| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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the top of HTML pages containing at least two non-standard sections.
Suggested by Adam Kalisz and discussed with kristaps@ during EuroBSDCon 2018.
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selecting the format according to local existence of the file.
Suggested by kristaps@ during EuroBSDCon 2018.
Written on the train Frankfurt-Karlsruhe returning from EuroBSDCon.
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now that we no longer use variable style= attributes.
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author-specified column widths, which can harm responsive design and
provide no real benefit: HTML rendering engines usually do just
fine automatically selecting appropriate column widths.
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Append suffixes for disambiguation. Issue first reported by Jakub
Klinkovsky <j dot l dot k at gmx dot com> (Arch Linux).
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Some macros (Nd, Oo) can contain blocks but rendered as elements that
can only contain phrasing content, resulting in invalid HTML nesting.
Switch them to <div>.
Also move the related "display: inline" style from the HTML to the CSS.
Reminded during a conversation with John Gardner.
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in full HTML output, but not with -Ofragment, e.g. in man.cgi(8);
suggested by Thomas Klausner <wiz at NetBSD>
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of struct roff_node which is allocated for each equation anyway.
2. Do not keep a list of equation parsers, one parser is enough.
Minus fifty lines of code, no functional change.
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and write fontstyle or fontweight attributes where required.
Missing features reported by bentley@.
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used by both the mdoc and man formatters, with the ultimate
goal of reducing code duplication between the two macro formatters.
Made possible by the parser unification.
Add the first formatting function (for the .br request).
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As the man(7) language does not provide semantic markup,
only .SH, .SS, and .UR become anchors for now.
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suggested by bentley@ long ago, but needed lots of cleanup first
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The <col> element can only appear inside <colgroup>, so use <colgroup>.
The <tbody> element is optional and useless, so don't use it.
Even if we would ever need <thead> or <tfoot>, <tbody> would still be
optional and useless; besides, we will likely never need <thead> or <tfoot>,
simply because our languages don't support such functionality.
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no functional change
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with "literal", by the way, it means "no fill"):
* Use <pre> such that whitespace is preserved.
* Preserve lines breaks.
* For font alternating macros, avoid node recursion which required
scary juggling with the fill state. Instead, simply print the text
children directly.
Missing feature first noticed by kristaps@ in 2011,
the again reported by afresh1@ in 2016,
and finally reported here: https://github.com/Debian/debiman/issues/21 ,
which i only found because of Shane Kerr's comment here:
https://plus.google.com/110314300533310775053/posts/H1eaw9Yskoc
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in particular, stop abuse of <blockquote>
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in filled text. This does not affect HTML semantics, but makes the
HTML code even more humanly readable.
While here,
- collapse multiple consecutive space characters in filled text
- and insert a blank between style entries.
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around tags and by introducing some simple indentation.
No change of HTML semantics intended.
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interfaces. Such a static buffer was a bad idea in the first place,
causing unfixable truncation that was only prevented by triggering
an assertion failure. Instead, let the small number of remaining
users allocate and free their own, temporary dynamic buffers,
or for the case of .Xr and .In, pass the original data to be
assembled in print_otag().
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number of arguments.
Delete struct htmlpair and all the PAIR_*() macros.
Delete enum htmlattr, handle that in print_otag() instead.
Minus 190 lines of code; no functional change except better ordering
of attributes (class before style) in three cases.
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Triggered by a smaller patch from Christos Zoulas.
While here, unify style, move several config tests to config.h,
and delete the useless MANDOC_CONFIG_H.
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Because these work slightly differently on different systems,
they are becoming a maintenance burden in the portable version,
so delete them.
Besides, one of the chief design goals of the mandoc toolbox is to
make sure that nothing related to documentation requires C++.
Consequently, linking mandoc against any kind of C++ program would
defeat the purpose and is not supported.
I don't understand why kristaps@ added them in the first place.
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* Use ohash(3) rather than a hand-rolled hash table.
* Make the character table static in the chars.c module:
There is no need to pass a pointer around, we most certainly
never want to use two different character tables concurrently.
* No need to keep the characters in a separate file chars.in;
that merely encourages downstream porters to mess with them.
* Sort the characters to agree with the mandoc_chars(7) manual page.
* Specify Unicode codepoints in hex, not decimal (that's the detail
that originally triggered this patch).
No functional change, minus 100 LOC, and i don't see a performance change.
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In particular, make it work in no-fill mode, too.
Reminded by Carsten dot Kunze at arcor dot de (Heirloom roff).
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* add missing forward declarations
* remove needless header inclusions
* some style unification
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validity of character escape names and warn about unknown ones.
This requires mchars_spec2cp() to report unknown names again.
Fortunately, that doesn't require changing the calling code because
according to groff, invalid character escapes should not produce
output anyway, and now that we warn about them, that's fine.
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This adds parser-level support for the grammar described by the eqn
second-edition technical paper, "Typesetting Mathematics — User's Guide"
(Kernighan, Cherry).
The reason for this re-write is the grouping rules, which were not
possible given the existing implementation.
The re-write has also considerably simplified the HTML (and, if it ever
is completed, terminal) front-end.
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This is good because <p> is brittle: it can't appear within other block
macros.
This fixes a regression of the original HTML5 patch as noted by schwarze@
on the tech@ list, 14/8/2014.
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This uses a <style /> block right before the <link /> for the stylesheet.
Use this to kick out hardcoded header and footer table widths.
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The .Bf block can contain subblocks, so it has to render as an
element that can contain flow content. But <em> cannot contain
flow content, only phrasing content. Rendering .Em and .Bf differently
would by unfortunate, and closing out .Bf before subblocks and
re-opening it afterwards would merely complicate both the C code
of the program and the generated HTML code. Besides, converting
.Em to semantic HTML markup would require some content to be put
into <em> and some into <i>, but we cannot automatically distinguish
which is which, so strictly speaking, we can't use semantic HTML
here but have to fall back to physical markup. Wonders of HTML...
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The vast majority of .Em in real-world manuals is stress emphasis,
for which <em> is the correct markup. Admittedly, there are some
instances of .Em usage for alternate quality, for which <i> would
be a better match. Most of these are technical terms that neither
allow semantic markup nor are keywords - for the latter, .Sy would
be preferable. A typical example is that the shell breaks input into
.Em words .
Alternate voice or mood, which would also require <i>, is almost
absent from manuals.
We cannot satisfy both stress emphasis and alternate quality, so
pick the one that fits more often and looks less wrong when off.
Patch from Guy Harris <guy at alum dot mit dot edu>.
ok joerg@ bentley@
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remove trailing whitespace and blanks before tabs, improve some indenting;
no functional change
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Fix one case where a non-literal is used as format string.
Fix another case where a variable is formatted using the wrong type.
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This improves the formatting of about 40 base manuals
and reduces groff-mandoc formatting differences in base by about 5%.
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character without advancing the cursor position; implement it to
simply skip the next character, as it will usually be overwritten.
With this change, the pod2man(1) preamble user-defined string \*:,
intended to render as a diaeresis or umlaut diacritic above the
preceding character, is rendered in a slightly less ugly way,
though still not correctly. It was rendered as "z.." and is now
rendered as ".".
Given that the definition of \*: uses elaborate manual \h positioning,
there is little chance for mandoc(1) to ever render it correctly,
but at least we can refrain from printing out a spurious "z", and
we can make the \z do something semi-reasonable for easier cases.
"just commit" kristaps@
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manual output in existing HTML or XHTML documents, e.g., when invoking
mandoc from an SSI or CGI.
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found while syncing to OpenBSD
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