GROTTY(1) manual page
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grotty - groff driver for typewriter-like devices
grotty
[ -bBcdfhioruUv ] [ -Fdir ] [ files... ]
It is possible to have whitespace between
the -F option and its parameter.
grotty translates the output
of GNU troff into a form suitable for typewriter-like devices. Normally grotty
should be invoked by using the groff command with a -Tascii, -Tlatin1 or
-Tutf8 option on ASCII based systems, and with -Tcp1047 and -Tutf8 on EBCDIC
based hosts. If no files are given, grotty reads the standard input. A filename
of - also causes grotty to read the standard input. Output is written to
the standard output.
By default, grotty emits SGR escape sequences (from
ISO 6429, also called ANSI color escapes) to change text attributes (bold,
italic, colors). This makes it possible to have eight different background
and foreground colors; additionally, bold and italic attributes can be
used BI]at the same time] (by using the BI font).
The following colors
are defined in tty.tmac: black, white, red, green, blue, yellow, magenta,
cyan. Unknown colors are mapped to the default color (which is dependent
on the settings of the terminal; in most cases, this is black for the foreground
and white for the background).
Use the -c switch to revert to the old behaviour,
printing a bold character c with the sequence ‘c BACKSPACE
c’ and an italic
character c by the sequence ‘_ BACKSPACE
c’. At the same time, color output
is disabled. The same effect can be achieved by setting either the GROFF_NO_SGR
environment variable or using the ‘sgr’ X command (see below).
For SGR support,
it is necessary to use the -R option of less(1)
to disable the interpretation
of grotty’s old output format. Consequently, all programs which use less
as the pager program have to pass this option to it. For man(1)
in particular,
either add -R to the $PAGER environment variable, e.g.
PAGER="/usr/bin/less
-R"
export PAGER
or use the -P option of man to set the pager executable and
its options, or modify the configuration file of man in a similar fashion.
Note that with some man(1)
versions, you have to use the $MANPAGER environment
variable instead.
grotty’s old output format can be displayed on a terminal
by piping through ul(1)
. Pagers such as more(1)
or less(1)
are also able
to display these sequences. Use either -B or -U when piping into less(1)
;
use -b when piping into more(1)
. There is no need to filter the output through
col(1)
since grotty never outputs reverse line feeds.
The font description
file may contain a command
- internalname n
where n is a decimal integer.
If the 01 bit in n is set, then the font is treated as an italic font;
if the 02 bit is set, then it is treated as a bold font. The code field
in the font description field gives the code which is used to output the
character. This code can also be used in the [rs]N escape sequence in troff.
If the DESC file contains the keyword unicode, grotty emits Unicode characters
in UTF-8 encoding. Otherwise, it emits characters in a single-byte encoding
depending on the data in the font description files. See the groff_font(5)
man page for more details.
- -b
- Suppress the use of overstriking
for bold characters. Ignored if -c isn’t used.
- -B
- Use only overstriking for
bold-italic characters. Ignored if -c isn’t used.
- -c
- Use grotty’s old output
format (see above). This also disables color output.
- -d
- Ignore all [rs]D
commands. Without this grotty renders [rs]D’l...’ commands that have at least
one zero argument (and so are either horizontal or vertical) using -, |,
and + characters. In a similar way, grotty handles [rs]D’p...’ commands which
consist entirely of horizontal and vertical lines.
- -f
- Use form feeds in
the output. A form feed is output at the end of each page that has no output
on its last line.
- -Fdir
- Prepend directory dir/devname to the search path
for font and device description files; name is the name of the device,
usually ascii, latin1, utf8, or cp1047.
- -h
- Use horizontal tabs in the output.
Tabs are assumed to be set every 8 columns.
- -i
- Use escape sequences to set
the italic text attribute instead of the underline attribute for italic
fonts (‘I’ and ‘BI’). Note that most terminals (including xterm) don’t support
this. Ignored if -c is active.
- -o
- Suppress overstriking (other than for bold
or underlined characters in case the old output format has been activated
with -c).
- -r
- Use escape sequences to set the reverse text attribute instead
of the underline attribute for italic fonts (‘I’ and ‘BI’). Ignored if -c is
active.
- -u
- Suppress the use of underlining for italic characters. Ignored
if -c isn’t used.
- -U
- Use only underlining for bold-italic characters. Ignored
if -c isn’t used.
- -v
- Print the version number.
grotty understands a
single X command produced using the [rs]X escape sequence.
- [rs]X’tty: sgr n’
- If n is non-zero or missing, enable SGR output (this is the default), otherwise
use the old drawing scheme for bold and underline.
- GROFF_NO_SGR
- If set, the old drawing scheme for bold and underline (using the backspace
character) is active. Colors are disabled.
- GROFF_FONT_PATH
- A list of directories
in which to search for the devname directory in addition to the default
ones. See troff(1)
and groff_font(5)
for more details.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devascii/DESC
- Device description file for ascii device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devascii/F
- Font description file for font F of ascii device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devlatin1/DESC
- Device description file for latin1 device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devlatin1/F
- Font description file for font F of latin1 device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devutf8/DESC
- Device description file for utf8 device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devutf8/F
- Font description file for font F of utf8 device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devcp1047/DESC
- Device description file for cp1047 device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/font/devcp1047/F
- Font description file for font F of cp1047 device.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/tmac/tty.tmac
- Macros for use with grotty.
- /usr/share/groff/1.22.2/tmac/tty-char.tmac
- Additional
klugdey character definitions for use with grotty.
Note that on EBCDIC
hosts, only files for the cp1047 device is installed.
grotty is intended
only for simple documents.
There is no support for fractional horizontal
or vertical motions.
There is no support for [rs]D commands other than
horizontal and vertical lines.
Characters above the first line (ie with
a vertical position of~0) cannot be printed.
Color handling is different
compared to grops(1)
. [rs]M doesn’t set the fill color for closed graphic
objects (which grotty doesn’t support anyway) but changes the background
color of the character cell, affecting all subsequent operations.
groff(1)
, troff(1)
, groff_out(5)
, groff_font(5)
, groff_char(7)
, ul(1)
,
more(1)
, man(1)
, less(1)
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