Date: Sun, 16 Apr 1995 10:30:23 +0300 From: eliz AT is DOT elta DOT co DOT il. (Eli Zaretskii) To: FZ AT phrouter DOT phy DOT pku DOT edu DOT cn Subject: Re: about man Cc: djgpp AT sun DOT soe DOT clarkson DOT edu > Is there a software for dos that can look the man format file ? This is answered in the FAQ list: 4.6 Q: Some docs files are called foo.1 or bar.man or baz.nroff, and they seem to be written in some weird format which is very difficult to read. How can I convert them to readable text files? A: That weird format is the troff format which is used for formatting Unix manual pages. The Unix command ``man'' converts them to formatted text files which are usually displayed with a program like ``more'' or ``less'' (and here ``less'' is considered to be more than ``more'' :-). The formatted file includes bold and underlined letters produced by overtyping using Backspace characters. To format these files, you can choose one of these methods: * Get and install a DOS port of the groff package, or port it yourself (a very difficult task). One port of Groff to DJGPP can be found on omnigate.clarkson.edu:/pub/msdos/djgpp/pub. The latest Groff distribution can be found on the GNU ftp archive and any of its mirrors. * Get and install CAWF, a DOS program which knows about most of the troff formatting commands. CAWF can be found on any SimTel mirror. * Format the file on any Unix machine, and download the results to your PC. Under Unix, typing ``catman -p'' will print the commands which are required to do this; you can then run those commands on your .1 troff source files. No matter which of the above methods you chose, you will need some kind of browser which understands how to show bold and underlined letters instead of backspace-overtyped characters. I suggest to download a DOS port of GNU Less, which uses colors to show bold and underlined letters. You can find it as LESS177E.ZIP on any SimTel mirror in the textutil directory. Another possibility is to get the latest official GNU Less distribution which can be compiled out of the box with the Microsoft C compiler (but I didn't try to do so). Another possibility to read formatted man pages would be with an Emacs editor, if you use one. If you want to use Less, you can download the latest version 290 ported to DJGPP (by this humble DJGPP'er) from omnigate.clarkson.edu:/pub/msdos/djgpp/pub, filename less290a.zip. You can get the latest version of the DJGPP FAQ list as faqNNN.zip (where NNN is the version number) from the same place you get DJGPP.