NAME
          gtroff - format documents

     SYNOPSIS
          gtroff [ -abivzCER ] [ -wname ] [ -Wname ] [ -dcs ]
                 [ -ffam ] [ -mname ] [ -nnum ] [ -olist ] [ -rcn ]
                 [ -Tname ] [ -Fdir ] [ -Mdir ] [ files... ]

     DESCRIPTION
          This manual page describes the GNU version of troff, which
          is part of the groff document formatting system.  It is
          highly compatible with Unix troff.  Usually it should be
          invoked using the groff command, which will also run
          preprocessors and postprocessors in the appropriate order
          and with the appropriate options.

     OPTIONS
          -a        Generate an ASCII approximation of the typeset
                    output.

          -b        Print a backtrace with each warning or error
                    message.  This backtrace should help track down
                    the cause of the error.  The line numbers given in
                    the backtrace may not always correct: troff's idea
                    of line numbers gets confused by as or am
                    requests.

          -i        Read the standard input after all the named input
                    files have been processed.

          -v        Print the version number.

          -wname    Enable warning name.  Available warnings are
                    described in the Warnings subsection below.
                    Multiple -w options are allowed.

          -Wname    Inhibit warning name.  Multiple -W options are
                    allowed.

          -E        Inhibit all error messages.

          -z        Suppress formatted output.

          -C        Enable compatibility mode.

          -dcs
          -dname=s  Define c or name to be a string s; c must be a one
                    letter name.

          -ffam     Use fam as the default font family.

          -mname    Read in the file tmac.name.  Normally this will be
                    searched for in
                    /usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/tmac.

          -R        Don't load troffrc.

          -nnum     Number the first page num.

          -olist    Output only pages in list, which is a comma-
                    separated list of page ranges; n means print page
                    n, m-n means print every page between m and n, -n
                    means print every page up to n, n- means print
                    every page from n.  Troff will exit after printing
                    the last page in the list.

          -rcn
          -rname=n  Set number register c or name to n; c must be a
                    one character name; n can be any troff numeric
                    expression.

          -Tname    Prepare output for device name, rather than the
                    default ps.

          -Fdir     Search dir for subdirectories devname (name is the
                    name of the device) for the DESC file and font
                    files before the normal
                    /usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/font.

          -Mdir     Search directory dir for macro files before the
                    normal
                    /usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/tmac.

     USAGE
          Only the features not in Unix troff are described here.

        Long names
          The names of number registers, fonts,
          strings/macros/diversions, special characters can be of any
          length. In escape sequences, where you can use (xx for a two
          character name, you can use [xxx] for a name of arbitrary
          length:

          \[xxx]
               Print the special character called xxx.

          \f[xxx]
               Set font xxx.

          \*[xxx]
               Interpolate string xxx.

          \n[xxx]
               Interpolate number register xxx.

        Fractional pointsizes
          A scaled point is equal to 1/sizescale points, where
          sizescale is specified in the DESC file (1 by default.)
          There is a new scale indicator z which has the effect of
          multiplying by sizescale.  Requests and escape sequences in
          troff interpret arguments that represent a pointsize as
          being in units of scaled points, but they evaluate each such
          argument using a default scale indicator of z.  Arguments
          treated in this way are the argument to the ps request, the
          third argument to the cs request, the second and fourth
          arguments to the tkf request, the argument to the \H escape
          sequence, and those variants of the \s escape sequence that
          take a numeric expression as their argument.

          For example, suppose sizescale is 1000; then a scaled point
          will be equivalent to a millipoint; the request .ps 10.25 is
          equivalent to .ps 10.25z and so sets the pointsize to 10250
          scaled points, which is equal to 10.25 points.

          The number register \n(.s returns the pointsize in points as
          decimal fraction.  There is also a new number register
          \n[.ps] that returns the pointsize in scaled points.

          It would make no sense to use the z scale indicator in a
          numeric expression whose default scale indicator was neither
          u nor z, and so troff disallows this.  Similarly it would
          make no sense to use a scaling indicator other than z or u
          in a numeric expression whose default scale indicator was z,
          and so troff disallows this as well.

          There is also new scale indicator s which multiplies by the
          number of units in a scaled point.  So, for example,
          \n[.ps]s is equal to 1m.  Be sure not to confuse the s and z
          scale indicators.

        Numeric expressions
          Spaces are permitted in a number expression within
          parentheses.

          M indicates a scale of 100ths of an em.

          e1>?e2
               The maximum of e1 and e2.

          e1<?e2
               The minimum of e1 and e2.

          (c;e)
               Evaluate e using c as the default scaling indicator.
               If c is missing, ignore scaling indicators in the
               evaluation of e.

        New escape sequences
          \A'anything'
               This expands to 1 or 0 according as anything is or is
               not acceptable as the name of a string, macro,
               diversion, number register, environment or font.  It
               will return 0 if anything is empty.  This is useful if
               you want to lookup user input in some sort of
               associative table.

          \C'xxx'
               Typeset character named xxx.  Normally it is more
               convenient to use \[xxx].  But \C has the advantage
               that it is compatible with recent versions of UNIX and
               is available in compatibility mode.

          \E   This is equivalent to an escape character, but it's not
               interpreted in copy-mode.  For example, strings to
               start and end superscripting could be defined like
               this:

                    .ds { \v'-.3m'\s'\En[.s]*6u/10u'
                    .ds } \s0\v'.3m'

               The use of \E ensures that these definitions will work
               even if \*{ gets interpreted in copy-mode (for example,
               by being used in a macro argument.)

          \N'n'
               Typeset the character with code n in the current font.
               n can be any integer.  Most devices only have
               characters with codes between 0 and 255.  If the
               current font does not contain a character with that
               code, special fonts will not be searched.  The \N
               escape sequence can be conveniently used on conjunction
               with the char request:

                    .char \[phone] \f(ZD\N'37'

               The code of each character is given in the fourth
               column in the font description file after the charset
               command.  It is possible to include unnamed characters
               in the font description file by using a name of ---;
               the \N escape sequence is the only way to use these.

          \R'name _n'
               This has the same effect as

                    .nr name _n

          \s(nn
          \s_(nn
               Set the point size to nn points; nn must be exactly two
               digits.

          \s[_n]
          \s_[n]
          \s'_n'
          \s_'n'
               Set the point size to n scaled points; n is a numeric
               expression with a default scale indicator of z.

          \Vx
          \V(xx
          \V[xxx]
               Interpolate the contents of the environment variable
               xxx , as returned by getenv(3).  \V is interpreted in
               copy-mode.

          \Yx
          \Y(xx
          \Y[xxx]
               This is approximately equivalent to \X'\*[xxx]'.
               However the contents of the string or macro xxx are not
               interpreted; also it is permitted for xxx to have been
               defined as a macro and thus contain newlines (it is not
               permitted for the argument to \X to contain newlines).
               The inclusion of newlines requires an extension to the
               Unix troff output format, and will confuse drivers that
               do not know about this extension.

          \Z'anything'
               Print anything and then restore the horizontal and
               vertical position; anything may not contain tabs or
               leaders.

          \$0  The name by which the current macro was invoked.  The
               als request can make a macro have more than one name.

          \$*  In a macro, the concatenation of all the arguments
               separated by spaces.

          \$@  In a macro, the concatenation of all the arguments with
               each surrounded by double quotes, and separated by
               spaces.

          \$(nn
          \$[nnn]
               In a macro, this gives the nn-th or nnn-th argument.
               Macros can have a unlimited number of arguments.

          \?anything\?
               When used in a diversion, this will transparently embed
               anything in the diversion.  anything is read in copy
               mode.  When the diversion is reread, anything will be
               interpreted.  anything may not contain newlines; use \!
               if you want to embed newlines in a diversion.  The
               escape sequence \? is also recognised in copy mode and
               turned into a single internal code; it is this code
               that terminates anything.  Thus
                    .nr x 1
                    .nf
                    .di d
                    \?\\?\\\\?\\\\\\\\nx\\\\?\\?\?
                    .di
                    .nr x 2
                    .di e
                    .d
                    .di
                    .nr x 3
                    .di f
                    .e
                    .di
                    .nr x 4
                    .f

               will print 4.

          \/   This increases the width of the preceding character so
               that the spacing between that character and the
               following character will be correct if the following
               character is a roman character.  For example, if an
               italic f is immediately followed by a roman right
               parenthesis, then in many fonts the top right portion
               of the f will overlap the top left of the right
               parenthesis producing f), which is ugly.  Inserting \/
               produces f) and avoids this problem.  It is a good idea
               to use this escape sequence whenever an italic
               character is immediately followed by a roman character
               without any intervening space.

          \,   This modifies the spacing of the following character so
               that the spacing between that character and the
               preceding character will correct if the preceding
               character is a roman character.  For example, inserting
               \, between the parenthesis and the f changes (f to (f.
               It is a good idea to use this escape sequence whenever
               a roman character is immediately followed by an italic
               character without any intervening space.

          \)   Like \& except that it behaves like a character
               declared with the cflags request to be transparent for
               the purposes of end of sentence recognition.

          \~   This produces an unbreakable space that stretches like
               a normal inter-word space when a line is adjusted.

          \#   Everything up to and including the next newline is
               ignored.  This is interpreted in copy mode.  This is
               like \% except that \% does not ignore the terminating
               newline.

        New requests
          .aln xx yy
               Create an alias xx for number register object named yy.
               The new name and the old name will be exactly
               equivalent.  If yy is undefined, a warning of type reg
               will be generated, and the request will be ignored.

          .als xx yy
               Create an alias xx for request, string, macro, or
               diversion object named yy.  The new name and the old
               name will be exactly equivalent (it is similar to a
               hard rather than a soft link).  If yy is undefined, a
               warning of type mac will be generated, and the request
               will be ignored.  The de, am, di, da, ds, and as
               requests only create a new object if the name of the
               macro, diversion or string diversion is currently
               undefined or if it is defined to be a request; normally
               they modify the value of an existing object.

          .asciify xx
               This request only exists in order to make it possible
               to make certain gross hacks work with GNU troff.  It
               `unformats' the diversion xx in such a way that ASCII
               characters that were formatted and diverted into xx
               will be treated like ordinary input characters when xx
               is reread.  For example, this


                    .tr @.
                    .di x
                    @nr\ n\ 1
                    .br
                    .di
                    .tr @@
                    .asciify x
                    .x

               will set register n to 1.

          .backtrace
               Print a backtrace of the input stack on stderr.

          .break
               Break out of a while loop.  See also the while and
               continue requests.  Be sure not to confuse this with
               the br request.

          .cflags n c1 c2...
               Characters c1, c2,...  have properties determined by n,
               which is ORed from the following:

               1    the character ends sentences (initially characters
                    .?! have this property);

               2    lines can be broken before the character
                    (initially no characters have this property); a
                    line will not be broken at a character with this
                    property unless the characters on each side both
                    have non-zero hyphenation codes.

               4    lines can be broken after the character (initially
                    characters -\(hy\(em have this property); a line
                    will not be broken at a character with this
                    property unless the characters on each side both
                    have non-zero hyphenation codes.

               8    the character overlaps horizontally (initially
                    characters \(ul\(rn\(ru have this property);

               16   the character overlaps vertically (initially
                    character \(br has this property);

               32   an end of sentence character followed by any
                    number of characters with this property will be
                    treated as the end of a sentence if followed by a
                    newline or two spaces; in other words the
                    character is transparent for the purposes of end
                    of sentence recognition; this is the same as
                    having a zero space factor in TeX (initially
                    characters "')]*\(dg\(rq have this property).

          .char c string
               Define character c to be string.  Every time character
               c needs to be printed, string will be processed in a
               temporary environment and the result will be wrapped up
               into a single object.  Compatibility mode will be
               turned off and the escape character will be set to \
               while string is being processed.  Any emboldening,
               constant spacing or track kerning will be applied to
               this object rather than to individual characters in
               string.  A character defined by this request can be
               used just like a normal character provided by the
               output device.  In particular other characters can be
               translated to it with the tr request; it can be made
               the leader character by the lc request; repeated
               patterns can be drawn with the character using the \l
               and \L escape sequences; words containing the character
               can be hyphenated correctly, if the hcode request is
               used to give the character a hyphenation code.  There
               is a special anti-recursion feature: use of character
               within the character's definition will be handled like
               normal characters not defined with char.  A character
               definition can be removed with the rchar request.

          .chop xx
               Chop the last character off macro, string, or diversion
               xx.  This is useful for removing the newline from the
               end of diversions that are to be interpolated as
               strings.

          .close stream
               Close the stream named stream; stream will no longer be
               an acceptable argument to the write request.  See the
               open request.

          .continue
               Finish the current iteration of a while loop.  See also
               the while and break requests.

          .cp n
               If n is non-zero or missing, enable compatibility mode,
               otherwise disable it.  In compatibility mode, long
               names are not recognised, and the incompatibilities
               caused by long names do not arise.

          .do xxx
               Interpret .xxx with compatibility mode disabled.  For
               example,

                    .do fam T

               would have the same effect as

                    .fam T

               except that it would work even if compatibility mode
               had been enabled.  Note that the previous compatibility
               mode is restored before any files sourced by xxx are
               interpreted.

          .fam xx
               Set the current font family to xx.  The current font
               family is part of the current environment.  See the
               description of the sty request for more information on
               font families.

          .fspecial f s1 s2...
               When the current font is f, fonts s1, s2,...  will be
               special, that is, they will searched for characters not
               in the current font.  Any fonts specified in the
               special request will be searched after fonts specified
               in the fspecial request.

          .ftr f g
               Translate font f to g.  Whenever a font named f is
               referred to in \f escape sequence, or in the ft, ul,
               bd, cs, tkf, special, fspecial, fp, or sty requests,
               font g will be used.  If g is missing, or equal to f
               then font f will not be translated.

          .hcode c1 code1 c2 code2...
               Set the hyphenation code of character c1 to code1 and
               that of c2 to code2.  A hyphenation code must be a
               single input character (not a special character) other
               than a digit or a space.  Initially each lower-case
               letter has a hyphenation code, which is itself, and
               each upper-case letter has a hyphenation code which is
               the lower case version of itself.  See also the hpf
               request.

          .hla lang
               Set the current hyphenation language to lang.
               Hyphenation exceptions specified with the hw request
               and hyphenation patterns specified with the hpf request
               are both associated with the current hyphenation
               language.  The hla request is usually invoked by the
               troffrc file.

          .hlm n
               Set the maximum number of consecutive hyphenated lines
               to n.  If n is negative, there is no maximum.  The
               default value is -1.  This value is associated with the
               current environment.  Only lines output from an
               environment count towards the maximum associated with
               that environment.  Hyphens resulting from \% are
               counted; explicit hyphens are not.

          .hpf file
               Read hyphenation patterns from file; this will be
               searched for in the same way that tmac.name is searched
               for when the -mname option is specified.  It should
               have the same format as the argument to the \patterns
               primitive in TeX; the letters appearing in this file
               are interpreted as hyphenation codes.  A % character in
               the patterns file introduces a comment that continues
               to the end of the line.  The set of hyphenation
               patterns is associated with the current language set by
               the hla request.  The hpf request is usually invoked by
               the troffrc file.

          .hym n
               Set the hyphenation margin to n:  when the current
               adjustment mode is not b, the line will not be
               hyphenated if the line is no more than n short.  The
               default hyphenation margin is 0.  The default scaling
               indicator for this request is m.  The hyphenation
               margin is associated with the current environment.  The
               current hyphenation margin is available in the \n[.hym]
               register.

          .hys n
               Set the hyphenation space to n:  when the current
               adjustment mode is b don't hyphenate the line if the
               line can be justified by adding no more than n extra
               space to each word space.  The default hyphenation
               space is 0.  The default scaling indicator for this
               request is m.  The hyphenation space is associated with
               the current environment.  The current hyphenation space
               is available in the \n[.hys] register.

          .kern n
               If n is non-zero or missing, enable pairwise kerning,
               otherwise disable it.

          .mso file
               The same as the so request except that file is searched
               for in the same way that tmac.name is searched for when
               the -mname option is specified.

          .nroff
               Make the n built-in condition true and the t built-in
               condition false.  This can be reversed using the troff
               request.

          .open stream filename
               Open filename for writing and associate the stream
               named stream with it.  See also the close and write
               requests.

          .opena stream filename
               Like open, but if filename exists, append to it instead
               of truncating it.

          .pnr Print the names and contents of all currently defined
               number registers on stderr.

          .pso command
               This is behaves like the so request except that input
               comes from the standard output of command.

          .ptr Print the names and positions of all traps (not
               including input line traps and diversion traps) on
               stderr.  Empty slots in the page trap list are printed
               as well, because they can affect the priority of
               subsequently planted traps.

          .rchar c1 c2...
               Remove the definitions of characters c1, c2,...  This
               undoes the effect of a char request.

          .rj
          .rj n
               Right justify the next n input lines.  Without an
               argument right justify the next input line.  The number
               of lines to be right justified is available in the
               \n[.rj] register.  This implicitly does .ce 0.  The ce
               request implicitly does .rj 0.

          .rnn xx yy
               Rename number register xx to yy.

          .shc c
               Set the soft hyphen character to c.  If c is omitted,
               the soft hyphen character will be set to the default
               \(hy.  The soft hyphen character is the character which
               will be inserted when a word is hyphenated at a line
               break.  If the soft hyphen character does not exist in
               the font of the character immediately preceding a
               potential break point, then the line will not be broken
               at that point.  Neither definitions (specified with the
               char request) nor translations (specified with the tr
               request) are considered when finding the soft hyphen
               character.

          .shift n
               In a macro, shift the arguments by n positions:
               argument i becomes argument i-n; arguments 1 to n will
               no longer be available.  If n is missing, arguments
               will be shifted by 1.  Shifting by negative amounts is
               currently undefined.

          .special s1 s2...
               Fonts s1, s2, are special and will be searched for
               characters not in the current font.

          .sty n f
               Associate style f with font position n.  A font
               position can be associated either with a font or with a
               style.  The current font is the index of a font
               position and so is also either a font or a style.  When
               it is a style, the font that is actually used is the
               font the name of which is the concatenation of the name
               of the current family and the name of the current
               style.  For example, if the current font is 1 and font
               position 1 is associated with style R and the current
               font family is T, then font TR will be used.  If the
               current font is not a style, then the current family is
               ignored.  When the requests cs, bd, tkf, uf, or
               fspecial are applied to a style, then they will instead
               be applied to the member of the current family
               corresponding to that style.  The default family can be
               set with the -f option.  The styles command in the DESC
               file controls which font positions (if any) are
               initially associated with styles rather than fonts.

          .tkf f s1 n1 s2 n2
               Enable track kerning for font f.  When the current font
               is f the width of every character will be increased by
               an amount between n1 and n2; when the current point
               size is less than or equal to s1 the width will be
               increased by n1; when it is greater than or equal to s2
               the width will be increased by n2; when the point size
               is greater than or equal to s1 and less than or equal
               to s2 the increase in width is a linear function of the
               point size.

          .trf filename
               Transparently output the contents of file filename.
               Each line is output as it would be were it preceded by
               \!; however, the lines are not subject to copy-mode
               interpretation.  If the file does not end with a
               newline, then a newline will be added.  For example,
               you can define a macro x containing the contents of
               file f, using

                    .di x
                    .trf f
                    .di

               Unlike with the cf request, the file cannot contain
               characters such as NUL that are not legal troff input
               characters.

          .trnt abcd
               This is the same as the tr request except that the
               translations do not apply to text that is transparently
               throughput into a diversion with \!.  For example,

               .tr ab
               .di x
               \!.tm a
               .di
               .x

               will print b; if trnt is used instead of tr it will
               print a.

          .troff
               Make the n built-in condition false, and the t built-in
               condition true.  This undoes the effect of the nroff
               request.

          .vpt n
               Enable vertical position traps if n is non-zero,
               disable them otherwise.  Vertical position traps are
               traps set by the wh or dt requests.  Traps set by the
               it request are not vertical position traps.  The
               parameter that controls whether vertical position traps
               are enabled is global.  Initially vertical position
               traps are enabled.

          .warn n
               Control warnings.  n is the sum of the numbers
               associated with each warning that is to be enabled; all
               other warnings will be disabled.  The number associated
               with each warning is listed in the `Warnings' section.
               For example, .warn 0 will disable all warnings, and
               .warn 1 will disable all warnings except that about
               missing characters.  If n is not given, all warnings
               will be enabled.

          .while c anything
               While condition c is true, accept anything as input; c
               can be any condition acceptable to an if request;
               anything can comprise multiple lines if the first line
               starts with \{ and the last line ends with \}.  See
               also the break and continue requests.

          .write stream anything
               Write anything to the stream named stream.  stream must
               previously have been the subject of an open request.
               anything is read in copy mode; a leading " will be
               stripped.

        Extended requests
          .cf filename
               When used in a diversion, this will embed in the
               diversion an object which, when reread, will cause the
               contents of filename to be transparently copied through
               to the output.  In Unix troff, the contents of filename
               is immediately copied through to the output regardless
               of whether there is a current diversion; this behaviour
               is so anomalous that it must be considered a bug.

          .ev xx
               If xx is not a number, this will switch to a named
               environment called xx.  The environment should be
               popped with a matching ev request without any
               arguments, just as for numbered environments.  There is
               no limit on the number of named environments; they will
               be created the first time that they are referenced.

          .fp n f1 f2
               The fp request has an optional third argument.  This
               argument gives the external name of the font, which is
               used for finding the font description file.  The second
               argument gives the internal name of the font which is
               used to refer to the font in troff after it has been
               mounted.  If there is no third argument then the
               internal name will be used as the external name.  This
               feature allows you to use fonts with long names in
               compatibility mode.

          .ss m n
               When two arguments are given to the ss request, the
               second argument gives the sentence space size.  If the
               second argument is not given, the sentence space size
               will be the same as the word space size.  Like the word
               space size, the sentence space is in units of one
               twelfth of the spacewidth parameter for the current
               font.  Initially both the word space size and the
               sentence space size are 12.  The sentence space size is
               used in two circumstances:  if the end of a sentence
               occurs at the end of a line in fill mode, then both an
               inter-word space and a sentence space will be added; if
               two spaces follow the end of a sentence in the middle
               of a line, then the second space will be a sentence
               space.  Note that the behaviour of Unix troff will be
               exactly that exhibited by GNU troff if a second
               argument is never given to the ss request.  In GNU
               troff, as in Unix troff, you should always follow a
               sentence with either a newline or two spaces.

          .ta n1 n2...nn T r1 r2...rn
               Set tabs at positions n1, n2,..., nn and then set tabs
               at nn+r1, nn+r2,...., nn+rn and then at nn+rn+r1,
               nn+rn+r2,..., nn+rn+rn, and so on.  For example,

                    .ta T .5i

               will set tabs every half an inch.

        New number registers
          The following read-only registers are available:

          \n[.C]
               1 if compatibility mode is in effect, 0 otherwise.

          \n[.cdp]
               The depth of the last character added to the current
               environment.  It is positive if the character extends
               below the baseline.

          \n[.ce]
               The number of lines remaining to be centered, as set by
               the ce request.

          \n[.cht]
               The height of the last character added to the current
               environment.  It is positive if the character extends
               above the baseline.

          \n[.csk]
               The skew of the last character added to the current
               environment.  The skew of a character is how far to the
               right of the center of a character the center of an
               accent over that character should be placed.

          \n[.ev]
               The name or number of the current environment.  This is
               a string-valued register.

          \n[.fam]
               The current font family.  This is a string-valued
               register.

          \n[.fp]
               The number of the next free font position.

          \n[.g]
               Always 1.  Macros should use this to determine whether
               they are running under GNU troff.

          \n[.hla]
               The current hyphenation language as set by the hla
               request.

          \n[.hlc]
               The number of immediately preceding consecutive
               hyphenated lines.

          \n[.hlm]
               The maximum allowed number of consecutive hyphenated
               lines, as set by the hlm request.

          \n[.hy]
               The current hyphenation flags (as set by the hy
               request.)

          \n[.hym]
               The current hyphenation margin (as set by the hym
               request.)

          \n[.hys]
               The current hyphenation space (as set by the hys
               request.)

          \n[.in]
               The indent that applies to the current output line.

          \n[.kern]
               1 if pairwise kerning is enabled, 0 otherwise.

          \n[.lg]
               The current ligature mode (as set by the lg request.)

          \n[.ll]
               The line length that applies to the current output
               line.

          \n[.lt]
               The title length as set by the lt request.

          \n[.ne]
               The amount of space that was needed in the last ne
               request that caused a trap to be sprung.  Useful in
               conjunction with the \n[.trunc] register.

          \n[.pn]
               The number of the next page:  either the value set by a
               pn request, or the number of the current page plus 1.

          \n[.ps]
               The current pointsize in scaled points.

          \n[.psr]
               The last-requested pointsize in scaled points.

          \n[.rj]
               The number of lines to be right-justified as set by the
               rj request.

          \n[.sr]
               The last requested pointsize in points as a decimal
               fraction.  This is a string-valued register.

          \n[.tabs]
               A string representation of the current tab settings
               suitable for use as an argument to the ta request.

          \n[.trunc]
               The amount of vertical space truncated by the most
               recently sprung vertical position trap, or, if the trap
               was sprung by a ne request, minus the amount of
               vertical motion produced by the ne request.  In other
               words, at the point a trap is sprung, it represents the
               difference of what the vertical position would have
               been but for the trap, and what the vertical position
               actually is.  Useful in conjunction with the \n[.ne]
               register.

          \n[.ss]
          \n[.sss]
               These give the values of the parameters set by the
               first and second arguments of the ss request.

          \n[.vpt]
               1 if vertical position traps are enabled, 0 otherwise.

          \n[.warn]
               The sum of the numbers associated with each of the
               currently enabled warnings.  The number associated with
               each warning is listed in the `Warnings' subsection.

          \n(.x
               The major version number.  For example, if the version
               number is 1.03 then \n(.x will contain 1.

          \n(.y
               The minor version number.  For example, if the version
               number is 1.03 then \n(.y will contain 03.

          The following registers are set by the \w escape sequence:

          \n[rst]
          \n[rsb]
               Like the st and sb registers, but takes account of the
               heights and depths of characters.

          \n[ssc]
               The amount of horizontal space (possibly negative) that
               should be added to the last character before a
               subscript.

          \n[skw]
               How far to right of the center of the last character in
               the \w argument, the center of an accent from a roman
               font should be placed over that character.

          The following read/write number registers are available:

          \n[systat]
               The return value of the system() function executed by
               the last sy request.

          \n[slimit]
               If greater than 0, the maximum number of objects on the
               input stack.  If less than or equal to 0, there is no
               limit on the number of objects on the input stack.
               With no limit, recursion can continue until virtual
               memory is exhausted.

        Miscellaneous
          Fonts not listed in the DESC file are automatically mounted
          on the next available font position when they are
          referenced.  If a font is to be mounted explicitly with the
          fp request on an unused font position, it should be mounted
          on the first unused font position, which can be found in the
          \n[.fp] register; although troff does not enforce this
          strictly, it will not allow a font to be mounted at a
          position whose number is much greater than that of any
          currently used position.

          Interpolating a string does not hide existing macro
          arguments.  Thus in a macro, a more efficient way of doing

               .xx \\$@

          is

               \\*[xx]\\

          If the font description file contains pairwise kerning
          information, characters from that font will be kerned.
          Kerning between two characters can be inhibited by placing a
          \& between them.

          In a string comparison in a condition, characters that
          appear at different input levels to the first delimiter
          character will not be recognised as the second or third
          delimiters.  This applies also to the tl request.  In a \w
          escape sequence, a character that appears at a different
          input level to the starting delimiter character will not be
          recognised as the closing delimiter character.  When
          decoding a macro argument that is delimited by double
          quotes, a character that appears at a different input level
          to the starting delimiter character will not be recognised
          as the closing delimiter character.  The implementation of
          \$@ ensures that the double quotes surrounding an argument
          will appear the same input level, which will be different to
          the input level of the argument itself.  In a long escape
          name ] will not be recognized as a closing delimiter except
          when it occurs at the same input level as the opening ].  In
          compatibility mode, no attention is paid to the input-level.

          There are some new types of condition:

          .if rxxx
               True if there is a number register named xxx.

          .if dxxx
               True if there is a string, macro, diversion, or request
               named xxx.

          .if cch
               True if there is a character ch available; ch is either
               an ASCII character or a special character \(xx or
               \[xxx]; the condition will also be true if ch has been
               defined by the char request.

        Warnings
          The warnings that can be given by troff are divided into the
          following categories.  The name associated with each warning
          is used by the -w and -W options; the number is used by the
          warn request, and by the .warn register.

          char           1   Non-existent characters.  This is enabled
                             by default.

          number         2   Invalid numeric expressions.  This is
                             enabled by default.

          break          4   In fill mode, lines which could not be
                             broken so that their length was less than
                             the line length.  This is enabled by
                             default.

          delim          8   Missing or mismatched closing delimiters.

          el            16   Use of the el request with no matching ie
                             request.

          scale         32   Meaningless scaling indicators.

          range         64   Out of range arguments.

          syntax       128   Dubious syntax in numeric expressions.

          di           256   Use of di or da without an argument when
                             there is no current diversion.

          mac          512   Use of undefined strings, macros and
                             diversions.  When an undefined string,
                             macro or diversion is used, that string
                             is automatically defined as empty.  So,
                             in most cases, at most one warning will
                             be given for each name.

          reg         1024   Use of undefined number registers.  When
                             an undefined number register is used,
                             that register is automatically defined to
                             have a value of 0.  a definition is
                             automatically made with a value of 0.
                             So, in most cases, at most one warning
                             will be given for use of a particular
                             name.

          tab         2048   Inappropriate use of a tab character.
                             Either use of a tab character where a
                             number was expected, or use of tab
                             character in an unquoted macro argument.

          right-brace 4096   Use of \} where a number was expected.

          missing     8192   Requests that are missing non-optional
                             arguments.

          input      16384   Illegal input characters.

          escape     32768   Unrecognized escape sequences.  When an
                             unrecognized escape sequence is
                             encountered, the escape character is
                             ignored.

          space      65536   Missing space between a request or macro
                             and its argument.  This warning will be
                             given when an undefined name longer than
                             two characters is encountered, and the
                             first two characters of the name make a
                             defined name.  The request or macro will
                             not be invoked.  When this warning is
                             given, no macro is automatically defined.
                             This is enabled by default.  This warning
                             will never occur in compatibility mode.

          font      131072   Non-existent fonts.  This is enabled by
                             default.

          ig        262144   Illegal escapes in text ignored with the
                             ig request.  These are conditions that
                             are errors when they do not occur in
                             ignored text.

          There are also names that can be used to refer to groups of
          warnings:

          all  All warnings except di, mac and reg.  It is intended
               that this covers all warnings that are useful with
               traditional macro packages.

          w    All warnings.

        Incompatibilities
          Long names cause some incompatibilities.  Unix troff will
          interpret

               .dsabcd

          as defining a string ab with contents cd.  Normally, GNU
          troff will interpret this as a call of a macro named dsabcd.
          Also Unix troff will interpret \*[ or \n[ as references to a
          string or number register called [.  In GNU troff, however,
          this will normally be interpreted as the start of a long
          name.  In compatibility mode GNU troff will interpret these
          things in the traditional way.  In compatibility mode,
          however, long names are not recognised.  Compatibility mode
          can be turned on with the -C command line option, and turned
          on or off with the cp request.  The number register \n(.C is
          1 if compatibility mode is on, 0 otherwise.

          GNU troff does not allow the use of the escape sequences
          \\|\^\&\}\{\(space)\'\`\-\_\!\%\c in names of strings,
          macros, diversions, number registers, fonts or environments;
          Unix troff does.  The \A escape sequence may be helpful in
          avoiding use of these escape sequences in names.

          Fractional pointsizes cause one noteworthy incompatibility.
          In Unix troff the ps request ignores scale indicators and so

               .ps 10u

          will set the pointsize to 10 points, whereas in GNU troff it
          will set the pointsize to 10 scaled points.

          In GNU troff there is a fundamental difference between
          unformatted, input characters, and formatted, output
          characters.  Everything that affects how an output character
          will be output is stored with the character; once an output
          character has been constructed it is unaffected by any
          subsequent requests that are executed, including bd, cs,
          tkf, tr, or fp requests.  Normally output characters are
          constructed from input characters at the moment immediately
          before the character is added to the current output line.
          Macros, diversions and strings are all, in fact, the same
          type of object; they contain lists of input characters and
          output characters in any combination.  An output character
          does not behave like an input character for the purposes of
          macro processing; it does not inherit any of the special
          properties that the input character from which it was
          constructed might have had.  For example,


               .di x
               \\\\
               .br
               .di
               .x

          will print \\ in GNU troff; each pair of input \s is turned
          into one output \ and the resulting output \s are not
          interpreted as escape characters when they are reread.  Unix
          troff would interpret them as escape characters when they
          were reread and would end up printing one \.  The correct
          way to obtain a printable \ is to use the \e escape
          sequence: this will always print a single instance of the
          current escape character, regardless of whether or not it is
          used in a diversion; it will also work in both GNU troff and
          Unix troff.  If you wish for some reason to store in a
          diversion an escape sequence that will be interpreted when
          the diversion is reread, you can either use the traditional
          \! transparent output facility, or, if this is unsuitable,
          the new \? escape sequence.

     ENVIRONMENT
          GROFF_TMAC_PATH
               A colon separated list of directories in which to
               search for macro files.

          GROFF_TYPESETTER
               Default device.

          GROFF_FONT_PATH
               A colon separated list of directories in which to
               search for the devname directory.  troff will search in
               directories given in the -F option before these, and in
               standard directories
               (.:/usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/font:/usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/font:/usr/lib/font)
               after these.

     FILES
          /usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/tmac/troffrc
               Initialization file

          /usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/tmac/tmac.name
               Macro files

          /usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/font/devname/DESC
               Device description file for device name.

          /usr/products/src2/gcc/AIX.d/lib/groff/font/devname/F
               Font file for font F of device name.

     SEE ALSO
          groff(1) gtbl(1), gpic(1), geqn(1), grops(1), grodvi(1),
          grotty(1), groff_font(5), groff_out(5), groff_char(7)