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@(#)tt12 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/8/93
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$FreeBSD$

Conditionals

Suppose we want the .SH macro to leave two extra inches of space just before section 1, but nowhere else. The cleanest way to do that is to test inside the .SH macro whether the section number is 1, and add some space if it is. The .if command provides the conditional test that we can add just before the heading line is output:

1 4 ^if \e\en(SH=1 ^sp 2i \e" first section only

2

The condition after the .if can be any arithmetic or logical expression. If the condition is logically true, or arithmetically greater than zero, the rest of the line is treated as if it were text _ here a command. If the condition is false, or zero or negative, the rest of the line is skipped.

It is possible to do more than one command if a condition is true. Suppose several operations are to be done before section 1. One possibility is to define a macro .S1 and invoke it if we are about to do section 1 (as determined by an .if ).

1 ^de S1 --- processing for section 1 --- ^^ ^de SH ^^^ ^if \e\en(SH=1 ^S1 ^^^ ^^

2

An alternate way is to use the extended form of the .if , like this:

1 ^if \e\en(SH=1 \e{--- processing for section 1 ----\e}

2 The braces \e{ and \e} must occur in the positions shown or you will get unexpected extra lines in your output. troff also provides an `if-else' construction, which we will not go into here.

A condition can be negated by preceding it with ! ; we get the same effect as above (but less clearly) by using

1 ^if !\e\en(SH>1 ^S1

2

There are a handful of other conditions that can be tested with .if . For example, is the current page even or odd?

1 ^if o ^tl 'odd page title''- % -' ^if e ^tl '- % -''even page title'

2 gives facing pages different titles and page numbers on the outside edge when used inside an appropriate new page macro.

Two other conditions are t and n , which tell you whether the formatter is troff or nroff .

1 ^if t troff stuff ... ^if n nroff stuff ...

2

Finally, string comparisons may be made in an .if :

1 ^if 'string1'string2' stuff

2 does `stuff' if .ul string1 is the same as .ul string2. The character separating the strings can be anything reasonable that is not contained in either string. The strings themselves can reference strings with \e* , arguments with \e$ , and so on.