| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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bufcat_id(), then collapse it into a little function without so much
crap. Next, make bufinit() only be called when we really need to do so,
and not simply before pre/post calls.
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conditional; same for print_xmltype() and print_doctype(), same reason;
make bufncat() be static, as it was only being called from html.c;
have bufcat() simply call through to strlcat(). Finally, assert()
whenever we truncate.
Also rename buffmt() -> bufcat_fmt() to differentiate from buffmt_man et
al., which do not concatenate.
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the roff units. Also remove a comment about CSS and number types (they
all accept decimal numbers).
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(oops). Do the same for -Thtml (oops^2).
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widths (e.g., `Bl -tag -width "\s[blahblah]bar"). This has long since
been done for -Tascii but escaped noticed with -T[x]html.
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change any code but for renaming functions and types to be consistent
with other mandoc.h stuff. The reason for moving into libmandoc is that
the rendering of special characters is part of mandoc itself---not an
external part. From mandoc(1)'s perspective, this changes nothing, but
for other utilities, it's important to have these part of libmandoc.
Note this isn't documented [yet] in mandoc.3 because there are some
parts I'd like to change around beforehand.
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a public (mandoc.h) function mandoc_escape(), which merges the
functionality of both prior functions.
Reason: code duplication. The a2roffdeco() and mandoc_special()
functions were pretty much the same thing and both quite complex. This
allows one function to receive improvements in (e.g.) subexpression
handling and performance, instead of having to replicate functionality.
As such, the mandoc_escape() function already handles a superset of the
escapes handled in previous versions and has improvements in performance
(using strcspn(), for example) and reliable handling of subexpressions.
This code Works For Me, but may need work to catch any regressions.
Since the benefits are great (leaner code, simpler API), I'd rather have
it in-tree than floating as a patch.
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error where (1) -man pages were punctuating delimiters (e.g., `.B a ;')
and where (2) standalone punctuation in -mdoc or -man (e.g., ";" on its
own line) would also be punctuated. This introduces a small amount of
complexity of mdoc_{html,term}.c must manage their own spacing with
running print_word() or print_text(). The check for delimiting now
happens in mdoc_macro.c's dword().
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necessary to all [real] front-ends, so stop pretending it's special.
While here, add some documentation to the variable types.
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removal of manual delimiter checks in html.c and term.c. Finally, add
the escaped period as a closing delimiter, removing a TODO to this
effect.
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so that everybody can use them. This follows the convention of
libXXXX.h being internal to a library and XXXX.h being the external
interface. Not only does this allow the removal of lots of redundant
NULL-checking code, it also sets the tone for adding new mandoc-global
routines.
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Don't use it in new manuals, it is inherently non-portable, but we
need it for backward-compatibility with existing manuals, for example
in Xenocara driver pages.
ok kristaps@ jmc@ and tested by Matthieu Herrb (matthieu at openbsd dot org)
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set by COL, until an external macro is encountered. At this point in
time, close out the table and process the macro. When the first table
row is again re-encountered, re-start the table. This requires a bit of
tracking added to "struct html", but the change is very small and
follows the logic of meta-fonts. This all follows a bug-report by
joerg@.
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piece with a prepended 'x', not each piece, such that quoted and
unquoted .Sh, .Ss, and .Sx arguments are compatible with each other.
Fixing a bug reported by Nicolas Joly <njoly at NetBSD dot org>,
avoiding a regression in my first patch as pointed out by njoly as well.
"feel free to do so" kristaps@
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version date for release.
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using \fI or \fP). Now, using these modes will cause a font to be
rendered for each word; furthermore, setting mode within a word will do
the correct thing.
Second, make -man use real font tags (B, I, SMALL) to set its font
instead of using font modes and fix up the pre-macro unsetting of the
current mode.
This fixes how roff.7 wasn't validating (<P> closing out a font mode)
and has been checked against gcc.1 (more will come). I considered
failure to validate OUR manual to be a show-stopper for the up-coming
release.
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simplifies clean-up and allows for more types without extra hassle.
Also made in-line literal types in -T[x]html use CODE instead of SPAN to
match how literal blocks use PRE.
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segfault in the last commit.
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atttributes) if no style is specified.
Give the default-bold elements a B tag instead of a SPAN tag, as this
can be overriden in the stylesheet.
Prune some unused attributes from html.h.
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only a single DIV or PRE. Tag all displays with display class.
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Banish header and footer TABLE styling to example.style.css.
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paragraph breaking in CSS).
Use -man's handling of `sp' and `br', which accomodates for scaling
widths (-mdoc wasn't).
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be handled in CSS.
Clarified "lit" tag (will be the subject of future clarification).
Removed CSS2 note in mandoc.1, which is no longer the case.
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OL, and UL. Issue raised by Will Backman, solution proposed by
schwarze@.
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* slightly simplify .Pf *_IGNDELIM code, and share part of it with .No
* do not let opening delimiters fall out of the front of .Ns (from kristaps@)
This fixes a few spacing issues in csh(1) and ksh(1).
OK kristaps@
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We now have sufficient practical experience to know what we want,
so this is intended to be final:
- provide -Wlevel (warning, error or fatal) to select what you care about
- provide -Wstop to stop after parsing a file with warnings you care about
- provide consistent exit status codes for those warnings you care about
- fully document what warnings, errors and fatal errors mean
- remove all other cruft from the user interface, less is more:
- remove all -f knobs along with the whole -f option
- remove the old -Werror because calling warnings "fatal" is silly
- always finish parsing each file, unless fatal errors prevent that
This commit also includes a couple of related simplifications behind
the scenes regarding error handling.
Feedback and OK kristaps@; Joerg Sonnenberger (NetBSD) and
Sascha Wildner (DragonFly BSD) agree with the general direction.
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-T[x]html and -T{pdf,ps,ascii}. Reported by Jason McIntyre.
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single-character escape (and ONLY this type of escape) will map back
into itself:
"If a backslash is followed by a character that does not
constitute a defined escape sequence the backslash is silently
ignored and the character maps to itself."
(From groff.7.)
Found by Jason McIntyre.
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later formatted in html.c.
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ok kristaps@
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to make sharing of TERMP_KEEP easier.
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unclear about which units accept floats/integers, which leads me to
assume that it handles either and rounds as appropriate.
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thousand years ago. Note that this is normalised to >=60.
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Breakable hyphens are cued in the back-ends (with ASCII_HYPH) and acted
upon in term.c or ignored in html.c.
Also cleaned up XML decl printing (no need for extra vars).
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(noted by Ingo Schwarze).
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Syntax" for why this mistake was made). Noted by Ingo Schwarze.
Lines of text now break at a hyphen, unless the hyphen is the first or second subsequent in a word. Inspired by a Ingo Schwarze's patch.
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Sonnenberger.
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Added -Txhtml for XHTML output (minimal increase to programme logic). Because groff has it and it bothers me that we don't.
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