line from 0,650 to 3,650 " linear curve" ljust at 1,650 " exponential curve" ljust at 1,600 times at 1,600 label top "Exponential curves: growth over time (7%)" up -.2 .G2 .BELLOWEXPLANATION1 Exponentials: always fun and games when talking about economy. A complete nighmare when talking about mineral extraction costs. .BELLOWEXPLANATION2 .METAINFO1 .G1 GROWTHFACTOR=0.07 grid bot dotted from 0 to 100 by 10 grid left dotted from 0 to 800 by 50 frame ht 2.5 wid 2.8 define expo { $1+$1*GROWTHFACTOR } value = 1 draw LINEAR solid for i from 1 to 100 by 1 do { next LINEAR at i, i times at i, value value = expo(value) } line from 0,650 to 3,650 " linear curve" ljust at 1,650 " exponential curve" ljust at 1,600 times at 1,600 label top "Exponential curves: growth over time (7%)" up -.2 .G2 .METAINFO2 .\" Neighbor Discovery, RS... IPv6 stuff .\" .PS .\" reset .\" space_between_machines = 2.0 .\" space_lines = 0.1 .\" space_hdr = 0.8 .\" space_step = 0.3 .\" space_step_small = 0.2 .\" .\" .ps 16 .\" A: "A" ; move space_between_machines .\" R: "R" ; move space_between_machines .\" B: "B" .\" .\" .ps 12 .\" move to A + (0, -space_hdr) .\" "start" rjust; move down space_lines .\" START: line left ; move right; move right space_between_machines; move down space_step .\" DAD_SOL: line right ; move to START + (0, -space_step) .\" RS_A: line left ; move right; move right space_between_machines; move down space_step .\" RS_B: line right ; move left ; move down space_step_small .\" RS_C: line right ; move left ; move left space_between_machines; move down space_step .\" RS_D: line left "New IP @" "" ; move right .\" move down space_step_small .\" DAD_SEC_A: line left ; move right; move right space_between_machines; move down space_step .\" DAD_SEC_B: line right ; move to DAD_SEC_A + (0, -space_step) .\" .\" .\" .ps 8 .\" line -> from START to DAD_SOL "DAD: Neighbor Sollicitation" "" "" .\" line -> from RS_A to RS_B "Router Sollicitation" "" "" .\" line -> from RS_C to RS_D "Router Advertisment" "" "" .\" line -> from DAD_SEC_A to DAD_SEC_B "(second) DAD: Neighbor Sollicitation" "" "" .\" .PE .NH Some equations with eqn .LP Let's see a few equations. .EQ E = mc sup 2 .EN .METAINFO1 .EQ E = mc sup 2 .EN .METAINFO2 Inline equations, via the "\[Do]" sign: .METAINFO1 .EQ delim \[Do]\[Do] .EN Inlining equations also is possible: \[Do]a sup b = c\[Do] .METAINFO2 .EQ delim $$ .EN .\" \h'5p' => horizontal space Inlining equations also is possible:\h'5p' $a sup b = c$ .EQ delim off .EN And this can be set off, with "delim off". .NH UTF-8 .PP UTF-8 is wonderful. Unfortunately, this wasn't implemented in troff, since it comes from 1972, and neither in the later implementation .B groff . So, I wrote the \f[CW]./bin/utf8-to-ms.sh\f[] filter to automatically convert an extensive list of accents, ligatures, and text markers in their equivalent ms macros. Therefore, one can write in UTF-8 (or at least a good chunk of it) in the input file\*[*]. .FS All characters cannot be converted so easily. Some of them are used in troff, such as the arobase, the backslash, etc. However, my script is a good enough solution for me to write in my mother tongue without any problem. .FE Examples (all written in UTF-8 in the troff file): .br ©®àÀÇçéÉÙÛâÂÔ¡¿œŒæÆ .NH Tables with tbl .PP .TS allbox tab(:); c | c c | lew(2.5i). Column1 : Column2 cell : cell content cell :T{ Hello this is a way longer content, way more than what the cell can hold in a single line. T} .TE .METAINFO1 .TS allbox tab(:); c | c c | lew(2.5i). Column1 : Column2 cell : cell content cell :T{ Hello this is a way longer content, way more than what the cell can hold in a single line. T} .TE .METAINFO2 .NH Tables with hdtbl .PP .mso hdtbl.tmac .\" .ds t*bgc white\" background color .\".ds t*fgc black \" foreground color .\".nr t*cpd 0.1n \" cell padding .ds t*bc pink2\" border color . .TBL cols=3 width='10% 45%' . CPTN val=b This is a fine table. This is a fine table. This is a fine table. This is a fine table. This is a fine table. This is a fine table. . TR . TD fst=I first cell . TD fgc=green4 bgc= 1*2 . TD hal=c val=m rowspan=2 hello . TR .TD 2*1 ".TD bgc=pink" 2*2 . TR height=0.5i .TD 3*1 ".TD colspan=2 hal=r fst=B" Last cell .ETB .TBL cols=3 width='50% 25%' . TR . TD fst=I first cell, long message . TD fgc=green4 bgc= second . TD bgc= 3 .ETB .NH Some references .PP Let's reference a few documents, such as A Universe from Nothing .[ universe .] and a book about the excellent Haskell language. .[ haskell .] .METAINFO1 Let's reference a few documents, such as A Universe from Nothing .[ universe .] and a book about the excellent Haskell language. .[ haskell .] .METAINFO2 .NH Images .PP Only PDF can be included, so images need to be converted beforehand. .METAINFO1 .PDFPIC -R "./are-you.pdf" 3.5 .METAINFO2 . .nr figurespace 15 .sp \n[figurespace] .PDFPIC -R "./are-you.pdf" 3.2 .sv \n[figurespace] .METAINFO1 Note: for now, on my system, I need a hack. The included PDF has no length, despite having installed the poppler-utils package. So, I added vertical spaces by hand (with .I sp and .I sv requests). The length is an empirical constant. I'll try to search for a better way, someday. .METAINFO2 .NH Final words .PP It is customary in old tools such as troff to read the source code and hack your way. Once you're familiar with the basics, if you need something that isn't in the official troff documentation, don't hesitate to read provided macros (mines, but also ms macros as well, for instance). You'll quickly learn a lot.