xref: /freebsd/share/doc/usd/21.troff/m5 (revision 97759ccc715c4b365432c16d763c50eecfcb1100)
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.rs TUTORIAL EXAMPLES .nr p 0 .2C .ns .mh

Introduction .pg Although \*(NR and \*(TR have by design a syntax reminiscent of earlier text processors* .fn .xx *For example: P.|A.|Crisman, Ed., .ul The Compatible Time-Sharing System, MIT Press, 1965, Section|AH9.01 (Description of RUNOFF program on MIT's CTSS system). .ef with the intent of easing their use, it is almost always necessary to prepare at least a small set of macro definitions to describe most documents. Such common formatting needs as page margins and footnotes are deliberately not built into \*(NR and \*(TR. Instead, the macro and string definition, number register, diversion, environment switching, page-position trap, and conditional input mechanisms provide the basis for user-defined implementations. .pg The examples to be discussed are intended to be useful and somewhat realistic, but won't necessarily cover all relevant contingencies. Explicit numerical parameters are used in the examples to make them easier to read and to illustrate typical values. In many cases, number registers would really be used to reduce the number of places where numerical information is kept, and to concentrate conditional parameter initialization like that which depends on whether \*(TR or \*(NR is being used. .mh Page Margins .pg As discussed in \(sc3, header and footer macros are usually defined to describe the top and bottom page margin areas respectively. A trap is planted at page position 0 for the header, and at -N (N from the page bottom) for the footer. The simplest such definitions might be .x1 &de hd \e"define header \'sp 1i && \e"end definition &de fo \e"define footer \'bp && \e"end definition &wh 0 hd &wh -1i fo .x2 which provide blank 1|inch top and bottom margins. The header will occur on the first page, only if the definition and trap exist prior to the initial pseudo-page transition (\(sc3). In fill mode, the output line that springs the footer trap was typically forced out because some part or whole word didn't fit on it. If anything in the footer and header that follows causes a break, that word or part word will be forced out. In this and other examples, requests like bp and sp that normally cause breaks are invoked using the no-break control character \' to avoid this. When the header\(slfooter design contains material requiring independent text processing, the environment may be switched, avoiding most interaction with the running text. .pg A more realistic example would be .x1 &de hd \e"header &if t .tl \'\|\e(rn\'\'\e(rn\' \e"troff cut mark &if \e\en%>1 \e{\e \'sp ~\|0.5i-1 \e"tl base at 0.5i &tl \'\'- % -\'\' \e"centered page number &ps \e"restore size &ft \e"restore font &vs \e} \e"restore vs \'sp ~\|1.0i \e"space to 1.0i &ns \e"turn on no-space mode && &de fo \e"footer &ps 10 \e"set footer\(slheader size &ft R \e"set font &vs 12p \e"set base-line spacing &if \e\en%=1 \e{\e \'sp ~\|\e\en(.pu-0.5i-1 \e"tl base 0.5i up &tl \'\'- % -\'\' \e} \e"first page number \'bp && &wh 0 hd &wh -1i fo .x2 which sets the size, font, and base-line spacing for the header\(slfooter material, and ultimately restores them. The material in this case is a page number at the bottom of the first page and at the top of the remaining pages. If \*(TR is used, a cut mark is drawn in the form of root-en's at each margin. The sp's refer to absolute positions to avoid dependence on the base-line spacing. Another reason for this in the footer is that the footer is invoked by printing a line whose vertical spacing swept past the trap position by possibly as much as the base-line spacing. The no-space mode is turned on at the end of hd to render ineffective accidental occurrences of sp at the top of the running text. .pg The above method of restoring size, font, etc. presupposes that such requests (that set previous value) are not used in the running text. A better scheme is save and restore both the current and previous values as shown for size in the following: .x1 &de fo &nr s1 \e\en(.s \e"current size &ps &nr s2 \e\en(.s \e"previous size & --- \e"rest of footer && &de hd & --- \e"header stuff &ps \e\en(s2 \e"restore previous size &ps \e\en(s1 \e"restore current size && .x2 Page numbers may be printed in the bottom margin by a separate macro triggered during the footer's page ejection: .x1 &de bn \e"bottom number &tl \'\'- % -\'\' \e"centered page number && &wh -0.5i-1v bn \e"tl base 0.5i up .x2 .mh Paragraphs and Headings .pg The housekeeping associated with starting a new paragraph should be collected in a paragraph macro that, for example, does the desired preparagraph spacing, forces the correct font, size, base-line spacing, and indent, checks that enough space remains for more than one line, and requests a temporary indent. .x1 &de pg \e"paragraph &br \e"break &ft R \e"force font, &ps 10 \e"size, &vs 12p \e"spacing, &in 0 \e"and indent &sp 0.4 \e"prespace &ne 1+\e\en(.Vu \e"want more than 1 line &ti 0.2i \e"temp indent && .x2 The first break in pg will force out any previous partial lines, and must occur before the vs. The forcing of font, etc. is partly a defense against prior error and partly to permit things like section heading macros to set parameters only once. The prespacing parameter is suitable for \*(TR; a larger space, at least as big as the output device vertical resolution, would be more suitable in \*(NR. The choice of remaining space to test for in the ne is the smallest amount greater than one line (the .V is the available vertical resolution). .pg A macro to automatically number section headings might look like: .x1 &de sc \e"section & --- \e"force font, etc. &sp 0.4 \e"prespace &ne 2.4+\e\en(.Vu \e"want 2.4+ lines .lg 0 &fi .lg \e\en+S. && &nr S 0 1 \e"init S .x2 The usage is .sc, followed by the section heading text, followed by .pg. The ne test value includes one line of heading, 0.4 line in the following pg, and one line of the paragraph text. A word consisting of the next section number and a period is produced to begin the heading line. The format of the number may be set by af (\(sc8). .pg Another common form is the labeled, indented paragraph, where the label protrudes left into the indent space. .x1 &de lp \e"labeled paragraph &pg &in 0.5i \e"paragraph indent &ta 0.2i 0.5i \e"label, paragraph &ti 0 \et\e\e$1\et\ec \e"flow into paragraph && .x2 The intended usage is ".lp label\|"; label will begin at 0.2\|inch, and cannot exceed a length of 0.3\|inch without intruding into the paragraph. The label could be right adjusted against 0.4\|inch by setting the tabs instead with .ta|0.4iR|0.5i. The last line of lp ends with \ec so that it will become a part of the first line of the text that follows. .mh Multiple Column Output .pg The production of multiple column pages requires the footer macro to decide whether it was invoked by other than the last column, so that it will begin a new column rather than produce the bottom margin. The header can initialize a column register that the footer will increment and test. The following is arranged for two columns, but is easily modified for more. .x1 &de hd \e"header & --- &nr cl 0 1 \e"init column count &mk \e"mark top of text && &de fo \e"footer &ie \e\en+(cl<2 \e{\e &po +3.4i \e"next column; 3.1+0.3 &rt \e"back to mark &ns \e} \e"no-space mode &el \e{\e &po \e\enMu \e"restore left margin & --- \'bp \e} && &ll 3.1i \e"column width &nr M \e\en(.o \e"save left margin .x2 Typically a portion of the top of the first page contains full width text; the request for the narrower line length, as well as another .mk would be made where the two column output was to begin. .mh Footnote Processing .pg The footnote mechanism to be described is used by imbedding the footnotes in the input text at the point of reference, demarcated by an initial .fn and a terminal .ef: .x1 &fn Footnote text and control lines... &ef .x2 In the following, footnotes are processed in a separate environment and diverted for later printing in the space immediately prior to the bottom margin. There is provision for the case where the last collected footnote doesn't completely fit in the available space. .x1 &de hd \e"header & --- &nr x 0 1 \e"init footnote count &nr y 0-\e\enb \e"current footer place &ch fo -\e\enbu \e"reset footer trap &if \e\en(dn .fz \e"leftover footnote && &de fo \e"footer &nr dn 0 \e"zero last diversion size &if \e\enx \e{\e &ev 1 \e"expand footnotes in ev1 &nf \e"retain vertical size &FN \e"footnotes &rm FN \e"delete it &if "\e\en(.z"fy" .di \e"end overflow diversion &nr x 0 \e"disable fx &ev \e} \e"pop environment & --- \'bp && &de fx \e"process footnote overflow &if \e\enx .di fy \e"divert overflow && &de fn \e"start footnote &da FN \e"divert (append) footnote &ev 1 \e"in environment 1 &if \e\en+x=1 .fs \e"if first, include separator .lg 0 &fi \e"fill mode .lg && &de ef \e"end footnote &br \e"finish output &nr z \e\en(.v \e"save spacing &ev \e"pop ev &di \e"end diversion &nr y -\e\en(dn \e"new footer position, &if \e\enx=1 .nr y -(\e\en(.v-\e\enz) \e \e"uncertainty correction &ch fo \e\enyu \e"y is negative &if (\|\e\en(nl+1v)>(\|\e\en(.p+\e\eny) \e &ch fo \e\en(nlu+1v \e"it didn't fit && &de fs \e"separator \el\'\|1i\' \e"1 inch rule &br && &de fz \e"get leftover footnote &fn &nf \e"retain vertical size &fy \e"where fx put it &ef && &nr b 1.0i \e"bottom margin size &wh 0 hd \e"header trap &wh 12i fo \e"footer trap, temp position &wh -\e\enbu fx \e"fx at footer position &ch fo -\e\enbu \e"conceal fx with fo .x2 The header hd initializes a footnote count register x, and sets both the current footer trap position register y and the footer trap itself to a nominal position specified in register b. In addition, if the register dn indicates a leftover footnote, fz is invoked to reprocess it. The footnote start macro fn begins a diversion (append) in environment 1, and increments the count x; if the count is one, the footnote separator fs is interpolated. The separator is kept in a separate macro to permit user redefinition. The footnote end macro ef restores the previous environment and ends the diversion after saving the spacing size in register z. y is then decremented by the size of the footnote, available in dn; then on the first footnote, y is further decremented by the difference in vertical base-line spacings of the two environments, to prevent the late triggering the footer trap from causing the last line of the combined footnotes to overflow. The footer trap is then set to the lower (on the page) of y or the current page position (nl) plus one line, to allow for printing the reference line. If indicated by x, the footer fo rereads the footnotes from FN in nofill mode in environment 1, and deletes FN. If the footnotes were too large to fit, the macro fx will be trap-invoked to redivert the overflow into fy, and the register dn will later indicate to the header whether fy is empty. Both fo and fx are planted in the nominal footer trap position in an order that causes fx to be concealed unless the fo trap is moved. The footer then terminates the overflow diversion, if necessary, and zeros x to disable fx, because the uncertainty correction together with a not-too-late triggering of the footer can result in the footnote rereading finishing before reaching the fx trap. .pg A good exercise for the student is to combine the multiple-column and footnote mechanisms. .mh The Last Page .pg After the last input file has ended, \*(NR and \*(TR invoke the end macro (\(sc7), if any, and when it finishes, eject the remainder of the page. During the eject, any traps encountered are processed normally. At the end of this last page, processing terminates unless a partial line, word, or partial word remains. If it is desired that another page be started, the end-macro .x1 &de en \e"end-macro \ec \'bp && &em en .x2 will deposit a null partial word, and effect another last page. .1C 'bp