troff(1) — Linux manual page
troff(1) General Commands Manual troff(1)
Name
troff - GNU roff typesetter and document formatter
Synopsis
troff [-abcCEiRUz] [-d ctext] [-d string=text] [-f font-family]
[-F font-directory] [-I inclusion-directory] [-m macro-
package] [-M macro-directory] [-n page-number] [-o page-
list] [-r cnumeric-expression] [-r register=numeric-
expression] [-T output-device] [-w warning-category]
[-W warning-category] [file ...]
troff --help
troff -v
troff --version
Description
GNU troff transforms groff(7) language input into the device-
independent output format described in groff_out(5); troff is
thus the heart of the GNU roff document formatting system. If no
file operands are present, or if file is “-”, troff reads the
standard input stream.
GNU troff is functionally compatible with the AT&T troff
typesetter and features numerous extensions. Many people prefer
to use the groff(1) command, a front end which also runs
preprocessors and output drivers in the appropriate order and
with appropriate options.
Options
-h and --help display a usage message, while -v and --version
show version information; all exit afterward.
-a Generate a plain text approximation of the typeset output.
The read-only register .A is set to 1. This option
produces a sort of abstract preview of the formatted
output.
• Page breaks are marked by a phrase in angle brackets;
for example, “<beginning of page>”.
• Lines are broken where they would be in formatted
output.
• Vertical motion, apart from that implied by a break, is
not represented.
• A horizontal motion of any size is represented as one
space. Adjacent horizontal motions are not combined.
Inter-sentence space nodes (those arising from the
second argument to the .ss request) are not
represented.
• A special character is rendered as its identifier
between angle brackets; for example, a hyphen appears
as “<hy>”.
The above description should not be considered a
specification; the details of -a output are subject to
change.
-b Write a backtrace reporting the state of troff's input
parser to the standard error stream with each diagnostic
message. The line numbers given in the backtrace might
not always be correct, because troff's idea of line
numbers can be confused by requests that append to macros.
-c Start with color output disabled.
-C Enable AT&T troff compatibility mode; implies -c. See
groff_diff(7).
-d ctext
-d string=text
Define roff string c or string as text. c must be a one-
character identifier; string can be of arbitrary length.
Such assignments happen before any macro file is loaded,
including the startup file. Due to getopt_long(3)
limitations, c cannot be, and string cannot contain, an
equals sign, even though that is a valid character in a
roff identifier.
-E Inhibit troff error messages; implies -Ww. This option
does not suppress messages sent to the standard error
stream by documents or macro packages using tm or related
requests.
-f fam Use fam as the default font family.
-F dir Search in directory dir for the selected output device's
directory of device and font description files. See the
description of GROFF_FONT_PATH in section “Environment”
below for the default search locations and ordering.
-i Read the standard input stream after all named input files
have been processed.
-I dir Search the directory dir for files (those named on the
command line; in psbb, so, and soquiet requests; and in
“\X'ps: import'”, “\X'ps: file'”, and “\X'pdf: pdfpic'”
device control escape sequences). -I may be specified
more than once; each dir is searched in the given order.
To search the current working directory before others, add
“-I .” at the desired place; it is otherwise searched
last. -I works similarly to, and is named for, the
“include” option of Unix C compilers.
-m mac Search for the macro package mac.tmac and read it prior to
any input files. If not found, tmac.mac is attempted.
See the description of GROFF_TMAC_PATH in section
“Environment” below for the default search locations and
ordering.
-M dir Search directory dir for macro files. See the description
of GROFF_TMAC_PATH in section “Environment” below for the
default search locations and ordering.
-n num Begin numbering pages at num. The default is 1.
-o list
Output only pages in list, which is a comma-separated list
of inclusive page ranges; n means page n, m-n means every
page between m and n, -n means every page up to n, and n-
means every page from n on. troff stops processing and
exits after formatting the last page enumerated in list.
-r cnumeric-expression
-r register=numeric-expression
Define roff register c or register as numeric-expression.
c must be a one-character identifier; register can be of
arbitrary length. Such assignments happen before any
macro file is loaded, including the startup file. Due to
getopt_long(3) limitations, c cannot be, and register
cannot contain, an equals sign, even though that is a
valid character in a roff identifier.
-R Don't load troffrc and troffrc-end.
-T dev Prepare output for device dev. The default is ps; see
groff(1).
-U Operate in unsafe mode, enabling the open, opena, pi, pso,
and sy requests, which are disabled by default because
they allow an untrusted input document to write to
arbitrary file names and run arbitrary commands. This
option also adds the current directory to the macro
package search path; see the -m and -M options above.
-w cat
-W cat Enable and inhibit, respectively, warnings in category
cat. See section “Warnings” below.
-z Suppress formatted output.
Warnings
Warning diagnostics emitted by troff are divided into named,
numbered categories. The name associated with each warning
category is used by the -w and -W options. Each category is also
assigned a power of two; the sum of enabled category codes is
used by the warn request and the .warn register. Warnings of
each category are produced under the following circumstances.
┌───────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ Bit Code Category │ Bit Code Category │
├───────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│ 0 1 char │ 10 1024 reg │
│ 1 2 number │ 11 2048 tab │
│ 2 4 break │ 12 4096 right-brace │
│ 3 8 delim │ 13 8192 missing │
│ 4 16 unused │ 14 16384 input │
│ 5 32 scale │ 15 32768 escape │
│ 6 64 range │ 16 65536 space │
│ 7 128 syntax │ 17 131072 font │
│ 8 256 di │ 18 262144 ig │
│ 9 512 mac │ 19 524288 color │
│ │ 20 1048576 file │
└───────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
break 4 A filled output line could not be broken such
that its length was less than the output line
length \n[.l]. This category is enabled by
default.
char 1 No mounted font defines a glyph for the
requested character. This category is
enabled by default.
color 524288 An undefined color name was selected, an
attempt was made to define a color using an
unrecognized color space, an invalid
component in a color definition was
encountered, or an attempt was made to
redefine a default color.
delim 8 The closing delimiter in an escape sequence
was missing or mismatched.
di 256 A di, da, box, or boxa request was invoked
without an argument when there was no current
diversion.
escape 32768 An unsupported escape sequence was
encountered.
file 1048576 An attempt was made to load a file that does
not exist. This category is enabled by
default.
font 131072 A non-existent font was selected, or the
selection was ignored because a font
selection escape sequence was used after the
output line continuation escape sequence on
an input line. This category is enabled by
default.
ig 262144 An invalid escape sequence occurred in input
ignored using the ig request. This warning
category diagnoses a condition that is an
error when it occurs in non-ignored input.
input 16384 An invalid character occurred on the input
stream.
mac 512 An undefined string, macro, or diversion was
used. When such an object is dereferenced,
an empty one of that name is automatically
created. So, unless it is later deleted, at
most one warning is given for each.
This warning is also emitted upon an attempt
to move an unplanted trap macro. In such
cases, the unplanted macro is not
dereferenced, so it is not created if it does
not exist.
missing 8192 A request was invoked with a mandatory
argument absent.
number 2 An invalid numeric expression was
encountered. This category is enabled by
default.
range 64 A numeric expression was out of range for its
context.
reg 1024 An undefined register was used. When an
undefined register is dereferenced, it is
automatically defined with a value of 0. So,
unless it is later deleted, at most one
warning is given for each.
right-brace 4096 A right brace escape sequence \} was
encountered where a number was expected.
scale 32 A scaling unit inappropriate to its context
was used in a numeric expression.
space 65536 A space was missing between a request or
macro and its argument. This warning is
produced when an undefined name longer than
two characters is encountered and the first
two characters of the name constitute a
defined name. No request is invoked, no
macro called, and an empty macro is not
defined. This category is enabled by
default. It never occurs in compatibility
mode.
syntax 128 A self-contradictory hyphenation mode was
requested; an empty or incomplete numeric
expression was encountered; an operand to a
numeric operator was missing; an attempt was
made to define a recursive, empty, or
nonsensical character class; or a groff
extension conditional expression operator was
used while in compatibility mode.
tab 2048 A tab character was encountered where a
number was expected, or appeared in an
unquoted macro argument.
Two warning names group other warning categories for convenience.
all All warning categories except di, mac, and reg. This
shorthand is intended to produce all warnings that are
useful with macro packages and documents written for AT&T
troff and its descendants, which have less fastidious
diagnostics than GNU troff.
w All warning categories. Authors of documents and macro
packages targeting groff are encouraged to use this
setting.
Environment
GROFF_FONT_PATH and GROFF_TMAC_PATH each accept a search path of
directories; that is, a list of directory names separated by the
system's path component separator character. On Unix systems,
this character is a colon (:); on Windows systems, it is a
semicolon (;).
GROFF_FONT_PATH
A list of directories in which to seek the selected output
device's directory of device and font description files.
troff will scan directories given as arguments to any
specified -F options before these, then in a site-specific
directory (/usr/local/share/groff/site-font), a standard
location (/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/font), and a
compatibility directory (/usr/lib/font) after them.
GROFF_TMAC_PATH
A list of directories in which to search for macro files.
troff will scan directories given as arguments to any
specified -M options before these, then the current
directory (only if in unsafe mode), the user's home
directory, a site-specific directory (/usr/local/share/
groff/site-tmac), and a standard location (/usr/local/
share/groff/1.23.0/tmac) after them.
GROFF_TYPESETTER
Set the default output device. If empty or not set, ps is
used. The -T option overrides GROFF_TYPESETTER.
SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
A timestamp (expressed as seconds since the Unix epoch) to
use as the output creation timestamp in place of the
current time. The time is converted to human-readable
form using gmtime(3) and asctime(3) when the formatter
starts up and stored in registers usable by documents and
macro packages.
TZ The time zone to use when converting the current time to
human-readable form; see tzset(3). If SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
is used, it is always converted to human-readable form
using UTC.
Files
/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/tmac/troffrc
is an initialization macro file loaded before any macro
packages specified with -m options.
/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/tmac/troffrc-end
is an initialization macro file loaded after all macro
packages specified with -m options.
/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/tmac/name.tmac
are macro files distributed with groff.
/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/font/devname/DESC
describes the output device name.
/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/font/devname/F
describes the font F of device name.
troffrc and troffrc-end are sought neither in the current nor the
home directory by default for security reasons, even if the -U
option is specified. Use the -M command-line option or the
GROFF_TMAC_PATH environment variable to add these directories to
the search path if necessary.
Authors
The GNU version of troff was originally written by James Clark;
he also wrote the original version of this document, which was
updated by Werner Lemberg ⟨wl@gnu.org⟩, Bernd Warken ⟨groff-bernd
.warken-72@web.de⟩, and G. Branden Robinson ⟨g.branden.robinson@
gmail.com⟩.
See also
Groff: The GNU Implementation of troff, by Trent A. Fisher and
Werner Lemberg, is the primary groff manual. You can browse it
interactively with “info groff”.
groff(1)
offers an overview of the GNU roff system and describes
its front end executable.
groff(7)
details the groff language, including a short but complete
reference of all predefined requests, registers, and
escape sequences.
groff_char(7)
explains the syntax of groff special character escape
sequences, and lists all special characters predefined by
the language.
groff_diff(7)
enumerates the differences between AT&T device-independent
troff and groff.
groff_font(5)
covers the format of groff device and font description
files.
groff_out(5)
describes the format of troff's output.
groff_tmac(5)
includes information about macro files that ship with
groff.
roff(7)
supplies background on roff systems in general, including
pointers to further related documentation.
COLOPHON
This page is part of the groff (GNU troff) project. Information
about the project can be found at
⟨http://www.gnu.org/software/groff/⟩. If you have a bug report
for this manual page, see ⟨http://www.gnu.org/software/groff/⟩.
This page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/groff.git⟩ on 2024-06-14. (At
that time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in
the repository was 2024-06-10.) If you discover any rendering
problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org
groff 1.23.0.1273-9d53-dirty 6 June 2024 troff(1)
Pages that refer to this page: colcrt(1), man(1), zsoelim(1)