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GROFF_MS(7)                                                                           GROFF_MS(7)



NAME
       groff_ms - groff ms macros

SYNOPSIS
       groff -ms [ options... ] [ files... ]
       groff -m ms [ options... ] [ files... ]

DESCRIPTION
       This manual page describes the GNU version of the ms macros, part of the groff typesetting
       system.  The ms macros are mostly compatible with the documented behavior of the  4.3  BSD
       Unix ms macros (see Differences from troff ms below for details).  The ms macros are suit-
       able for reports, letters, books, and technical documentation.

USAGE
       The ms macro package expects files to have a certain amount of  structure.   The  simplest
       documents  can  begin  with  a  paragraph macro and consist of text separated by paragraph
       macros or even blank lines.  Longer documents have a structure as follows:

       Document type
              If you use the RP (report) macro at the beginning of the document, groff prints the
              cover  page information on its own page; otherwise it prints the information on the
              first page with your document text immediately following.  Other  document  formats
              found  in  AT&T  troff  are  specific to AT&T or Berkeley, and are not supported in
              groff ms.

       Format and layout
              By setting number registers, you can change your document's type (font  and  size),
              margins,  spacing, headers and footers, and footnotes.  See Document control regis-
              ters below for more details.

       Cover page
              A cover page consists of a title, and optionally the author's name and institution,
              an abstract, and the date.  See Cover page macros below for more details.

       Body   Following  the  cover  page is your document.  It consists of paragraphs, headings,
              and lists.

       Table of contents
              Longer documents usually include a table of contents, which you can add by  placing
              the TC macro at the end of your document.

   Document control registers
       The  following table lists the document control number registers.  For the sake of consis-
       tency, set registers related to margins at the beginning of your document, or  just  after
       the RP macro.

       Margin settings

              Reg.           Definition           Effective    Default
              ---------------------------------------------------------
               PO     Page offset (left margin)   next page    1i
               LL     Line length                 next para.   6i
               LT     Header/footer length        next para.   6i
               HM     Top (header) margin         next page    1i
               FM     Bottom (footer) margin      next page    1i
              ---------------------------------------------------------

       Text settings

              Reg.          Definition         Effective    Default
              ------------------------------------------------------

               PS     Point size               next para.   10p
               VS     Line spacing (leading)   next para.   12p
              ------------------------------------------------------

       Paragraph settings

              Reg.          Definition          Effective    Default
              -------------------------------------------------------
               PI    Initial indent             next para.   5n
               PD    Space between paragraphs   next para.   0.3v
               QI    Quoted paragraph indent    next para.   5n
              -------------------------------------------------------

       Footnote settings

              Reg.     Definition        Effective     Default
              -------------------------------------------------
               FL    Footnote length   next footnote   LL*5/6
               FI    Footnote indent   next footnote   2n
               FF    Footnote format   next footnote   0
              -------------------------------------------------

       Other settings

               Reg.              Definition             Effective   Default
              --------------------------------------------------------------
               MINGW    Minimum width between columns   next page   2n
              --------------------------------------------------------------

   Cover page macros
       Use the following macros to create a cover page for your document in the order shown.

       .RP [no]
              Specifies the report format for your document.  The report format creates  a  sepa-
              rate  cover  page.   With  no  RP macro, groff prints a subset of the cover page on
              page 1 of your document.

              If you use the optional no argument, groff prints a title page but does not  repeat
              any  of the title page information (title, author, abstract, etc.) on page 1 of the
              document.

       .P1    (P-one) Prints the header on page 1.  The default is to suppress the header.

       .DA [xxx]
              (optional) Print the current date, or the arguments to the macro  if  any,  on  the
              title page (if specified) and in the footers.  This is the default for nroff.

       .ND [xxx]
              (optional)  Print  the  current  date, or the arguments to the macro if any, on the
              title page (if specified) but not in the footers.  This is the default for troff.

       .TL    Specifies the document title.  Groff collects text following the TL macro into  the
              title, until reaching the author name or abstract.

       .AU    Specifies the author's name.  You can specify multiple authors by using an AU macro
              for each author.

       .AI    Specifies the author's institution.  You can specify multiple institutions.

       .AB [no]
              Begins the abstract.  The default is to print the word ABSTRACT,  centered  and  in
              italics, above the text of the abstract.  The option no suppresses this heading.

       .AE    End the abstract.

   Paragraphs
       Use the PP macro to create indented paragraphs, and the LP macro to create paragraphs with
       no initial indent.

       The QP macro indents all text at both left and right margins.  The effect is identical  to
       the HTML <BLOCKQUOTE> element.  The next paragraph or heading returns margins to normal.

       The  XP  macro  produces an exdented paragraph.  The first line of the paragraph begins at
       the left margin, and subsequent lines are indented (the opposite of PP).

   Headings
       Use headings to create a hierarchical structure for your document.  The  ms  macros  print
       headings in bold using the same font family and point size as the body text.

       The following heading macros are available:

       .NH xx Numbered  heading.   The  argument  xx is either a numeric argument to indicate the
              level of the heading, or S xx xx "..."  to set the section number  explicitly.   If
              you  specify  heading  levels  out of sequence, such as invoking .NH 3 after .NH 1,
              groff prints a warning on standard error.

       .SH    Unnumbered subheading.

   Highlighting
       The ms macros provide a variety of methods to highlight or emphasize text:

       .B [txt [post [pre]]]
              Sets its first argument in bold type.  If you  specify  a  second  argument,  groff
              prints it in the previous font after the bold text, with no intervening space (this
              allows you to set punctuation after the highlighted text without  highlighting  the
              punctuation).   Similarly,  it  prints  the third argument (if any) in the previous
              font before the first argument.  For example,

                     .B foo ) (

              prints (foo).

              If you give this macro no arguments, groff prints all text following in bold  until
              the next highlighting, paragraph, or heading macro.

       .R [txt [post [pre]]]
              Sets its first argument in roman (or regular) type.  It operates similarly to the B
              macro otherwise.

       .I [txt [post [pre]]]
              Sets its first argument in italic type.  It operates similarly to the B macro  oth-
              erwise.

       .CW [txt [post [pre]]]
              Sets  its  first argument in a constant width face.  It operates similarly to the B
              macro otherwise.

       .BI [txt [post [pre]]]
              Sets its first argument in bold italic type.  It operates similarly to the B  macro
              otherwise.

       .BX [txt]
              Prints  its  argument  and draws a box around it.  If you want to box a string that
              contains spaces, use a digit-width space (\0).

       .UL [txt [post]]
              Prints its first argument with an underline.  If you  specify  a  second  argument,
              groff prints it in the previous font after the underlined text, with no intervening
              space.

       .LG    Prints all text following in larger type (2 points larger than  the  current  point
              size) until the next font size, highlighting, paragraph, or heading macro.  You can
              specify this macro multiple times to enlarge the point size as needed.

       .SM    Prints all text following in smaller type (2 points smaller than the current  point
              size) until the next type size, highlighting, paragraph, or heading macro.  You can
              specify this macro multiple times to reduce the point size as needed.

       .NL    Prints all text following in the normal point size (that is, the value  of  the  PS
              register).

       \*{text\*}
              Print the enclosed text as a superscript.

   Indents
       You  may  need  to indent sections of text.  A typical use for indents is to create nested
       lists and sublists.

       Use the RS and RE macros to start and end a section of indented text,  respectively.   The
       PI register controls the amount of indent.

       You  can  nest indented sections as deeply as needed by using multiple, nested pairs of RS
       and RE.

   Lists
       The IP macro handles duties for all lists.  Its syntax is as follows:

       .IP [marker [width]]

              The marker is usually a bullet character \(bu for unordered  lists,  a  number  (or
              auto-incrementing  number  register)  for  numbered  lists, or a word or phrase for
              indented (glossary-style) lists.

              The width specifies the indent for the body of each list item.  Once specified, the
              indent remains the same for all list items in the document until specified again.

   Tab stops
       Use  the  ta  request  to  set tab stops as needed.  Use the TA macro to reset tabs to the
       default (every 5n).  You can redefine the TA macro to create a different  set  of  default
       tab stops.

   Displays and keeps
       Use  displays  to  show  text-based examples or figures (such as code listings).  Displays
       turn off filling, so lines of code can be displayed as-is without inserting br requests in
       between  each  line.   Displays  can  be kept on a single page, or allowed to break across
       pages.  The following table shows the display types available.

                   Display macro                  Type of display
                With keep      No keep
              --------------------------------------------------------------
              .DS L            .LD       Left-justified.
              .DS I [indent]   .ID       Indented (default indent in the DI
                                         register).
              .DS B            .BD       Block-centered (left-justified,
                                         longest line centered).
              .DS C            .CD       Centered.
              .DS R            .RD       Right-justified.
              --------------------------------------------------------------

       Use the DE macro to end any display type.

       To keep text together on a page, such as a paragraph that refers to a table (or  list,  or
       other  item) immediately following, use the KS and KE macros.  The KS macro begins a block
       of text to be kept on a single page, and the KE macro ends the block.

       You can specify a floating keep using the KF and KE macros.  If the keep cannot fit on the
       current  page, groff holds the contents of the keep and allows text following the keep (in
       the source file) to fill in the remainder of the current  page.   When  the  page  breaks,
       whether  by  an  explicit  bp request or by reaching the end of the page, groff prints the
       floating keep at the top of the new page.  This is useful for printing large  graphics  or
       tables that do not need to appear exactly where specified.

   Tables, figures, equations, and references
       The  -ms  macros support the standard groff preprocessors: tbl, pic, eqn, and refer.  Mark
       text meant for preprocessors by enclosing it in pairs of tags as follows:

       .TS [H] and .TE
              Denotes a table, to be processed by the tbl preprocessor.  The optional H  argument
              instructs groff to create a running header with the information up to the TH macro.
              Groff prints the header at the beginning of the  table;  if  the  table  runs  onto
              another page, groff prints the header on the next page as well.

       .PS and .PE
              Denotes  a  graphic, to be processed by the pic preprocessor.  You can create a pic
              file by hand, using the AT&T pic manual available on the Web as a reference, or  by
              using a graphics program such as xfig.

       .EQ [align] and .EN
              Denotes  an  equation, to be processed by the eqn preprocessor.  The optional align
              argument can be C, L, or I to center (the default),  left-justify,  or  indent  the
              equation.

       .[ and .]
              Denotes  a  reference, to be processed by the refer preprocessor.  The GNU refer(1)
              manual page provides a comprehensive reference to the preprocessor and  the  format
              of the bibliographic database.

   Footnotes
       The  ms macros provide a flexible footnote system.  You can specify a numbered footnote by
       using the \** escape, followed by the text of the footnote enclosed by FS and FE macros.

       You can specify symbolic footnotes by placing the mark character (such  as  \(dg  for  the
       dagger  character)  in  the  body  text,  followed by the text of the footnote enclosed by
       FS \(dg and FE macros.

       You can control how groff prints footnote numbers by changing the value of the FF register
       as follows:

              0      Prints the footnote number as a superscript; indents the footnote (default).

              1      Prints the number followed by a period (like 1.) and indents the footnote.

              2      Like 1, without an indent.

              3      Like 1, but prints the footnote number as a hanging paragraph.

       You can use footnotes safely within keeps and displays, but avoid using numbered footnotes
       within  floating keeps.  You can set a second \** between a \** and its corresponding .FS;
       as long as each .FS occurs after the corresponding \** and the occurrences of .FS  are  in
       the same order as the corresponding occurrences of \**.

   Headers and footers
       There are two ways to define headers and footers:

       ?  Use  the strings LH, CH, and RH to set the left, center, and right headers; use LF, CF,
          and RF to set the left, center, and right footers.  This works best for documents  that
          do not distinguish between odd and even pages.

       ?  Use  the  OH  and EH macros to define headers for the odd and even pages; and OF and EF
          macros to define footers for the odd and even pages.  This is more flexible than defin-
          ing the individual strings.  The syntax for these macros is as follows:

                 .OH 'left'center'right'

          You  can  replace the quote (') marks with any character not appearing in the header or
          footer text.

   Margins
       You control margins using a set of number registers.  The following table lists the regis-
       ter names and defaults:

              Reg.           Definition           Effective    Default
              ---------------------------------------------------------

               PO     Page offset (left margin)   next page    1i
               LL     Line length                 next para.   6i
               LT     Header/footer length        next para.   6i
               HM     Top (header) margin         next page    1i
               FM     Bottom (footer) margin      next page    1i
              ---------------------------------------------------------

       Note  that  there  is  no  right  margin setting.  The combination of page offset and line
       length provide the information necessary to derive the right margin.

   Multiple columns
       The ms macros can set text in as many columns as will reasonably fit  on  the  page.   The
       following  macros are available.  All of them force a page break if a multi-column mode is
       already set.  However, if the current mode is single-column, starting a multi-column  mode
       does not force a page break.

       .1C    Single-column mode.

       .2C    Two-column mode.

       .MC [width [gutter]]
              Multi-column  mode.  If you specify no arguments, it is equivalent to the 2C macro.
              Otherwise, width is the width of each  column  and  gutter  is  the  space  between
              columns.  The MINGW number register is the default gutter width.

   Creating a table of contents
       Wrap  text  that you want to appear in the table of contents in XS and XE macros.  Use the
       TC macro to print the table of contents at the end of the  document,  resetting  the  page
       number to i (Roman numeral 1).

       You can manually create a table of contents by specifying a page number as the first argu-
       ment to XS.  Add subsequent entries using the XA macro.  For example:

              .XS 1
              Introduction
              .XA 2
              A Brief History of the Universe
              .XA 729
              Details of Galactic Formation
              ...
              .XE

       Use the PX macro to print a manually-generated table of  contents  without  resetting  the
       page number.

       If you give the argument no to either PX or TC, groff suppresses printing the title speci-
       fied by the \*[TOC] string.

DIFFERENCES FROM troff ms
       The groff ms macros are a complete re-implementation, using no original AT&T code.   Since
       they  take  advantage  of  the  extended  features in groff, they cannot be used with AT&T
       troff.  Other differences include:

       ?  The internals of groff ms differ from the internals of Unix ms.  Documents that  depend
          upon implementation details of Unix ms may not format properly with groff ms.

       ?  The  error-handling  policy  of  groff  ms  is to detect and report errors, rather than
          silently to ignore them.

       ?  Bell Labs localisms are not implemented.

       ?  Berkeley localisms, in particular the TM and CT macros, are not implemented.

       ?  Groff ms does not work in compatibility mode (e.g. with the -C option).

       ?  There is no support for typewriter-like devices.

       ?  Groff ms does not provide cut marks.

       ?  Multiple line spacing is not supported (use a larger vertical spacing instead).

       ?  Some Unix ms documentation says that the CW and GW number registers can be used to con-
          trol  the  column  width and gutter width respectively.  These number registers are not
          used in groff ms.

       ?  Macros that cause a reset (paragraphs, headings, etc.)  may change the indent.   Macros
          that  change  the  indent  do  not increment or decrement the indent, but rather set it
          absolutely.  This can cause problems for documents that  define  additional  macros  of
          their own.  The solution is to use not the in request but instead the RS and RE macros.

       ?  The number register GS is set to 1 by the groff ms macros, but is not used by the  Unix
          ms macros.  Documents that need to determine whether they are being formatted with Unix
          ms or groff ms should use this number register.

   Strings
       You can redefine the following strings to adapt the groff ms  macros  to  languages  other
       than English:

                                       String        Default Value
                                    ---------------------------------
                                     REFERENCES    References
                                     ABSTRACT      ABSTRACT
                                     TOC           Table of Contents
                                     MONTH1        January
                                     MONTH2        February
                                     MONTH3        March
                                     MONTH4        April
                                     MONTH5        May
                                     MONTH6        June
                                     MONTH7        July
                                     MONTH8        August
                                     MONTH9        September
                                     MONTH10       October
                                     MONTH11       November
                                     MONTH12       December
                                    ---------------------------------

       The \*- string produces an em dash -- like this.

   Text Settings
       The  FAM  string sets the default font family.  If this string is undefined at initializa-
       tion, it is set to Times.

       The point size, vertical spacing, and inter-paragraph spacing for footnotes are controlled
       by  the  number  registers  FPS, FVS, and FPD; at initialization these are set to \n(PS-2,
       \n[FPS]+2, and \n(PD/2 respectively.  If any of these registers are  defined  before  ini-
       tialization, the initialization macro does not change them.

       The hyphenation flags (as set by the hy request) are set from the HY register; the default
       is 14.

       Improved accent marks (as originally defined in Berkeley's ms version)  are  available  by
       specifying  the  AM macro at the beginning of your document.  You can place an accent over
       most characters by specifying the string defining the accent directly after the character.
       For example, n\*~ produces an n with a tilde over it.

NAMING CONVENTIONS
       The  following  conventions  are  used  for names of macros, strings and number registers.
       External names available to documents that use the groff ms macros contain only  uppercase
       letters and digits.

       Internally the macros are divided into modules; naming conventions are as follows:

       ?  Names used only within one module are of the form module*name.

       ?  Names used outside the module in which they are defined are of the form module@name.

       ?  Names  associated with a particular environment are of the form environment:name; these
          are used only within the par module.

       ?  name does not have a module prefix.

       ?  Constructed names used to implement arrays are of the form array!index.

       Thus the groff ms macros reserve the following names:

       ?  Names containing the characters *, @, and :.

       ?  Names containing only uppercase letters and digits.

FILES
       /usr/share/groff/1.18.1.1/tmac/ms.tmac (a wrapper file for s.tmac)
       /usr/share/groff/1.18.1.1/tmac/s.tmac

SEE ALSO
       groff(1), troff(1), tbl(1), pic(1), eqn(1), refer(1), Groff:  The  GNU  Implementation  of
       troff by Trent Fisher and Werner Lemberg.

AUTHOR
       Original   manual   page   by  James  Clark  et  al;  rewritten  by  Larry  Kollar  (lkol-
       lar AT despammed.com).



Groff Version 1.18.1.1                    09 March 2002                               GROFF_MS(7)