MDOC(7) | Miscellaneous Information Manual | MDOC(7) |
NAME¶
mdoc
— quick
reference guide for the -mdoc
macro
package
SYNOPSIS¶
groff |
-m doc
files ... |
DESCRIPTION¶
The -mdoc
package is a set of
content-based and domain-based macros used to format the
BSD man pages. The macro names and their meanings
are listed below for quick reference; for a detailed explanation on using
the package, see the tutorial sampler mdoc.samples(7).
Note that this is not the usual macro package for Linux documentation, although it is used for documentation of several widely used programs; see man(7).
The macros are described in two groups, the first includes the
structural and physical page layout macros. The second contains the manual
and general text domain macros which differentiate the
-mdoc
package from other troff
formatting packages.
PAGE STRUCTURE DOMAIN¶
Title Macros¶
To create a valid manual page, these three macros, in this order, are required:
Page Layout Macros¶
Section headers, paragraph breaks, lists and displays.
.Sh
- Section Headers. Valid headers, in the order of presentation:
- NAME
- Name section, should include the
‘
.Nm
’ or ‘.Fn
’ and the ‘.Nd
’ macros. - SYNOPSIS
- Usage.
- DESCRIPTION
- General description, should include options and parameters.
- RETURN VALUE
- Sections two and three function calls.
- ENVIRONMENT
- Describe environment variables.
- FILES
- Files associated with the subject.
- EXAMPLES
- Examples and suggestions.
- DIAGNOSTICS
- Normally used for section four device interface diagnostics.
- ERRORS
- Sections two and three error and signal handling.
- SEE ALSO
- Cross references and citations.
- CONFORMING TO
- Conformance to standards if applicable.
- HISTORY
- If a standard is not applicable, the history of the subject should be given.
- BUGS
- Gotchas and caveats.
- other
- Customized headers may be added at the authors discretion.
.Ss
- Subsection Headers.
.Pp
- Paragraph Break. Vertical space (one line).
.D1
- (D-one) Display-one Indent and display one text line.
.Dl
- (D-ell) Display-one literal. Indent and display one line of literal text.
.Bd
- Begin-display block. Display options:
-ragged
- Unjustified (ragged edges).
-filled
- Justified.
-literal
- Literal text or code.
-file
name- Read in named file and display.
-offset
string- Offset display. Acceptable string values:
- left
- Align block on left (default).
- center
- Approximate center margin.
- indent
- Six constant width spaces (a tab).
- indent-two
- Two tabs.
- right
- Left aligns block 2 inches from right.
- xx
n
- Where xx is a number from
4
n
to 99n
. - Aa
- Where Aa is a callable macro name.
- string
- The width of string is used.
.Ed
- End-display (matches .Bd).
.Bl
- Begin-list. Create lists or columns. Options:
.El
- End-list.
.It
- List item.
MANUAL AND GENERAL TEXT DOMAIN MACROS¶
The manual and general text domain macros are special in that most of them are parsed for callable macros for example:
.Op Fl s Ar file
- Produces [
-s
file]
In this example, the option enclosure macro
‘.Op
’ is parsed, and calls the
callable content macro ‘Fl
’ which
operates on the argument ‘s
’ and then
calls the callable content macro ‘Ar
’
which operates on the argument ‘file
’.
Some macros may be callable, but are not parsed and vice versa. These macros
are indicated in the
parsed and
callable
columns below.
Unless stated, manual domain macros share a common syntax:
.Va argument
[ . , ; : ( ) [ ] argument
... ]
Note:
Opening and closing punctuation characters are recognized as such only if
they are presented one at a time. The string
‘),
’ is not recognized as punctuation
and will be output with a leading white space and in what ever font the
calling macro uses. The argument list ‘] )
,
’ is recognized as three sequential closing punctuation
characters and a leading white space is not output between the characters
and the previous argument (if any). The special meaning of a punctuation
character may be escaped with the string
‘\&
’. For example the following
string,
.Ar file1 , file2 , file3 ) .
- Produces file1, file2, file3).
Manual Domain Macros¶
Name | Parsed | Callable | Description |
Ad |
Yes | Yes | Address. (This macro may be deprecated.) |
An |
Yes | Yes | Author name. |
Ar |
Yes | Yes | Command-line argument. |
Cd |
No | No | Configuration declaration (section four only). |
Cm |
Yes | Yes | Command-line argument modifier. |
Dv |
Yes | Yes | Defined variable (source code). |
Er |
Yes | Yes | Error number (source code). |
Ev |
Yes | Yes | Environment variable. |
Fa |
Yes | Yes | Function argument. |
Fd |
Yes | Yes | Function declaration. |
Fn |
Yes | Yes | Function call (also .Fo and .Fc). |
Ic |
Yes | Yes | Interactive command. |
Li |
Yes | Yes | Literal text. |
Nm |
Yes | Yes | Command name. |
Op |
Yes | Yes | Option (also .Oo and .Oc). |
Ot |
Yes | Yes | Old style function type (Fortran only). |
Pa |
Yes | Yes | Pathname or filename. |
St |
Yes | Yes | Standards (-p1003.2, -p1003.1 or -ansiC) |
Va |
Yes | Yes | Variable name. |
Vt |
Yes | Yes | Variable type (Fortran only). |
Xr |
Yes | Yes | Manual Page Cross Reference. |
General Text Domain Macros¶
Name | Parsed | Callable | Description |
%A |
Yes | No | Reference author. |
%B |
Yes | Yes | Reference book title. |
%C |
No | No | Reference place of publishing (city). |
%D |
No | No | Reference date. |
%J |
Yes | Yes | Reference journal title. |
%N |
No | No | Reference issue number. |
%O |
No | No | Reference optional information. |
%P |
No | No | Reference page number(s). |
%R |
No | No | Reference report Name. |
%T |
Yes | Yes | Reference article title. |
%V |
No | No | Reference volume. |
Ac |
Yes | Yes | Angle close quote. |
Ao |
Yes | Yes | Angle open quote. |
Ap |
Yes | Yes | Apostrophe. |
Aq |
Yes | Yes | Angle quote. |
At |
No | No | AT&T UNIX |
Bc |
Yes | Yes | Bracket close quote. |
Bf |
No | No | Begin font mode. |
Bo |
Yes | Yes | Bracket open quote. |
Bq |
Yes | Yes | Bracket quote. |
Bx |
Yes | Yes | BSD. |
Db |
No | No | Debug (default is "off") |
Dc |
Yes | Yes | Double close quote. |
Do |
Yes | Yes | Double open quote. |
Dq |
Yes | Yes | Double quote. |
Ec |
Yes | Yes | Enclose string close quote. |
Ef |
No | No | End font mode. |
Em |
Yes | Yes | Emphasis (traditional English). |
Eo |
Yes | Yes | Enclose string open quote. |
Fx |
No | No | FreeBSD operating system |
No |
Yes | Yes | Normal text (no-op). |
Ns |
Yes | Yes | No space. |
Pc |
Yes | Yes | Parenthesis close quote. |
Pf |
Yes | No | Prefix string. |
Po |
Yes | Yes | Parenthesis open quote. |
Pq |
Yes | Yes | Parentheses quote. |
Qc |
Yes | Yes | Straight Double close quote. |
Ql |
Yes | Yes | Quoted literal. |
Qo |
Yes | Yes | Straight Double open quote. |
Qq |
Yes | Yes | Straight Double quote. |
Re |
No | No | Reference end. |
Rs |
No | No | Reference start. |
Rv |
No | No | Return values (sections two and three only). |
Sc |
Yes | Yes | Single close quote. |
So |
Yes | Yes | Single open quote. |
Sq |
Yes | Yes | Single quote. |
Sm |
No | No | Space mode (default is \*qon\*q) |
Sx |
Yes | Yes | Section Cross Reference. |
Sy |
Yes | Yes | Symbolic (traditional English). |
Tn |
Yes | Yes | Trade or type name (small Caps). |
Ux |
Yes | Yes | UNIX |
Xc |
Yes | Yes | Extend argument list close. |
Xo |
Yes | Yes | Extend argument list open. |
Macro names ending in ‘q
’
quote remaining items on the argument list. Macro names ending in
‘o
’ begin a quote which may span more
than one line of input and are close quoted with the matching macro name
ending in ‘c
’. Enclosure macros may be
nested and are limited to eight arguments.
Note: the extended argument list macros
(‘.Xo
’,
‘.Xc
’) and the function enclosure
macros (‘.Fo
’,
‘.Fc
’) are irregular. The extended
list macros are used when the number of macro arguments would exceed the
troff limitation of nine arguments.
The macros UR (starting a URI/URL hypertext reference), UE (ending one), and UN (identifying a target for a reference) are also available. See man(7) for more information on these macros.
FILES¶
SEE ALSO¶
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
July 11, 1999 | Linux |