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groff_out (5) Table of Contents
Namegroff_out - groff intermediate output format
DescriptionThis manual page describes the intermediate output format of the GNU roff(7) text processing system. This output is produced by a run of the GNU troff(1) program before it is fed into a device postprocessor program.
As the GNU roff processor groff(1) is a wrapper program around troff that automatically calls a postprocessor, this output does not show up normally. This is why it is called intermediate within the groff sys_tem. The groff program provides the option -Z to inhibit postprocessing, such that the produced intermediate output is sent to standard output just like calling troff manually.
In this document, the term troff output describes what is output by the GNU troff program, while intermediate output refers to the language that is accepted by the parser that prepares this output for the postprocessors. This parser is smarter on whitespace and implements obsolete elements for compatibility, otherwise both formats are the same. The pre-groff roff versions are denoted as classical troff.
The main purpose of the intermediate output concept is to facilitate the development of postprocessors by providing a common programming interface for all devices. It has a language of its own that is completely different from the groff(7) language. While the groff language is a high-level programming language for text processing, the intermediate output language is a kind of low-level assembler language by specifying all positions on the page for writing and drawing.
The intermediate output produced by groff is fairly readable, while classical troff output was hard to understand because of strange habits that are still supported, but not used any longer by GNU troff.
Language ConceptsDuring the run of troff, the roff input is cracked down to the information on what has to be printed at what position on the intended device. So the language of the intermediate output format can be quite small. Its only elements are commands with or without arguments. In this document, the term command always refers to the intermediate output language, never to the roff language used for document formatting. There are commands for positioning and text writing, for drawing, and for device controlling.
Separation
Any sequence of space or tab characters is treated as a single syntactical space. It separates commands and arguments, but is only required when there would occur a clashing between the command code and the arguments without the space. Most often, this happens when variable length command names, arguments, argument lists, or command clusters meet. Commands and arguments with a known, fixed length need not be separated by syntactical space.
A line break is a syntactical element, too. Every command argument can be followed by whitespace, a comment, or a newline character. Thus a syntactical line break is defined to consist of optional syntactical space that is optionally followed by a comment, and a newline character.
The normal commands, those for positioning and text, consist of a single letter taking a fixed number of arguments. For historical reasons, the parser allows to stack such commands on the same line, but fortunately, in groff intermediate output, every command with at least one argument is followed by a line break, thus providing excellent readability.
The other commands -- those for drawing and device controlling -- have a more complicated structure; some recognize long command names, and some take a variable number of arguments. So all D and x commands were designed to request a syntactical line break after their last argument. Only one command, `x X' has an argument that can stretch over several lines, all other commands must have all of their arguments on the same line as the command, i.e. the arguments may not be splitted by a line break.
Empty lines, i.e. lines containing only space and/or a comment, can occur everywhere. They are just ignored.
Argument Units
Note that single characters can have the eighth bit set, as can the names of fonts and special characters. The names of characters and fonts can be of arbitrary length. A character that is to be printed will always be in the current font.
A string argument is always terminated by the next whitespace character (space, tab, or newline); an embedded # character is regarded as part of the argument, not as the beginning of a comment command. An integer argument is already terminated by the next non-digit character, which then is regarded as the first character of the next argument or command.
Document Parts
The task of the prologue is to set the general device parameters using three exactly specified commands. The groff prologue is guaranteed to consist of the following three lines (in that order):
x T device
with the arguments set as outlined in the section Device Control Commands. But the parser for the intermediate output format is able to swallow additional whitespace and comments as well.
The body is the main section for processing the document data. Syntactically, it is a sequence of any commands different from the ones used in the prologue. Processing is terminated as soon as the first x stop command is encountered; the last line of any groff intermediate output always contains such a command.
Semantically, the body is page oriented. A new page is started by a p command. Positioning, writing, and drawing commands are always done within the current page, so they cannot occur before the first p command. Absolute positioning (by the H and V commands) is done relative to the current page, all other positioning is done relative to the current location within this page.
Command ReferenceThis section describes all intermediate output commands, the classical commands as well as the groff extensions.
Comment Command
This command is the only possibility for commenting in the intermediate output. Each comment can be preceded by arbitrary syntactical space; every command can be terminated by a comment.
Simple Commands
C xxx<white_space>
m color_scheme [component ...]
mc cyan magenta yellow
mg gray
mk cyan magenta yellow black
mr red green blue
n b a Inform the device about a line break, but no positioning is done by this command. In classical troff, the integer arguments b and a informed about the space before and after the current line to make the intermediate output more human readable without performing any action. In groff, they are just ignored, but they must be provided for compatibility reasons.
t xxx<white_space>
u n xxx<white_space>
Graphics Commands
troff output follows the classical spacing rules (no space between command and subcommand, all arguments are preceded by a single space character), but the parser allows optional space between the command letters and makes the space before the first argument optional. As usual, each space can be any sequence of tab and space characters.
Some graphics commands can take a variable number of arguments. In this case, they are integers representing a size measured in basic units u. The arguments called h1, h2, ..., hn h1, h2, ..., hn stand for horizontal distances where positive means right, negative left. The arguments called v1, v2, ..., vn v1, v2, ..., vn stand for vertical distances where positive means down, negative up. All these distances are offsets relative to the current location.
Unless indicated otherwise, each graphics command directly corresponds to a similar groff \D escape sequence; see groff(7) .
Unknown D commands are assumed to be device-specific. Its arguments are parsed as strings; the whole information is then sent to the postprocessor.
In the following command reference, the syntax element <line_break> means a syntactical line break as defined in section Separation.
D~ h1 v1 h2 v2 ... hn vn<line_break> Draw B-spline from current position to offset (h1, v1), then to offset (h2, v2) if given, etc. up to (hn, vn). This command takes a variable number of argument pairs; the current position is moved to the terminal point of the drawn curve.
Da h1 v1 h2 v2<line_break>
DC d<line_break>
Dc d<line_break>
DE h v<line_break>
De h v<line_break>
DF color_scheme [component ...]<line_break> Set fill color for solid drawing objects using different color schemes; the analoguous command for setting the color of text, line graphics, and the outline of graphic objects is m. The color components are specified as integer arguments between 0 and 65536. The number of color components and their meaning vary for the different color schemes. These commands are generated by the groff escape sequences \D'F ...' and \M (with no other corresponding graphics commands). No position changing. This command is a groff extension.
DFc cyan magenta yellow<line_break> Set fill color for solid drawing objects using the CMY color scheme, having the 3 color components cyan, magenta, and yellow.
DFd <line_break>
DFg gray<line_break>
DFk cyan magenta yellow black<line_break> Set fill color for solid drawing objects using the CMYK color scheme, having the 4 color components cyan, magenta, yellow, and black.
DFr red green blue<line_break>
Df n<line_break>
0 <= n <= 1000
n < 0 or n > 1000
No position changing. This command is a groff extension.
Dl h v<line_break>
Dp h1 v1 h2 v2 ... hn vn<line_break> Draw a polygon line from current position to offset (h1, v1), from there to offset (h2, v2), etc. up to offset (hn, vn), and from there back to the starting position. For historical reasons, the position is changed by adding the sum of all arguments with odd index to the actual horizontal position and the even ones to the vertical position. Although this doesn't make sense it is kept for compatibility. This command is a groff extension.
DP h1 v1 h2 v2 ... hn vn<line_break> The same macro as the corresponding Dp command with the same arguments, but draws a solid polygon in the current fill color rather than an outlined polygon. The position is changed in the same way as with Dp. This command is a groff extension.
Dt n<line_break>
Device Control Commands
The subcommand is basically a single letter, but to increase readability, it can be written as a word, i.e. an arbitrary sequence of characters terminated by the next tab, space, or newline character. All characters of the subcommand word but the first are simply ignored. For example, troff outputs the initialization command x i as x init and the resolution command x r as x res. But writings like x i_like_groff and x roff_is_groff resp. are accepted as well to mean the same commands.
In the following, the syntax element <line_break> means a syntactical line break as defined in section Separation.
xF name<line_break>
xf n s<line_break>
xH n<line_break>
xi<line_break>
xp<line_break>
xr n h v<line_break>
xS n<line_break>
xs<line_break>
xt<line_break>
xT xxx<line_break>
xu n<line_break>
xX anything<line_break>
Obsolete Command
In groff, arbitrary syntactical space around and within this command is allowed to be added. Only when a preceding command on the same line ends with an argument of variable length a separating space is obligatory. In classical troff, large clusters of these and other commands were used, mostly without spaces; this made such output almost unreadable.
For modern high-resolution devices, this command does not make sense because the width of the characters can become much larger than two decimal digits. In groff, this is only used for the devices X75, X75-12, X100, and X100-12. For other devices, the commands t and u provide a better functionality.
PostprocessingThe roff postprocessors are programs that have the task to translate the intermediate output into actions that are sent to a device. A device can be some piece of hardware such as a printer, or a software file format suitable for graphical or text processing. The groff system provides powerful means that make the programming of such postprocessors an easy task.
There is a library function that parses the intermediate output and sends the information obtained to the device via methods of a class with a common interface for each device. So a groff postprocessor must only redefine the methods of this class. For details, see the reference in section FILES.
ExamplesThis section presents the intermediate output generated from the same input for three different devices. The input is the sentence hell world fed into groff on the command line.
shell> echo hell world | groff -Z -T ps
x T ps
This output can be fed into the postprocessor grops(1) to get its representation as a PostScript file.
This is similar to the high-resolution device except that the positioning is done at a minor scale. Some comments (lines starting with #) were added for clarification; they were not generated by the formatter.
shell> echo hell world | groff -Z -T latin1
# prologue
This output can be fed into the postprocessor grotty(1) to get a formatted text document.
As a computer monitor has a very low resolution compared to modern printers the intermediate output for the X devices can use the jumpand-write command with its 2-digit displacements.
shell> echo hell world | groff -Z -T X100
x T X100
This output can be fed into the postprocessor xditview(1x) or gxditview(1) for displaying in X.
Due to the obsolete jump-and-write command, the text clusters in the classical output are almost unreadable.
CompatibilityThe intermediate output language of the classical troff was first documented in [97]. The groff intermediate output format is compatible with this specification except for the following features.
The differences between groff and classical troff are documented in groff_diff(7) .
Files
/usr/share/groff/1.18.1/font/devname/DESC
<groff_source_dir>/src/libs/libdriver/input.cc Defines the parser and postprocessor for the intermediate output. It is located relative to the top directory of the groff source tree, e.g. @GROFFSRCDIR@. This parser is the definitive specification of the groff intermediate output format.
See AlsoA reference like groff(7) refers to a manual page; here groff in section 7 of the man-page documentation system. To read the example, look up section 7 in your desktop help system or call from the shell prompt
shell> man 7 groff
For more details, see man(1) .
groff(1)
groff(7)
groff_font(5)
troff(1)
roff(7)
groff_diff(7)
grodvi(1) , grohtml(1) , grolbp(1) , grolj4(1) , grops(1) , grotty(1) the groff postprocessor programs.
For a treatment of all aspects of the groff system within a single document, see the groff info file. It can be read within the integrated help systems, within emacs(1) or from the shell prompt by shell> info groff
The classical troff output language is described in two AT&T Bell Labs CSTR documents available on-line at Bell Labs CSTR site <http:// cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/cstr.html>.
AuthorsCopyright (C) 1989, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This document is distributed under the terms of the FDL (GNU Free Documentation License) version 1.1 or later. You should have received a copy of the FDL with this package; it is also available on-line at the GNU copyleft site <http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html>.
This document is part of groff, the GNU roff distribution. It is based on a former version - published under the GPL - that described only parts of the groff extensions of the output language. It has been rewritten 2002 by Bernd Warken <bwarken@mayn.de> and is maintained by Werner Lemberg <wl@gnu.org>.
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