svn commit: r333494 - head/share/man/man7
Rodney W. Grimes
freebsd at pdx.rh.CN85.dnsmgr.net
Mon May 14 00:14:43 UTC 2018
> On Sat, May 12, 2018, 12:59 AM Rodney W. Grimes <
> freebsd at pdx.rh.cn85.dnsmgr.net> wrote:
>
> > > On Fri, May 11, 2018 at 8:26 AM, Rodney W. Grimes
> > > <freebsd at pdx.rh.cn85.dnsmgr.net> wrote:
> > > >> @@ -67,7 +72,8 @@ Changes are first committed to CURRENT and then
> > usuall
> > > >> to STABLE.
> > > >> Every few years the CURRENT branch is renamed to STABLE, and a new
> > > >> CURRENT is branched, with an incremented major version number.
> > > >> -Releases are then branched off STABLE and numbered with consecutive
> > minor numbers.
> > > >> +Releases are then branched off STABLE and numbered with consecutive
> > minor
> > > >> +numbers.
> > > >
> > > > Proper place to line break long lines is at conjuncatives such
> > > > as the "and" above, yeilding:
> > >
> > > What? Are you just inventing these rules out of blue sky? What
> > > possible reason is there to do as you have proposed?
> >
> > Well known and established man page style rules, documented someplace,
> > which I can not seem to locate right now.
> >
>
> Could you please find that if possible and share with us?
> Personally I'm about to rewrite some man page and that would be useful in
> my case!
It did take me some time to track down this "crazy concept you all
think I just invented", but it is infact in the GNU groff info
documentaton (found on my 5.4 systems in /usr/share/info/groff.info.gz):
Here are a few hints for preparing text for input to `gtroff'.
* First, keep the input lines short. Short input lines are easier to
edit, and `gtroff' packs words onto longer lines anyhow.
* In keeping with this, it is helpful to begin a new line after every
comma or phrase, since common corrections are to add or delete
sentences or phrases.
* End each sentence with two spaces - or better, start each sentence
on a new line. `gtroff' recognizes characters that usually end a
sentence, and inserts sentence space accordingly.
* Do not hyphenate words at the end of lines - `gtroff' is smart
enough to hyphenate words as needed, but is not smart enough to
take hyphens out and join a word back together. Also, words such
as "mother-in-law" should not be broken over a line, since then a
space can occur where not wanted, such as "mother- in-law".
Regards,
--
Rod Grimes rgrimes at freebsd.org
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