nroff(1) | General Commands Manual | nroff(1) |
nroff - format documents with groff for TTY (terminal) devices
nroff |
[-bcCEhikpRStUVz] [-d ctext] [-d string=text] [-K fallback-encoding] [-m macro-package] [-M macro-directory] [-n page-number] [-o page-list] [-P postprocessor-argument] [-r cnumeric-expression] [-r register=numeric-expression] [-T output-device] [-w warning-category] [-W warning-category] [file ...] |
nroff |
--help |
nroff |
-v |
nroff |
--version |
nroff formats documents written in the groff(7) language for typewriter-like devices such as terminal emulators. GNU nroff emulates the AT&T nroff command using groff(1). nroff generates output via grotty(1), groff's terminal output driver, which needs to know the character encoding scheme used by the device. Consequently, acceptable arguments to the -T option are ascii, latin1, utf8, and cp1047; any others are ignored. If neither the GROFF_TYPESETTER environment variable nor the -T command-line option (which overrides the environment variable) specifies a (valid) device, nroff consults the locale to select an appropriate output device. It first tries the locale(1) program, then checks several locale-related environment variables; see section “Environment” below. If all of the foregoing fail, -Tascii is implied.
The -b, -c, -C, -d, -E, -i, -m, -M, -n, -o, -r, -U, -w, -W, and -z options have the effects described in troff(1). -c and -h imply “-P-c” and “-P-h”, respectively; -c is also interpreted directly by troff. In addition, this implementation ignores the AT&T nroff options -e, -q, and -s (which are not implemented in groff). The options -k, -K, -p, -P, -R, -t, and -S are documented in groff(1). -V causes nroff to display the constructed groff command on the standard output stream, but does not execute it. -v and --version show version information about nroff and the programs it runs, while --help displays a usage message; all exit afterward.
nroff exits with error status 2 if there was a problem parsing its arguments, with status 0 if any of the options -V, -v, --version, or --help were specified, and with the status of groff otherwise.
Normally, the path separator in environment variables ending with PATH is the colon; this may vary depending on the operating system. For example, Windows uses a semicolon instead.
Pager programs like more(1) and less(1) may require command-line options to correctly handle some output sequences; see grotty(1).
groff(1), troff(1), grotty(1), locale(1), roff(7)
31 March 2024 | groff 1.23.0 |