Manual browser: mandoc_mdoc(7)
MDOC(7) | Miscellaneous Information Manual | MDOC(7) |
NAME
mdoc — semantic markup language for formatting manual pagesDESCRIPTION
The mdoc language supports authoring of manual pages for the man(1) utility by allowing semantic annotations of words, phrases, page sections and complete manual pages. Such annotations are used by formatting tools to achieve a uniform presentation across all manuals written in mdoc, and to support hyperlinking if supported by the output medium.This reference document describes the structure of manual pages and the syntax and usage of the mdoc language. The reference implementation of a parsing and formatting tool is mandoc(1); the COMPATIBILITY section describes compatibility with other implementations.
In an mdoc document, lines beginning with the control character ‘.’ are called “macro lines”. The first word is the macro name. It consists of two or three letters. Most macro names begin with a capital letter. For a list of available macros, see MACRO OVERVIEW. The words following the macro name are arguments to the macro, optionally including the names of other, callable macros; see MACRO SYNTAX for details.
Lines not beginning with the control character are called “text lines”. They provide free-form text to be printed; the formatting of the text depends on the respective processing context:
.Sh Macro lines change control state. Text lines are interpreted within the current state.
Many aspects of the basic syntax of the mdoc language are based on the roff(7) language; see the LANGUAGE SYNTAX and MACRO SYNTAX sections in the roff(7) manual for details, in particular regarding comments, escape sequences, whitespace, and quoting. However, using roff(7) requests in mdoc documents is discouraged; mandoc(1) supports some of them merely for backward compatibility.
MANUAL STRUCTURE
A well-formed mdoc document consists of a document prologue followed by one or more sections.The prologue, which consists of the Dd, Dt, and Os macros in that order, is required for every document.
The first section (sections are denoted by Sh) must be the NAME section, consisting of at least one Nm followed by Nd.
Following that, convention dictates specifying at least the SYNOPSIS and DESCRIPTION sections, although this varies between manual sections.
The following is a well-formed skeleton mdoc file for a utility “progname”:
.Dd $Mdocdate$ .Dt PROGNAME section .Os .Sh NAME .Nm progname .Nd one line about what it does .\" .Sh LIBRARY .\" For sections 2, 3, & 9 only. .\" Not used in OpenBSD. .Sh SYNOPSIS .Nm progname .Op Fl options .Ar .Sh DESCRIPTION The .Nm utility processes files ... .\" .Sh IMPLEMENTATION NOTES .\" Not used in OpenBSD. .\" .Sh RETURN VALUES .\" For sections 2, 3, & 9 only. .\" .Sh ENVIRONMENT .\" For sections 1, 6, 7, & 8 only. .\" .Sh FILES .\" .Sh EXIT STATUS .\" For sections 1, 6, & 8 only. .\" .Sh EXAMPLES .\" .Sh DIAGNOSTICS .\" For sections 1, 4, 6, 7, & 8 only. .\" .Sh ERRORS .\" For sections 2, 3, & 9 only. .\" .Sh SEE ALSO .\" .Xr foobar 1 .\" .Sh STANDARDS .\" .Sh HISTORY .\" .Sh AUTHORS .\" .Sh CAVEATS .\" .Sh BUGS .\" .Sh SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS .\" Not used in OpenBSD.
The sections in an mdoc document are conventionally ordered as they appear above. Sections should be composed as follows:
- NAME
-
The name(s) and a one line description of the documented material. The syntax for this as follows:
.Nm name0 , .Nm name1 , .Nm name2 .Nd a one line description
Multiple ‘Nm’ names should be separated by commas.
- LIBRARY
-
The name of the library containing the documented material, which is assumed to be a function in a section 2, 3, or 9 manual. The syntax for this is as follows:
.Lb libarm
See Lb.
- SYNOPSIS
-
Documents the utility invocation syntax, function call syntax, or device configuration.
For the first, utilities (sections 1, 6, and 8), this is generally structured as follows:
.Nm bar .Op Fl v .Op Fl o Ar file .Op Ar .Nm foo .Op Fl v .Op Fl o Ar file .Op Ar
Commands should be ordered alphabetically.
For the second, function calls (sections 2, 3, 9):
.In header.h .Vt extern const char *global; .Ft "char *" .Fn foo "const char *src" .Ft "char *" .Fn bar "const char *src"
Ordering of In, Vt, Fn, and Fo macros should follow C header-file conventions.
And for the third, configurations (section 4):
.Cd "it* at isa? port 0x2e" .Cd "it* at isa? port 0x4e"
Manuals not in these sections generally don't need a SYNOPSIS.
Some macros are displayed differently in the SYNOPSIS section, particularly Nm, Cd, Fd, Fn, Fo, In, Vt, and Ft. All of these macros are output on their own line. If two such dissimilar macros are pairwise invoked (except for Ft before Fo or Fn), they are separated by a vertical space, unless in the case of Fo, Fn, and Ft, which are always separated by vertical space.
When text and macros following an Nm macro starting an input line span multiple output lines, all output lines but the first will be indented to align with the text immediately following the Nm macro, up to the next Nm, Sh, or Ss macro or the end of an enclosing block, whichever comes first.
- DESCRIPTION
-
This begins with an expansion of the brief, one line description in NAME:
The .Nm utility does this, that, and the other.
It usually follows with a breakdown of the options (if documenting a command), such as:
The arguments are as follows: .Bl -tag -width Ds .It Fl v Print verbose information. .El
Manuals not documenting a command won't include the above fragment.
Since the DESCRIPTION section usually contains most of the text of a manual, longer manuals often use the Ss macro to form subsections. In very long manuals, the DESCRIPTION may be split into multiple sections, each started by an Sh macro followed by a non-standard section name, and each having several subsections, like in the present mdoc manual.
- IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
- Implementation-specific notes should be kept here. This is useful when implementing standard functions that may have side effects or notable algorithmic implications.
- RETURN VALUES
-
This section documents the return values of functions in sections 2, 3, and 9.
See Rv.
- ENVIRONMENT
-
Lists the environment variables used by the utility, and explains the syntax and semantics of their values. The environ(7) manual provides examples of typical content and formatting.
See Ev.
- FILES
-
Documents files used. It's helpful to document both the file name and a short description of how the file is used (created, modified, etc.).
See Pa.
- EXIT STATUS
-
This section documents the command exit status for section 1, 6, and 8 utilities. Historically, this information was described in DIAGNOSTICS, a practise that is now discouraged.
See Ex.
- EXAMPLES
- Example usages. This often contains snippets of well-formed, well-tested invocations. Make sure that examples work properly!
- DIAGNOSTICS
-
Documents error conditions. This is most useful in section 4 manuals. Historically, this section was used in place of EXIT STATUS for manuals in sections 1, 6, and 8; however, this practise is discouraged.
See Bl -diag.
- ERRORS
-
Documents error handling in sections 2, 3, and 9.
See Er.
- SEE ALSO
-
References other manuals with related topics. This section should exist for most manuals. Cross-references should conventionally be ordered first by section, then alphabetically.
References to other documentation concerning the topic of the manual page, for example authoritative books or journal articles, may also be provided in this section.
- STANDARDS
-
References any standards implemented or used. If not adhering to any standards, the HISTORY section should be used instead.
See St.
- HISTORY
- A brief history of the subject, including where it was first implemented, and when it was ported to or reimplemented for the operating system at hand.
- AUTHORS
-
Credits to the person or persons who wrote the code and/or documentation. Authors should generally be noted by both name and email address.
See An.
- CAVEATS
- Common misuses and misunderstandings should be explained in this section.
- BUGS
- Known bugs, limitations, and work-arounds should be described in this section.
- SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
- Documents any security precautions that operators should consider.
MACRO OVERVIEW
This overview is sorted such that macros of similar purpose are listed together, to help find the best macro for any given purpose. Deprecated macros are not included in the overview, but can be found below in the alphabetical MACRO REFERENCE.Document preamble and NAME section macros
Dd | document date: $Mdocdate$ | month day, year |
Dt | document title: TITLE section [volume | arch] |
Os | operating system version: [system [version]] |
Nm | document name (one argument) |
Nd | document description (one line) |
Sections and cross references
Sh | section header (one line) |
Ss | subsection header (one line) |
Sx | internal cross reference to a section or subsection |
Xr | cross reference to another manual page: name section |
Pp, Lp | start a text paragraph (no arguments) |
Displays and lists
Bd, Ed | display block: -type [-offset width] [-compact] |
D1 | indented display (one line) |
Dl | indented literal display (one line) |
Bl, El | list block: -type [-width val] [-offset val] [-compact] |
It | list item (syntax depends on -type) |
Ta | table cell separator in Bl -column lists |
Rs, %*, Re | bibliographic block (references) |
Spacing control
Pf | prefix, no following horizontal space (one argument) |
Ns | roman font, no preceding horizontal space (no arguments) |
Ap | apostrophe without surrounding whitespace (no arguments) |
Sm | switch horizontal spacing mode: on | off |
Bk, Ek | keep block: -words |
br | force output line break in text mode (no arguments) |
sp | force vertical space: [height] |
Semantic markup for command line utilities:
Nm | start a SYNOPSIS block with the name of a utility |
Fl | command line options (flags) (>=0 arguments) |
Cm | command modifier (>0 arguments) |
Ar | command arguments (>=0 arguments) |
Op, Oo, Oc | optional syntax elements (enclosure) |
Ic | internal or interactive command (>0 arguments) |
Ev | environmental variable (>0 arguments) |
Pa | file system path (>=0 arguments) |
Semantic markup for function libraries:
Lb | function library (one argument) |
In | include file (one argument) |
Fd | other preprocessor directive (>0 arguments) |
Ft | function type (>0 arguments) |
Fo, Fc | function block: funcname |
Fn | function name: [functype] funcname [[argtype] argname] |
Fa | function argument (>0 arguments) |
Vt | variable type (>0 arguments) |
Va | variable name (>0 arguments) |
Dv | defined variable or preprocessor constant (>0 arguments) |
Er | error constant (>0 arguments) |
Ev | environmental variable (>0 arguments) |
Various semantic markup:
An | author name (>0 arguments) |
Lk | hyperlink: uri [name] |
Mt | “mailto” hyperlink: address |
Cd | kernel configuration declaration (>0 arguments) |
Ad | memory address (>0 arguments) |
Ms | mathematical symbol (>0 arguments) |
Tn | tradename (>0 arguments) |
Physical markup
Em | italic font or underline (emphasis) (>0 arguments) |
Sy | boldface font (symbolic) (>0 arguments) |
Li | typewriter font (literal) (>0 arguments) |
No | return to roman font (normal) (no arguments) |
Bf, Ef | font block: [-type | Em | Li | Sy] |
Physical enclosures
Dq, Do, Dc | enclose in typographic double quotes: “text” |
Qq, Qo, Qc | enclose in typewriter double quotes: “text” |
Sq, So, Sc | enclose in single quotes: ‘text’ |
Ql |
single-quoted literal text: ‘text ’ |
Pq, Po, Pc | enclose in parentheses: (text) |
Bq, Bo, Bc | enclose in square brackets: [text] |
Brq, Bro, Brc | enclose in curly braces: {text} |
Aq, Ao, Ac | enclose in angle brackets: <text> |
Eo, Ec | generic enclosure |
MACRO REFERENCE
This section is a canonical reference of all macros, arranged alphabetically. For the scoping of individual macros, see MACRO SYNTAX.%A
Author name of an Rs block. Multiple authors should each be accorded their own %A line. Author names should be ordered with full or abbreviated forename(s) first, then full surname.%B
Book title of an Rs block. This macro may also be used in a non-bibliographic context when referring to book titles.%C
Publication city or location of an Rs block.%D
Publication date of an Rs block. Recommended formats of arguments are month day, year or just year.%I
Publisher or issuer name of an Rs block.%J
Journal name of an Rs block.%N
Issue number (usually for journals) of an Rs block.%O
Optional information of an Rs block.%P
Book or journal page number of an Rs block.%Q
Institutional author (school, government, etc.) of an Rs block. Multiple institutional authors should each be accorded their own %Q line.%R
Technical report name of an Rs block.%T
Article title of an Rs block. This macro may also be used in a non-bibliographical context when referring to article titles.%U
URI of reference document.%V
Volume number of an Rs block.Ac
Close an Ao block. Does not have any tail arguments.Ad
Memory address. Do not use this for postal addresses.Examples:
.Ad [0,$]
.Ad 0x00000000
An
Author name. Can be used both for the authors of the program, function, or driver documented in the manual, or for the authors of the manual itself. Requires either the name of an author or one of the following arguments:
- -split
- Start a new output line before each subsequent invocation of An.
- -nosplit
- The opposite of -split.
The default is -nosplit. The effect of selecting either of the -split modes ends at the beginning of the AUTHORS section. In the AUTHORS section, the default is -nosplit for the first author listing and -split for all other author listings.
Examples:
.An -nosplit
.An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq Mt kristaps@bsd.lv
Ao
Begin a block enclosed by angle brackets. Does not have any head arguments.Examples:
.Fl -key= Ns Ao Ar val Ac
See also Aq.
Ap
Inserts an apostrophe without any surrounding whitespace. This is generally used as a grammatical device when referring to the verb form of a function.Examples:
.Fn execve Ap d
Aq
Encloses its arguments in angle brackets.Examples:
.Fl -key= Ns Aq Ar val
Remarks: this macro is often abused for rendering URIs, which should instead use Lk or Mt, or to note pre-processor “#include
” statements, which should use In.
See also Ao.
Ar
Command arguments. If an argument is not provided, the string “file ...” is used as a default.Examples:
.Fl o Ar file
.Ar
.Ar arg1 , arg2 .
The arguments to the Ar macro are names and placeholders for command arguments; for fixed strings to be passed verbatim as arguments, use Fl or Cm.
At
Formats an AT&T UNIX version. Accepts one optional argument:
- v[1-7] | 32v
- A version of AT&T UNIX.
- III
- AT&T System III UNIX.
- V[.[1-4]]?
- A version of AT&T System V UNIX.
Note that these arguments do not begin with a hyphen.
Examples:
.At
.At III
.At V.1
Bc
Close a Bo block. Does not have any tail arguments.Bd
Begin a display block. Its syntax is as follows:
Display blocks are used to select a different indentation and justification than the one used by the surrounding text. They may contain both macro lines and text lines. By default, a display block is preceded by a vertical space.
The type must be one of the following:
- -centered
- Produce one output line from each input line, and centre-justify each line. Using this display type is not recommended; many mdoc implementations render it poorly.
- -filled
- Change the positions of line breaks to fill each line, and left- and right-justify the resulting block.
- -literal
- Produce one output line from each input line, and do not justify the block at all. Preserve white space as it appears in the input. Always use a constant-width font. Use this for displaying source code.
- -ragged
- Change the positions of line breaks to fill each line, and left-justify the resulting block.
- -unfilled
- The same as -literal, but using the same font as for normal text, which is a variable width font if supported by the output device.
The type must be provided first. Additional arguments may follow:
- -offset width
-
Indent the display by the width, which may be one of the following:
- One of the pre-defined strings indent, the width of a standard indentation (six constant width characters); indent-two, twice indent; left, which has no effect; right, which justifies to the right margin; or center, which aligns around an imagined centre axis.
- A macro invocation, which selects a predefined width associated with that macro. The most popular is the imaginary macro Ds, which resolves to 6n.
- A scaling width as described in roff(7).
- An arbitrary string, which indents by the length of this string.
When the argument is missing, -offset is ignored.
- -compact
- Do not assert vertical space before the display.
Examples:
.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact Hello world. .Ed
Bf
Change the font mode for a scoped block of text. Its syntax is as follows:
The -emphasis and Em argument are equivalent, as are -symbolic and Sy, and -literal and Li. Without an argument, this macro does nothing. The font mode continues until broken by a new font mode in a nested scope or Ef is encountered.
Bk
For each macro, keep its output together on the same output line, until the end of the macro or the end of the input line is reached, whichever comes first. Line breaks in text lines are unaffected. The syntax is as follows:
.Bk -words
The -words argument is required; additional arguments are ignored.
The following example will not break within each Op macro line:
.Bk -words .Op Fl f Ar flags .Op Fl o Ar output .Ek
Be careful in using over-long lines within a keep block! Doing so will clobber the right margin.
Bl
Begin a list. Lists consist of items specified using the It macro, containing a head or a body or both. The list syntax is as follows:
The list type is mandatory and must be specified first. The -width and -offset arguments accept scaling widths as described in roff(7) or use the length of the given string. The -offset is a global indentation for the whole list, affecting both item heads and bodies. For those list types supporting it, the -width argument requests an additional indentation of item bodies, to be added to the -offset. Unless the -compact argument is specified, list entries are separated by vertical space.
A list must specify one of the following list types:
- -bullet
- No item heads can be specified, but a bullet will be printed at the head of each item. Item bodies start on the same output line as the bullet and are indented according to the -width argument.
- -column
- A columnated list. The -width argument has no effect; instead, each argument specifies the width of one column, using either the scaling width syntax described in roff(7) or the string length of the argument. If the first line of the body of a -column list is not an It macro line, It contexts spanning one input line each are implied until an It macro line is encountered, at which point items start being interpreted as described in the It documentation.
- -dash
- Like -bullet, except that dashes are used in place of bullets.
- -diag
- Like -inset, except that item heads are not parsed for macro invocations. Most often used in the DIAGNOSTICS section with error constants in the item heads.
- -enum
- A numbered list. No item heads can be specified. Formatted like -bullet, except that cardinal numbers are used in place of bullets, starting at 1.
- -hang
- Like -tag, except that the first lines of item bodies are not indented, but follow the item heads like in -inset lists.
- -hyphen
- Synonym for -dash.
- -inset
- Item bodies follow items heads on the same line, using normal inter-word spacing. Bodies are not indented, and the -width argument is ignored.
- -item
- No item heads can be specified, and none are printed. Bodies are not indented, and the -width argument is ignored.
- -ohang
- Item bodies start on the line following item heads and are not indented. The -width argument is ignored.
- -tag
- Item bodies are indented according to the -width argument. When an item head fits inside the indentation, the item body follows this head on the same output line. Otherwise, the body starts on the output line following the head.
Lists may be nested within lists and displays. Nesting of -column and -enum lists may not be portable.
Bo
Begin a block enclosed by square brackets. Does not have any head arguments.Examples:
.Bo 1 , .Dv BUFSIZ Bc
See also Bq.
Bq
Encloses its arguments in square brackets.Examples:
.Bq 1, Dv BUFSIZ
Remarks: this macro is sometimes abused to emulate optional arguments for commands; the correct macros to use for this purpose are Op, Oo, and Oc.
See also Bo.
Brc
Close a Bro block. Does not have any tail arguments.Bro
Begin a block enclosed by curly braces. Does not have any head arguments.Examples:
.Bro 1 , ... , .Va n Brc
See also Brq.
Bsx
Format the BSD/OS version provided as an argument, or a default value if no argument is provided.Examples:
.Bsx 1.0
.Bsx
Bt
Prints “is currently in beta test.”Bx
Format the BSD version provided as an argument, or a default value if no argument is provided.Examples:
.Bx 4.3 Tahoe
.Bx 4.4
.Bx
Cd
Kernel configuration declaration. This denotes strings accepted by config(8). It is most often used in section 4 manual pages.Examples:
.Cd device le0 at scode?
Remarks: this macro is commonly abused by using quoted literals to retain whitespace and align consecutive Cd declarations. This practise is discouraged.
Cm
Command modifiers. Typically used for fixed strings passed as arguments, unless Fl is more appropriate. Also useful when specifying configuration options or keys.Examples:
.Nm mt Fl f Ar device Cm rewind
.Nm ps Fl o Cm pid , Ns Cm command
.Nm dd Cm if= Ns Ar file1 Cm of= Ns Ar file2
.Cm IdentityFile Pa ~/.ssh/id_rsa
.Cm LogLevel Dv DEBUG
D1
One-line indented display. This is formatted by the default rules and is useful for simple indented statements. It is followed by a newline.Examples:
.D1 Fl abcdefgh
Db
Switch debugging mode. Its syntax is as follows:
.Db on | off
This macro is ignored by mandoc(1).
Dc
Close a Do block. Does not have any tail arguments.Dd
Document date. This is the mandatory first macro of any mdoc manual. Its syntax is as follows:
.Dd month day, year
The month is the full English month name, the day is an optionally zero-padded numeral, and the year is the full four-digit year.
Other arguments are not portable; the mandoc(1) utility handles them as follows:
- To have the date automatically filled in by the OpenBSD version of cvs(1), the special string “$Mdocdate$” can be given as an argument.
- A few alternative date formats are accepted as well and converted to the standard form.
- If a date string cannot be parsed, it is used verbatim.
- If no date string is given, the current date is used.
Examples:
.Dd $Mdocdate$
.Dd $Mdocdate: July 21 2007$
.Dd July 21, 2007
Dl
One-line intended display. This is formatted as literal text and is useful for commands and invocations. It is followed by a newline.Examples:
.Dl % mandoc mdoc.7 \(ba less
Do
Begin a block enclosed by double quotes. Does not have any head arguments.Examples:
.Do April is the cruellest month .Dc \(em T.S. Eliot
See also Dq.
Dq
Encloses its arguments in “typographic” double-quotes.Examples:
.Dq April is the cruellest month \(em T.S. Eliot
Dt
Document title. This is the mandatory second macro of any mdoc file. Its syntax is as follows:
Its arguments are as follows:
- title
- The document's title (name), defaulting to “UNKNOWN” if unspecified. It should be capitalised.
- section
- The manual section. This may be one of 1 (utilities), 2 (system calls), 3 (libraries), 3p (Perl libraries), 4 (devices), 5 (file formats), 6 (games), 7 (miscellaneous), 8 (system utilities), 9 (kernel functions), X11 (X Window System), X11R6 (X Window System), unass (unassociated), local (local system), draft (draft manual), or paper (paper). It should correspond to the manual's filename suffix and defaults to “1” if unspecified.
- volume
- This overrides the volume inferred from section. This field is optional, and if specified, must be one of USD (users' supplementary documents), PS1 (programmers' supplementary documents), AMD (administrators' supplementary documents), SMM (system managers' manuals), URM (users' reference manuals), PRM (programmers' reference manuals), KM (kernel manuals), IND (master index), MMI (master index), LOCAL (local manuals), LOC (local manuals), or CON (contributed manuals).
- arch
- This specifies the machine architecture a manual page applies to, where relevant, for example alpha, amd64, i386, or sparc64. The list of supported architectures varies by operating system. For the full list of all architectures recognized by mandoc(1), see the file arch.in in the source distribution.
Examples:
.Dt FOO 1
.Dt FOO 4 KM
.Dt FOO 9 i386
Dv
Defined variables such as preprocessor constants, constant symbols, enumeration values, and so on.Examples:
.Dv NULL
.Dv BUFSIZ
.Dv STDOUT_FILENO
See also Er and Ev for special-purpose constants, Va for variable symbols, and Fd for listing preprocessor variable definitions in the SYNOPSIS.
Dx
Format the DragonFly version provided as an argument, or a default value if no argument is provided.Examples:
.Dx 2.4.1
.Dx
Ec
Close a scope started by Eo. Its syntax is as follows:
.Ec [TERM]
The TERM argument is used as the enclosure tail, for example, specifying \(rq will emulate Dc.
Ed
End a display context started by Bd.Ef
End a font mode context started by Bf.Ek
End a keep context started by Bk.Em
Denotes text that should be emphasised. Note that this is a presentation term and should not be used for stylistically decorating technical terms. Depending on the output device, this is usually represented using an italic font or underlined characters.Examples:
.Em Warnings!
.Em Remarks:
En
This macro is obsolete and not implemented in mandoc(1).Eo
An arbitrary enclosure. Its syntax is as follows:
.Eo [TERM]
The TERM argument is used as the enclosure head, for example, specifying \(lq will emulate Do.
Er
Error constants for definitions of the errno libc global variable. This is most often used in section 2 and 3 manual pages.Examples:
.Er EPERM
.Er ENOENT
See also Dv for general constants.
Es
This macro is obsolete and not implemented.Ev
Environmental variables such as those specified in environ(7).Examples:
.Ev DISPLAY
.Ev PATH
See also Dv for general constants.
Ex
Insert a standard sentence regarding command exit values of 0 on success and >0 on failure. This is most often used in section 1, 6, and 8 manual pages. Its syntax is as follows:
.Ex -std [utility ...]
If utility is not specified, the document's name set by Nm is used. Multiple utility arguments are treated as separate utilities.
See also Rv.
Fa
Function argument. Its syntax is as follows:
This may be invoked for names with or without the corresponding type. It is also used to specify the field name of a structure. Most often, the Fa macro is used in the SYNOPSIS within Fo section when documenting multi-line function prototypes. If invoked with multiple arguments, the arguments are separated by a comma. Furthermore, if the following macro is another Fa, the last argument will also have a trailing comma.
Examples:
.Fa "const char *p"
.Fa "int a" "int b" "int c"
.Fa foo
See also Fo.
Fc
End a function context started by Fo.Fd
Preprocessor directive, in particular for listing it in the SYNOPSIS. Historically, it was also used to document include files. The latter usage has been deprecated in favour of In.Its syntax is as follows:
Examples:
.Fd #define sa_handler __sigaction_u.__sa_handler
.Fd #define SIO_MAXNFDS
.Fd #ifdef FS_DEBUG
.Ft void
.Fn dbg_open "const char *"
.Fd #endif
See also MANUAL STRUCTURE, In, and Dv.
Fl
Command-line flag or option. Used when listing arguments to command-line utilities. Prints a fixed-width hyphen ‘-’ directly followed by each argument. If no arguments are provided, a hyphen is printed followed by a space. If the argument is a macro, a hyphen is prefixed to the subsequent macro output.Examples:
.Fl R Op Fl H | L | P
.Op Fl 1AaCcdFfgHhikLlmnopqRrSsTtux
.Fl type Cm d Fl name Pa CVS
.Fl Ar signal_number
.Fl o Fl
See also Cm.
Fn
A function name. Its syntax is as follows:
Function arguments are surrounded in parenthesis and are delimited by commas. If no arguments are specified, blank parenthesis are output. In the SYNOPSIS section, this macro starts a new output line, and a blank line is automatically inserted between function definitions.
Examples:
.Fn "int funcname" "int arg0" "int arg1"
.Fn funcname "int arg0"
.Fn funcname arg0
.Ft functype .Fn funcname
When referring to a function documented in another manual page, use Xr instead. See also MANUAL STRUCTURE, Fo, and Ft.
Fo
Begin a function block. This is a multi-line version of Fn. Its syntax is as follows:
.Fo funcname
Invocations usually occur in the following context:
See also MANUAL STRUCTURE, Fa, Fc, and Ft.
Fr
This macro is obsolete and not implemented in mandoc(1).It was used to show function return values. The syntax was:
.Fr value
Ft
A function type. Its syntax is as follows:
.Ft functype
In the SYNOPSIS section, a new output line is started after this macro.
Examples:
.Ft int
.Ft functype .Fn funcname
See also MANUAL STRUCTURE, Fn, and Fo.
Fx
Format the FreeBSD version provided as an argument, or a default value if no argument is provided.Examples:
.Fx 7.1
.Fx
Hf
This macro is not implemented in mandoc(1).It was used to include the contents of a (header) file literally. The syntax was:
.Hf filename
Ic
Designate an internal or interactive command. This is similar to Cm but used for instructions rather than values.Examples:
.Ic :wq
.Ic hash
.Ic alias
Note that using Bd -literal or D1 is preferred for displaying code; the Ic macro is used when referring to specific instructions.
In
An “include” file. When invoked as the first macro on an input line in the SYNOPSIS section, the argument is displayed in angle brackets and preceded by “#include”, and a blank line is inserted in front if there is a preceding function declaration. This is most often used in section 2, 3, and 9 manual pages.Examples:
.In sys/types.h
See also MANUAL STRUCTURE.
It
A list item. The syntax of this macro depends on the list type.Lists of type -hang, -ohang, -inset, and -diag have the following syntax:
.It args
Lists of type -bullet, -dash, -enum, -hyphen and -item have the following syntax:
.It
with subsequent lines interpreted within the scope of the It until either a closing El or another It.
The -tag list has the following syntax:
.It [args]
Subsequent lines are interpreted as with -bullet and family. The line arguments correspond to the list's left-hand side; body arguments correspond to the list's contents.
The -column list is the most complicated. Its syntax is as follows:
.It cell [<TAB> cell ...]
The arguments consist of one or more lines of text and macros representing a complete table line. Cells within the line are delimited by tabs or by the special Ta block macro. The tab cell delimiter may only be used within the It line itself; on following lines, only the Ta macro can be used to delimit cells, and Ta is only recognised as a macro when called by other macros, not as the first macro on a line.
Note that quoted strings may span tab-delimited cells on an It line. For example,
.It "col1; <TAB> col2 ;" ;
will preserve the semicolon whitespace except for the last.
See also Bl.
Lb
Specify a library. The syntax is as follows:
.Lb library
The library parameter may be a system library, such as libz or libpam, in which case a small library description is printed next to the linker invocation; or a custom library, in which case the library name is printed in quotes. This is most commonly used in the SYNOPSIS section as described in MANUAL STRUCTURE.
Examples:
.Lb libz
.Lb libmandoc
Li
Denotes text that should be in aliteral
font mode. Note that this is a presentation term and should not be used for stylistically decorating technical terms.On terminal output devices, this is often indistinguishable from normal text.
Lk
Format a hyperlink. Its syntax is as follows:
.Lk uri [name]
Examples:
.Lk http://bsd.lv "The BSD.lv Project"
.Lk http://bsd.lv
See also Mt.
Lp
Synonym for Pp.Ms
Display a mathematical symbol. Its syntax is as follows:
.Ms symbol
Examples:
.Ms sigma
.Ms aleph
Mt
Format a “mailto:” hyperlink. Its syntax is as follows:
.Mt address
Examples:
.Mt discuss@manpages.bsd.lv
.An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq Mt kristaps@bsd.lv
Nd
A one line description of the manual's content. This may only be invoked in the SYNOPSIS section subsequent the Nm macro.Examples:
The Nd macro technically accepts child macros and terminates with a subsequent Sh invocation. Do not assume this behaviour: some whatis(1) database generators are not smart enough to parse more than the line arguments and will display macros verbatim.
See also Nm.
Nm
The name of the manual page, or — in particular in section 1, 6, and 8 pages — of an additional command or feature documented in the manual page. When first invoked, the Nm macro expects a single argument, the name of the manual page. Usually, the first invocation happens in the NAME section of the page. The specified name will be remembered and used whenever the macro is called again without arguments later in the page. The Nm macro uses Block full-implicit semantics when invoked as the first macro on an input line in the SYNOPSIS section; otherwise, it uses ordinary In-line semantics.Examples:
.Sh SYNOPSIS .Nm cat .Op Fl benstuv .Op Ar
In the SYNOPSIS of section 2, 3 and 9 manual pages, use the Fn macro rather than Nm to mark up the name of the manual page.
No
Normal text. Closes the scope of any preceding in-line macro. When used after physical formatting macros like Em or Sy, switches back to the standard font face and weight. Can also be used to embed plain text strings in macro lines using semantic annotation macros.Examples:
.Em italic , Sy bold , No and roman
.Sm off .Cm :C No / Ar pattern No / Ar replacement No / .Sm on
Ns
Suppress a space between the output of the preceding macro and the following text or macro. Following invocation, input is interpreted as normal text just like after an No macro.This has no effect when invoked at the start of a macro line.
Examples:
.Ar name Ns = Ns Ar value
.Cm :M Ns Ar pattern
.Fl o Ns Ar output
Nx
Format the NetBSD version provided as an argument, or a default value if no argument is provided.Examples:
.Nx 5.01
.Nx
Oc
Close multi-line Oo context.Op
Optional part of a command line. Prints the argument(s) in brackets. This is most often used in the SYNOPSIS section of section 1 and 8 manual pages.Examples:
.Op Fl a Ar b
.Op Ar a | b
See also Oo.
Os
Document operating system version. This is the mandatory third macro of any mdoc file. Its syntax is as follows:
.Os [system [version]]
The optional system parameter specifies the relevant operating system or environment. Left unspecified, it defaults to the local operating system version. This is the suggested form.
Examples:
.Os
.Os KTH/CSC/TCS
.Os BSD 4.3
Ot
This macro is obsolete and not implemented in mandoc(1).Historical mdoc packages described it as “old function type (FORTRAN)”.
Ox
Format the OpenBSD version provided as an argument, or a default value if no argument is provided.Examples:
.Ox 4.5
.Ox
Pa
An absolute or relative file system path, or a file or directory name. If an argument is not provided, the character ‘~’ is used as a default.Examples:
.Pa /usr/bin/mandoc
.Pa /usr/share/man/man7/mdoc.7
See also Lk.
Pc
Close parenthesised context opened by Po.Pf
Removes the space between its argument (“prefix”) and the following macro. Its syntax is as follows:
.Pf prefix macro arguments ...
This is equivalent to:
.No prefix Ns macro arguments ...
Examples:
.Pf $ Ar variable_name
.Pf 0x Ar hex_digits
Po
Multi-line version of Pq.Pp
Break a paragraph. This will assert vertical space between prior and subsequent macros and/or text.Paragraph breaks are not needed before or after Sh or Ss macros or before displays (Bd) or lists (Bl) unless the -compact flag is given.
Pq
Parenthesised enclosure.See also Po.
Qc
Close quoted context opened by Qo.Qo
Multi-line version of Qq.Re
Close an Rs block. Does not have any tail arguments.Rs
Begin a bibliographic (“reference”) block. Does not have any head arguments. The block macro may only contain %A, %B, %C, %D, %I, %J, %N, %O, %P, %Q, %R, %T, %U, and %V child macros (at least one must be specified).Examples:
.Rs .%A J. E. Hopcroft .%A J. D. Ullman .%B Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation .%I Addison-Wesley .%C Reading, Massachusettes .%D 1979 .Re
If an Rs block is used within a SEE ALSO section, a vertical space is asserted before the rendered output, else the block continues on the current line.
Rv
Insert a standard sentence regarding a function call's return value of 0 on success and -1 on error, with the errno libc global variable set on error. Its syntax is as follows:
.Rv -std [function ...]
If function is not specified, the document's name set by Nm is used. Multiple function arguments are treated as separate functions.
See also Ex.
Sc
Close single-quoted context opened by So.Sh
Begin a new section. For a list of conventional manual sections, see MANUAL STRUCTURE. These sections should be used unless it's absolutely necessary that custom sections be used.Section names should be unique so that they may be keyed by Sx. Although this macro is parsed, it should not consist of child node or it may not be linked with Sx.
Sm
Switches the spacing mode for output generated from macros. Its syntax is as follows:
.Sm on | off
By default, spacing is on. When switched off, no white space is inserted between macro arguments and between the output generated from adjacent macros, but text lines still get normal spacing between words and sentences.
So
Multi-line version of Sq.Ss
Begin a new subsection. Unlike with Sh, there is no convention for the naming of subsections. Except DESCRIPTION, the conventional sections described in MANUAL STRUCTURE rarely have subsections.Sub-section names should be unique so that they may be keyed by Sx. Although this macro is parsed, it should not consist of child node or it may not be linked with Sx.
St
Replace an abbreviation for a standard with the full form. The following standards are recognised:
- -p1003.1-88
- IEEE Std 1003.1-1988 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1-90
- IEEE Std 1003.1-1990 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1-96
- ISO/IEC 9945-1:1996 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1-2001
- IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1-2004
- IEEE Std 1003.1-2004 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1-2008
- IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1-2013
- IEEE Std 1003.1-2008/Cor 1-2013 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1
- IEEE Std 1003.1 (“POSIX.1”)
- -p1003.1b
- IEEE Std 1003.1b (“POSIX.1b”)
- -p1003.1b-93
- IEEE Std 1003.1b-1993 (“POSIX.1b”)
- -p1003.1c-95
- IEEE Std 1003.1c-1995 (“POSIX.1c”)
- -p1003.1d-99
- IEEE Std 1003.1d-1999 (“POSIX.1d”)
- -p1003.1g-2000
- IEEE Std 1003.1g-2000 (“POSIX.1g”)
- -p1003.1i-95
- IEEE Std 1003.1i-1995 (“POSIX.1i”)
- -p1003.1j-2000
- IEEE Std 1003.1j-2000 (“POSIX.1j”)
- -p1003.1q-2000
- IEEE Std 1003.1q-2000 (“POSIX.1q”)
- -p1003.2
- IEEE Std 1003.2 (“POSIX.2”)
- -p1003.2-92
- IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (“POSIX.2”)
- -p1003.2a-92
- IEEE Std 1003.2a-1992 (“POSIX.2”)
- -p1387.2
- IEEE Std 1387.2 (“POSIX.7.2”)
- -p1387.2-95
- IEEE Std 1387.2-1995 (“POSIX.7.2”)
- -isoC
- ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (“ISO C90”)
- -isoC-90
- ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (“ISO C90”)
- -isoC-amd1
- ISO/IEC 9899/AMD1:1995 (“ISO C90, Amendment 1”)
- -isoC-tcor1
- ISO/IEC 9899/TCOR1:1994 (“ISO C90, Technical Corrigendum 1”)
- -isoC-tcor2
- ISO/IEC 9899/TCOR2:1995 (“ISO C90, Technical Corrigendum 2”)
- -isoC-99
- ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (“ISO C99”)
- -isoC-2011
- ISO/IEC 9899:2011 (“ISO C11”)
- -iso9945-1-90
- ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990 (“POSIX.1”)
- -iso9945-1-96
- ISO/IEC 9945-1:1996 (“POSIX.1”)
- -iso9945-2-93
- ISO/IEC 9945-2:1993 (“POSIX.2”)
- -ansiC
- ANSI X3.159-1989 (“ANSI C89”)
- -ansiC-89
- ANSI X3.159-1989 (“ANSI C89”)
- -ansiC-99
- ANSI/ISO/IEC 9899-1999 (“ANSI C99”)
- -ieee754
- IEEE Std 754-1985
- -iso8802-3
- ISO 8802-3: 1989
- -iso8601
- ISO 8601
- -ieee1275-94
- IEEE Std 1275-1994 (“Open Firmware”)
- -xpg3
- X/Open Portability Guide Issue 3 (“XPG3”)
- -xpg4
- X/Open Portability Guide Issue 4 (“XPG4”)
- -xpg4.2
- X/Open Portability Guide Issue 4, Version 2 (“XPG4.2”)
- -xpg4.3
- X/Open Portability Guide Issue 4, Version 3 (“XPG4.3”)
- -xbd5
- X/Open Base Definitions Issue 5 (“XBD5”)
- -xcu5
- X/Open Commands and Utilities Issue 5 (“XCU5”)
- -xsh4.2
- X/Open System Interfaces and Headers Issue 4, Version 2 (“XSH4.2”)
- -xsh5
- X/Open System Interfaces and Headers Issue 5 (“XSH5”)
- -xns5
- X/Open Networking Services Issue 5 (“XNS5”)
- -xns5.2
- X/Open Networking Services Issue 5.2 (“XNS5.2”)
- -xns5.2d2.0
- X/Open Networking Services Issue 5.2 Draft 2.0 (“XNS5.2D2.0”)
- -xcurses4.2
- X/Open Curses Issue 4, Version 2 (“XCURSES4.2”)
- -susv2
- Version 2 of the Single UNIX Specification (“SUSv2”)
- -susv3
- Version 3 of the Single UNIX Specification (“SUSv3”)
- -svid4
- System V Interface Definition, Fourth Edition (“SVID4”)
Sx
Reference a section or subsection in the same manual page. The referenced section or subsection name must be identical to the enclosed argument, including whitespace.Examples:
.Sx MANUAL STRUCTURE
Sy
Format enclosed arguments in symbolic (“boldface”). Note that this is a presentation term and should not be used for stylistically decorating technical terms.Tn
Format a tradename.Since this macro is often implemented to use a small caps font, it has historically been used for acronyms (like ASCII) as well. Such usage is not recommended because it would use the same macro sometimes for semantical annotation, sometimes for physical formatting.
Examples:
.Tn IBM
Ud
Prints out “currently under development.”Ux
Format the UNIX name. Accepts no argument.Examples:
.Ux
Va
A variable name.Examples:
.Va foo
.Va const char *bar;
Vt
A variable type. This is also used for indicating global variables in the SYNOPSIS section, in which case a variable name is also specified. Note that it accepts Block partial-implicit syntax when invoked as the first macro on an input line in the SYNOPSIS section, else it accepts ordinary In-line syntax. In the former case, this macro starts a new output line, and a blank line is inserted in front if there is a preceding function definition or include directive.Note that this should not be confused with Ft, which is used for function return types.
Examples:
.Vt unsigned char
.Vt extern const char * const sys_signame[] ;
See also MANUAL STRUCTURE and Va.
Xc
Close a scope opened by Xo.Xo
Extend the header of an It macro or the body of a partial-implicit block macro beyond the end of the input line. This macro originally existed to work around the 9-argument limit of historic roff(7).Xr
Link to another manual (“cross-reference”). Its syntax is as follows:
.Xr name [section]
Cross reference the name and section number of another man page; omitting the section number is rarely useful.
Examples:
.Xr mandoc 1
.Xr mandoc 1 ;
.Xr mandoc 1 Ns s behaviour
br
Emits a line-break. This macro should not be used; it is implemented for compatibility with historical manuals.Consider using Pp in the event of natural paragraph breaks.
MACRO SYNTAX
The syntax of a macro depends on its classification. In this section, ‘-arg’ refers to macro arguments, which may be followed by zero or more ‘parm’ parameters; ‘Yo’ opens the scope of a macro; and if specified, ‘Yc’ closes it out.The Callable column indicates that the macro may also be called by passing its name as an argument to another macro. For example, ‘.Op Fl O Ar file’ produces ‘[-O file]’. To prevent a macro call and render the macro name literally, escape it by prepending a zero-width space, ‘\&’. For example, ‘Op \&Fl O’ produces ‘[Fl O]’. If a macro is not callable but its name appears as an argument to another macro, it is interpreted as opaque text. For example, ‘.Fl Sh’ produces ‘-Sh’.
The Parsed column indicates whether the macro may call other macros by receiving their names as arguments. If a macro is not parsed but the name of another macro appears as an argument, it is interpreted as opaque text.
The Scope column, if applicable, describes closure rules.
Block full-explicit
Multi-line scope closed by an explicit closing macro. All macros contains bodies; only Bf and (optionally) Bl contain a head.
.Yo [-arg [parm...]] [head...] [body...] .Yc
Macro | Callable | Parsed | Scope |
Bd | No | No | closed by Ed |
Bf | No | No | closed by Ef |
Bk | No | No | closed by Ek |
Bl | No | No | closed by El |
Ed | No | No | opened by Bd |
Ef | No | No | opened by Bf |
Ek | No | No | opened by Bk |
El | No | No | opened by Bl |
Block full-implicit
Multi-line scope closed by end-of-file or implicitly by another macro. All macros have bodies; some (It -bullet, -hyphen, -dash, -enum, -item) don't have heads; only one (It in Bl -column) has multiple heads.
.Yo [-arg [parm...]] [head... [Ta head...]] [body...]
Macro | Callable | Parsed | Scope |
It | No | Yes | closed by It, El |
Nd | No | No | closed by Sh |
Nm | No | Yes | closed by Nm, Sh, Ss |
Sh | No | Yes | closed by Sh |
Ss | No | Yes | closed by Sh, Ss |
Note that the Nm macro is a Block full-implicit macro only when invoked as the first macro in a SYNOPSIS section line, else it is In-line.
Block partial-explicit
Like block full-explicit, but also with single-line scope. Each has at least a body and, in limited circumstances, a head (Fo, Eo) and/or tail (Ec).
.Yo [-arg [parm...]] [head...] [body...] .Yc [tail...] .Yo [-arg [parm...]] [head...] [body...] Yc [tail...]
Macro | Callable | Parsed | Scope |
Ac | Yes | Yes | opened by Ao |
Ao | Yes | Yes | closed by Ac |
Bc | Yes | Yes | closed by Bo |
Bo | Yes | Yes | opened by Bc |
Brc | Yes | Yes | opened by Bro |
Bro | Yes | Yes | closed by Brc |
Dc | Yes | Yes | opened by Do |
Do | Yes | Yes | closed by Dc |
Ec | Yes | Yes | opened by Eo |
Eo | Yes | Yes | closed by Ec |
Fc | Yes | Yes | opened by Fo |
Fo | No | No | closed by Fc |
Oc | Yes | Yes | closed by Oo |
Oo | Yes | Yes | opened by Oc |
Pc | Yes | Yes | closed by Po |
Po | Yes | Yes | opened by Pc |
Qc | Yes | Yes | opened by Oo |
Qo | Yes | Yes | closed by Oc |
Re | No | No | opened by Rs |
Rs | No | No | closed by Re |
Sc | Yes | Yes | opened by So |
So | Yes | Yes | closed by Sc |
Xc | Yes | Yes | opened by Xo |
Xo | Yes | Yes | closed by Xc |
Block partial-implicit
Like block full-implicit, but with single-line scope closed by the end of the line.
.Yo [-arg [val...]] [body...] [res...]
Macro | Callable | Parsed |
Aq | Yes | Yes |
Bq | Yes | Yes |
Brq | Yes | Yes |
D1 | No | Yes |
Dl | No | Yes |
Dq | Yes | Yes |
Op | Yes | Yes |
Pq | Yes | Yes |
Ql | Yes | Yes |
Yes | Yes | |
Sq | Yes | Yes |
Vt | Yes | Yes |
Note that the Vt macro is a Block partial-implicit only when invoked as the first macro in a SYNOPSIS section line, else it is In-line.
Special block macro
The Ta macro can only be used below It in Bl -column lists. It delimits blocks representing table cells; these blocks have bodies, but no heads.Macro | Callable | Parsed | Scope |
Ta | Yes | Yes | closed by Ta, It |
In-line
Closed by the end of the line, fixed argument lengths, and/or subsequent macros. In-line macros have only text children. If a number (or inequality) of arguments is (n), then the macro accepts an arbitrary number of arguments.
.Yo [-arg [val...]] [args...] [res...] .Yo [-arg [val...]] [args...] Yc... .Yo [-arg [val...]] arg0 arg1 argN
Macro | Callable | Parsed | Arguments |
%A | No | No | >0 |
%B | No | No | >0 |
%C | No | No | >0 |
%D | No | No | >0 |
%I | No | No | >0 |
%J | No | No | >0 |
%N | No | No | >0 |
%O | No | No | >0 |
%P | No | No | >0 |
%Q | No | No | >0 |
%R | No | No | >0 |
%T | No | No | >0 |
%U | No | No | >0 |
%V | No | No | >0 |
Ad | Yes | Yes | >0 |
An | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Ap | Yes | Yes | 0 |
Ar | Yes | Yes | n |
At | Yes | Yes | 1 |
Bsx | Yes | Yes | n |
Bt | No | No | 0 |
Bx | Yes | Yes | n |
Cd | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Cm | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Db | No | No | 1 |
Dd | No | No | n |
Dt | No | No | n |
Dv | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Dx | Yes | Yes | n |
Em | Yes | Yes | >0 |
En | No | No | 0 |
Er | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Es | No | No | 0 |
Ev | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Ex | No | No | n |
Fa | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Fd | No | No | >0 |
Fl | Yes | Yes | n |
Fn | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Fr | No | No | n |
Ft | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Fx | Yes | Yes | n |
Hf | No | No | n |
Ic | Yes | Yes | >0 |
In | No | No | 1 |
Lb | No | No | 1 |
Li | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Lk | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Lp | No | No | 0 |
Ms | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Mt | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Nm | Yes | Yes | n |
No | Yes | Yes | 0 |
Ns | Yes | Yes | 0 |
Nx | Yes | Yes | n |
Os | No | No | n |
Ot | No | No | n |
Ox | Yes | Yes | n |
Pa | Yes | Yes | n |
Pf | Yes | Yes | 1 |
Pp | No | No | 0 |
Rv | No | No | n |
Sm | No | No | 1 |
St | No | Yes | 1 |
Sx | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Sy | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Tn | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Ud | No | No | 0 |
Ux | Yes | Yes | n |
Va | Yes | Yes | n |
Vt | Yes | Yes | >0 |
Xr | Yes | Yes | >0 |
br | No | No | 0 |
sp | No | No | 1 |
Delimiters
When a macro argument consists of one single input character considered as a delimiter, the argument gets special handling. This does not apply when delimiters appear in arguments containing more than one character. Consequently, to prevent special handling and just handle it like any other argument, a delimiter can be escaped by prepending a zero-width space (‘\&’). In text lines, delimiters never need escaping, but may be used as normal punctuation.For many macros, when the leading arguments are opening delimiters, these delimiters are put before the macro scope, and when the trailing arguments are closing delimiters, these delimiters are put after the macro scope. For example,
.Aq ( [ word ] ) .
renders as:
([<word>]).
Opening delimiters are:
- (
- left parenthesis
- [
- left bracket
Closing delimiters are:
- .
- period
- ,
- comma
- :
- colon
- ;
- semicolon
- )
- right parenthesis
- ]
- right bracket
- ?
- question mark
- !
- exclamation mark
Note that even a period preceded by a backslash (‘\.’) gets this special handling; use ‘\&.’ to prevent that.
Many in-line macros interrupt their scope when they encounter delimiters, and resume their scope when more arguments follow that are not delimiters. For example,
.Fl a ( b | c \*(Ba d ) e
renders as:
-a (-b | -c | -d) -e
This applies to both opening and closing delimiters, and also to the middle delimiter:
- |
- vertical bar
As a special case, the predefined string \*(Ba is handled and rendered in the same way as a plain ‘|’ character. Using this predefined string is not recommended in new manuals.
Font handling
In mdoc documents, usage of semantic markup is recommended in order to have proper fonts automatically selected; only when no fitting semantic markup is available, consider falling back to Physical markup macros. Whenever any mdoc macro switches the roff(7) font mode, it will automatically restore the previous font when exiting its scope. Manually switching the font using the roff(7) ‘\f
’ font escape sequences is never required.COMPATIBILITY
This section documents compatibility between mandoc and other troff implementations, at this time limited to GNU troff (“groff”). The term “historic groff” refers to groff versions before 1.17, which featured a significant update of the doc.tmac file.Heirloom troff, the other significant troff implementation accepting -mdoc, is similar to historic groff.
The following problematic behaviour is found in groff:
- Display macros (Bd, Dl, and D1) may not be nested. (Historic groff only.)
- At with unknown arguments produces no output at all. (Historic groff only.) Newer groff and mandoc print “AT&T UNIX” and the arguments.
- Bl -column does not recognise trailing punctuation characters when they immediately precede tabulator characters, but treats them as normal text and outputs a space before them.
- Bd -ragged -compact does not start a new line. (Historic groff only.)
- Dd with non-standard arguments behaves very strangely. When there are three arguments, they are printed verbatim. Any other number of arguments is replaced by the current date, but without any arguments the string “Epoch” is printed.
- Fl does not print a dash for an empty argument. (Historic groff only.)
- Fn does not start a new line unless invoked as the line macro in the SYNOPSIS section. (Historic groff only.)
- Fo with non-Fa children causes inconsistent spacing between arguments. In mandoc, a single space is always inserted between arguments.
- Ft in the SYNOPSIS causes inconsistent vertical spacing, depending on whether a prior Fn has been invoked. See Ft and Fn for the normalised behaviour in mandoc.
- In ignores additional arguments and is not treated specially in the SYNOPSIS. (Historic groff only.)
- It sometimes requires a -nested flag. (Historic groff only.) In new groff and mandoc, any list may be nested by default and -enum lists will restart the sequence only for the sub-list.
- Li followed by a delimiter is incorrectly used in some manuals instead of properly quoting that character, which sometimes works with historic groff.
- Lk only accepts a single link-name argument; the remainder is misformatted.
- Pa does not format its arguments when used in the FILES section under certain list types.
- Ta can only be called by other macros, but not at the beginning of a line.
- %C is not implemented.
- Historic groff only allows up to eight or nine arguments per macro input line, depending on the exact situation. Providing more arguments causes garbled output. The number of arguments on one input line is not limited with mandoc.
- Historic groff has many un-callable macros. Most of these (excluding some block-level macros) are callable in new groff and mandoc.
- ‘|’ (vertical bar) is not fully supported as a delimiter. (Historic groff only.)
- ‘\f’ (font face) and ‘\f’ (font family face) Text Decoration escapes behave irregularly when specified within line-macro scopes.
- Negative scaling units return to prior lines. Instead, mandoc truncates them to zero.
The following features are unimplemented in mandoc:
- Bd -file file.
- Bd -offset center and -offset right. Groff does not implement centred and flush-right rendering either, but produces large indentations.
- The ‘\h’ (horizontal position), ‘\v’ (vertical position), ‘\m’ (text colour), ‘\M’ (text filling colour), ‘\z’ (zero-length character), ‘\w’ (string length), ‘\k’ (horizontal position marker), ‘\o’ (text overstrike), and ‘\s’ (text size) escape sequences are all discarded in mandoc.
- The ‘\f’ scaling unit is accepted by mandoc, but rendered as the default unit.
- In quoted literals, groff allows pairwise double-quotes to produce a standalone double-quote in formatted output. This is not supported by mandoc.
HISTORY
The mdoc language first appeared as a troff macro package in 4.4BSD. It was later significantly updated by Werner Lemberg and Ruslan Ermilov in groff-1.17. The standalone implementation that is part of the mandoc(1) utility written by Kristaps Dzonsons appeared in OpenBSD 4.6.AUTHORS
The mdoc reference was written by <kristaps@bsd.lv>.December 31, 2013 | NetBSD 7.0 |