summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/mandoc_char.7
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'mandoc_char.7')
-rw-r--r--mandoc_char.733
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/mandoc_char.7 b/mandoc_char.7
index 2c8fe9a3..d4e02729 100644
--- a/mandoc_char.7
+++ b/mandoc_char.7
@@ -63,9 +63,9 @@ names; instead, provide ASCII transcriptions of the names.
.Ss Dashes and Hyphens
In typography there are different types of dashes of various width:
the hyphen (-),
-the minus sign (\(mi),
the en-dash (\(en),
-and the em-dash (\(em).
+the em-dash (\(em),
+and the mathematical minus sign (\(mi).
.Pp
Hyphens are used for adjectives;
to separate the two parts of a compound word;
@@ -100,14 +100,6 @@ Such automatic hyphenation is not supported by
which only breaks the line at whitespace, and inside words only
after existing hyphens.
.Pp
-The mathematical minus sign is used for negative numbers or subtraction.
-It should be written as
-.Sq \e(mi :
-.Bd -unfilled -offset indent
-a = 3 \e(mi 1;
-b = \e(mi2;
-.Ed
-.Pp
The en-dash is used to separate the two elements of a range,
or can be used the same way as an em-dash.
It should be written as
@@ -126,10 +118,23 @@ Three things \e(em apples, oranges, and bananas.
This is not that \e(em rather, this is that.
.Ed
.Pp
-Note:
-hyphens, minus signs, and en-dashes look identical under normal ASCII output.
-Other formats, such as PostScript, render them correctly,
-with differing widths.
+In
+.Xr roff 7
+documents, the minus sign is normally written as
+.Sq \e- .
+In manual pages, some style guides recommend to also use
+.Sq \e-
+if an ASCII 0x2d
+.Dq hyphen-minus
+output glyph that can be copied and pasted is desired in output modes
+supporting it, for example in
+.Fl T Cm utf8
+and
+.Fl T Cm html .
+But currently, no practically relevant manual page formatter actually
+requires that subtlety, so in manual pages just write plain
+.Sq -
+to represent hyphen, minus, and hyphen-minus.
.Ss Spaces
To separate words in normal text, for indenting and alignment
in literal context, and when none of the following special cases apply,