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scdoc/scdoc.1.scd

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scdoc(1)
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# NAME
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scdoc - tool for generating *roff*(7) manual pages
# SYNOPSIS
*scdoc* < _input_ > _output_
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# DESCRIPTION
scdoc is a tool designed to make the process of writing man pages more
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friendly. It reads scdoc syntax from stdin and writes roff to stdout, suitable
for reading with *man*(1).
# SYNTAX
Input files must use the UTF-8 encoding.
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## PREAMBLE
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Each scdoc file must begin with the following preamble:
*name*(_section_)
The *name* is the name of the man page you are writing, and _section_ is the
section you're writing for (see *man*(1) for information on manual sections).
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## SECTION HEADERS
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Each section of your man page should begin with something similar to the
following:
# HEADER NAME
Subsection headers are also understood - use two hashes. Each header must have
an empty line on either side.
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## PARAGRAPHS
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Begin a new paragraph with an empty line.
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## FORMATTING
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Text can be made *bold* or _underlined_ with asterisks and underscores: \*bold\*
or \_underlined\_.
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## INDENTATION
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You may indent lines with tab characters (*\\t*) to indent them by 4 spaces in
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the output. Indented lines may not contain headers.
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The result looks something like this.
You may use multiple lines and most _formatting_.
Deindent to return to normal, or indent again to increase your indentation
depth.
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## LISTS
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You may start bulleted lists with dashes (-), like so:
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```
- Item 1
- Item 2
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- Subitem 1
- Subitem 2
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- Item 3
```
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The result looks like this:
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- Item 1
- Item 2
- Subitem 1
- Subitem 2
- Item 3
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You may also extend long entries onto another line by giving it the same indent
level, plus two spaces. They will be rendered as a single list entry.
```
- Item 1 is pretty long so let's
break it up onto two lines
- Item 2 is shorter
- But its children can go on
for a while
```
- Item 1 is pretty long so let's
break it up onto two lines
- Item 2 is shorter
- But its children can go on
for a while
## NUMBERED LISTS
Numbered lists are similar to normal lists, but begin with periods (.) instead
of dashes (-), like so:
```
. Item 1
. Item 2
. Item 3,
with multiple lines
```
. Item 1
. Item 2
. Item 3,
with multiple lines
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## TABLES
To begin a table, add an empty line followed by any number of rows.
Each line of a table should start with | or : to start a new row or column
respectively, followed by [ or - or ] to align the contents to the left,
center, or right, followed by a space and the contents of that cell. You may
use a space instead of an alignment specifier to inherit the alignment of the
same column in the previous row.
The first character of the first row is not limited to | and has special
meaning. [ will produce a table with borders around each cell. | will produce a
table with no borders. ] will produce a table with one border around the whole
table.
To conclude your table, add an empty line after the last row.
```
[[ *Foo*
:- _Bar_
:- _Baz_
| *Row 1*
: Hello
:] world!
| *Row 2*
: こんにちは
: 世界
```
[[ *Foo*
:- _Bar_
:- _Baz_
| *Row 1*
: Hello
:] world!
| *Row 2*
: こんにちは
: 世界
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## LITERAL TEXT
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You may turn off scdoc formatting and output literal text with escape codes and
literal blocks. Inserting a \\ into your source will cause the subsequent symbol
to be treated as a literal and copied directly to the output. You may also make
blocks of literal syntax like so:
```
\```
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_This formatting_ will *not* be interpreted by scdoc.
\```
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```
These blocks will be indented one level. Note that literal text is shown
literally in the man viewer - that is, it's not a means for inserting your own
roff macros into the output. Note that \\ is still interpreted within literal
blocks, which for example can be useful to output \``` inside of a literal block.
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# AUTHORS
Maintained by Drew DeVault <sir@cmpwn.com>. Up-to-date sources can be found at
https://git.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/scdoc and bugs/patches can be submitted by email to
sir@cmpwn.com.