summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/contrib/mom/momdoc/definitions.html
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'contrib/mom/momdoc/definitions.html')
-rw-r--r--contrib/mom/momdoc/definitions.html976
1 files changed, 976 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/mom/momdoc/definitions.html b/contrib/mom/momdoc/definitions.html
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..c9b7e56e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/contrib/mom/momdoc/definitions.html
@@ -0,0 +1,976 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<!--
+This file is part of groff, the GNU roff type-setting system.
+
+Copyright (C) 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+Written by Peter Schaffter.
+
+Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
+under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
+any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the
+Invariant Sections being this comment section, with no Front-Cover
+Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts.
+
+A copy of the Free Documentation License is included as a file called
+FDL in the main directory of the groff source package.
+-->
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+
+<head>
+ <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8"/>
+ <title>Mom -- Definitions and Terms</title>
+ <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheet.css" />
+</head>
+
+<body style="background-color: #f5faff;">
+
+<!-- ==================================================================== -->
+
+<div id="top" class="page">
+
+<!-- Navigation links -->
+<table style="width: 100%;">
+ <tr>
+ <td><a href="toc.html">Back to Table of Contents</a></td>
+ <td style="text-align: right;"><a href="using.html#top">Next: Using mom</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+<h1 id="terms" class="docs">Definitions of terms used in this manual</h1>
+
+<p>
+I use a number of typesetting-specific and groff-specific terms
+throughout this documentation, as well as a few terms that apply
+to mom herself. To make life easier, I&#8217;ll explain
+them here. Refer back to this section should you encounter a word
+or concept you&#8217;re not familiar with.
+</p>
+
+<div class="rule-short" style="margin-top: 18px; margin-bottom: 28px;"><hr/></div>
+
+<div class="col-1-definitions">
+ <table class="definitions">
+ <tr><th class="definitions">Typesetting terms</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#ascender">Ascender</a><br/>
+ <a href="#baseline">Baseline</a><br/>
+ <a href="#ballotbox">Ballot box</a><br/>
+ <a href="#bullet">Bullet</a><br/>
+ <a href="#capheight">Cap-height</a><br/>
+ <a href="#descender">Descender</a><br/>
+ <a href="#discretionaryhyphen">Discretionary hyphen</a><br/>
+ <a href="#dropcap">Drop cap</a><br/>
+ <a href="#em">Em/en</a><br/>
+ <a href="#family">Family</a><br/>
+ <a href="#figurespace">Figure space/Digit space</a><br/>
+ <a href="#fixedwidthfont">Fixed width font</a><br/>
+ <a href="#fixedwidthspace">Fixed width space</a><br/>
+ <a href="#font">Font</a><br/>
+ <a href="#force">Force justify</a><br/>
+ <a href="#just">Justify/justification</a><br/>
+ <a href="#gutter">Gutter</a><br/>
+ <a href="#kern">Kerning</a><br/>
+ <a href="#kernunit">Kern Units</a><br/>
+ <a href="#leading">Lead/leading</a><br/>
+ <a href="#leader">Leaders</a><br/>
+ <a href="#ligatures">Ligature</a><br/>
+ <a href="#picaspoints">Picas/Points</a><br/>
+ <a href="#ps">Point Size</a><br/>
+ <a href="#quad">Quad</a><br/>
+ <a href="#rag">Rag</a><br/>
+ <a href="#shape">Shape</a><br/>
+ <a href="#solid">Solid/set solid</a><br/>
+ <a href="#trackkerning">Track kerning/Line kerning</a><br/>
+ <a href="#unbreakablespace">Unbreakable space</a><br/>
+ <a href="#weight">Weight</a><br/>
+ <a href="#wordspace">Word space</a><br/>
+ <a href="#xheight">x-height</a><br/>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<div class="col-2-definitions">
+ <table class="definitions">
+ <tr><th class="definitions">Groff terms</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#alias">Alias</a><br/>
+ <a href="#arguments">Arguments</a><br/>
+ <a href="#commentlines">Comment lines</a><br/>
+ <a href="#controllines">Control Lines</a><br/>
+ <a href="#filled">Filled lines</a><br/>
+ <a href="#inlines">Inline escapes</a><br/>
+ <a href="#inputline">Input line</a><br/>
+ <a href="#macros">Macros</a><br/>
+ <a href="#units">Machine units</a><br/>
+ <a href="#numericargument">Numeric argument</a><br/>
+ <a href="#outputline">Output line</a><br/>
+ <a href="#primitives">Primitives</a><br/>
+ <a href="#stringargument">String Argument</a><br/>
+ <a href="#unitofmeasure">Unit of measure</a><br/>
+ <a href="#zerowidthcharacter">Zero-width character</a><br/>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<div class="col-3-definitions">
+ <table class="definitions">
+ <tr><th class="definitions">Mom terms</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#blockquote">Blockquote</a><br/>
+ <a href="#controlmacro">Control macro</a><br/>
+ <a href="#docheader">Docheader</a><br/>
+ <a href="#epigraph">Epigraph</a><br/>
+ <a href="#footer">Footer</a><br/>
+ <a href="#head">Head</a><br/>
+ <a href="#header">Header</a><br/>
+ <a href="#linebreak">Linebreak</a><br/>
+ <a href="#parahead">Paragraph head</a><br/>
+ <a href="#quote">Quote</a><br/>
+ <a href="#running">Running text</a><br/>
+ <a href="#subhead">Subhead</a><br/>
+ <a href="#toggle">Toggle</a><br/>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id="typesetting-terms" class="docs">Typesetting terms</h3>
+<dl>
+ <dt id="ascender">Ascender</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The portion of a letter that extends above the bowl. For
+ example, the letters a, c, and e have no ascenders. The letters
+ b, d, and h do.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="baseline">Baseline</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The imaginary line on which the bottoms of capital letters and
+ the bowls of lower case letters rest.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="ballotbox">Ballot box</dt>
+ <dd>
+ An unfilled square, usually
+ <a href="#capheight">cap-height</a>
+ in size, typically placed beside items in a checklist.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="bullet">Bullet</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A small, filled circle typically found beside items or points in
+ a list.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="capheight">Cap-height</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The height of the tallest capital letter in a given
+ <a href="#font">font</a>
+ at the current
+ <a href="#ps">point size</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="descender">Descender</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The portion of a letter that extends beneath the
+ <a href="#baseline">baseline</a>
+ (j, q, y are letters with descenders).
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="discretionaryhyphen">Discretionary hyphen</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A symbol inserted between two syllables of a word that indicates
+ to a typesetting program the valid hyphenation points in the
+ word. Normally, if hyphenation is turned on, groff knows where
+ to hyphenate words. However, hyphenation being what it is
+ (in English, at any rate), groff doesn&#8217;t always get it right.
+ Discretionary hyphens make sure it does. In the event that the
+ word doesn&#8217;t need to be hyphenated at all, groff leaves them
+ alone. In groff, the discretionary hyphen is entered with
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \% (backslash followed by a percent)
+ </span>
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="dropcap">Drop cap</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A large, usually upper-case letter that introduces the first
+ paragraph of a document or section thereof. The top of the
+ drop cap usually lines up with the top of the first line of the
+ paragraph, and typically &#8220;drops&#8221; several lines lower.
+ Text adjacent to the drop cap is indented to the right of the
+ letter until the bottom of the drop cap is reached, at which
+ point text reverts to the left margin.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="em">Em/en</dt>
+ <dd>
+ An em is a relative measurement equal to the width of the
+ letter M at a given
+ <a href="#ps">point size</a>
+ in a given
+ <a href="#font">font</a>.
+ Since most Ms are designed square, an em is usually (but
+ sometimes erroneously) considered to be the same size as the
+ current point size (i.e. if the point size of the type is 12,
+ one em equals 12 points). An en is equal to the width of a
+ letter N (historically 2/3 of an em, although groff treats an en
+ as 1/2 of an em). Typically, ems and ens are used to measure
+ indents, or to define the length of dashes (long hyphens).
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="family">Family</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The collective name by which a collection of
+ <a href="#font">fonts</a>
+ are known, e.g. Helvetica, Times Roman, Garamond.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="figurespace">Figure space/Digit space</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A
+ <a href="#fixedwidthspace">fixed width space</a>
+ that has the width of one digit. Used for aligning numerals in,
+ say, columns or numbered lists. In groff, the figure space is
+ entered with
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \0 (backslash followed by a zero)
+ </span>
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="fixedwidthfont">Fixed width font</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A family or font in which every character occupies exactly the
+ same amount of vertical space on the line. Courier is the
+ best-known, if not the most elegant, fixed-width font.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="fixedwidthspace">Fixed width space</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Equal to
+ <a href="#wordspace">word space</a>,
+ but does not expand or contract when text is
+ <a href="#just">justified</a>.
+ In groff, fixed width space is entered with
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \&lt;space&gt; (backslash followed by hitting the spacebar)
+ </span>
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="font">Font</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The specific
+ <a href="#weight">weight</a>
+ and
+ <a href="#shape">shape</a>
+ of type within a
+ <a href="#family">family</a>,
+ e.g. light, medium, bold (which are weights), and roman, italic,
+ condensed (which are shapes). By default, groff knows of four
+ fonts within its default set of families: R (medium roman), I
+ (medium italic), B (bold roman) and BI (bold italic).
+ Mom considerably extends this very basic list.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="force">Force justify</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Sometimes, in
+ <a href="#just">justified</a>
+ text, a line needs to be broken short of the right margin.
+ Force justifying means telling a typesetting program (like
+ groff) that you want the line broken early AND that you want the
+ line&#8217;s word spacing stretched to force the line flush with the
+ right margin.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="gutter">Gutter</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The vertical whitespace separating columns of type.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="just">Justify/justification</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Lines of type are justified when they&#8217;re flush at both the left
+ and right margins. Justification is the act of making both
+ margins flush. Some people use the terms "left justified" and
+ "right justified" to mean type where only the left (or right)
+ margins align. I don&#8217;t. See
+ <a href="#quad">quad</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="kern">Kerning</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Moving pairs of letters closer together to remove excess
+ whitespace between them. In the days before phototypesetting,
+ type was set from small, rectangular blocks of wood or metal,
+ each block having exactly one letter. Because the edge of
+ each block determined the edge of each letter, certain letter
+ combinations (TA, for example) didn&#8217;t fit together well and had
+ to be mortised by hand to bring them visually closer. Modern
+ typesetting systems usually take care of kerning automatically,
+ but they&#8217;re far from perfect. Professional typesetters still
+ devote a lot of time to fitting letters and punctuation together
+ properly.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="kernunit">Kern Units</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A relative distance equal to 1/36 of the current
+ <a href="#ps">point size</a>.
+ Used between individual letters
+ for
+ <a href="#kern">kerning</a>.
+ Different typesetting systems use different values (1/54 is
+ popular), and sometimes call kern units by a different name.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="leading">Lead/leading</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The distance from the
+ <a href="#baseline">baseline</a>
+ of one line of type to the line of type immediately beneath
+ it. Pronounced "ledding." Also called line spacing. Usually
+ measured in
+ <a href="#picaspoints">points</a>.
+
+ <p>
+ <em>In case you&#8217;re interested...</em> In previous centuries,
+ lines of type were separated by thin strips of&mdash;you guessed
+ it&mdash;lead. Lines of type that had no lead between them were said
+ to be &#8220;set solid.&#8221; Once you began separating them with
+ strips of lead, they were said to be &#8220;leaded&#8221;, and the
+ spacing was expressed in terms of the number of
+ <a href="#picaspoints">points</a>
+ of lead. For this reason, &#8220;leading&#8221; and &#8220;line
+ spacing&#8221; aren&#8217;t, historically speaking, synonymous.
+ If type was set 10 on 12, for example, the leading was 2
+ points, not 12. Nowadays, however, the two terms are used
+ interchangeably to mean the distance from baseline to baseline.
+ </p>
+
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="leader">Leaders</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Single characters used to fill lines, usually to their end. So
+ called because they &#8220;lead&#8221; the eye from one element
+ of the page to another. For example, in the following (brief)
+ Table of Contents, the periods (dots) are leaders.
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ Foreword............... 2
+ Chapter 1.............. 5
+ Chapter 2.............. 38
+ Chapter 3.............. 60
+ </span>
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="ligatures">Ligature</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Ligatures are letters joined together to form a single
+ character. The commonest are fi, fl, ff, ffi and ffl. Others
+ are ae and oe. Occasionally, one sees an st ligature, but this
+ is archaic and quite rare.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="picaspoints">Picas/Points</dt>
+ <dd>
+ There are twelve points in a pica, and six picas in an inch
+ (hence 72 points to the inch). In the same way that gem-dealers
+ have always used their own system of measurement for weight
+ (carats), typographers have always used their own system of
+ measurement for type.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="ps">Point Size</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The nominal size of type, measured in
+ <a href="#picaspoints">points</a>
+ from the bottom of the longest
+ <a href="#descender">descender</a>
+ to the top of the highest
+ <a href="#ascender">ascender</a>.
+ In reality, type is always fractionally smaller than its point
+ size.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="quad">Quad</dt>
+ <dd>
+ When only one margin of type is flush, lines of type are quadded
+ in the direction of the flush margin. Therefore, quad left
+ means the left margin is flush, the right isn&#8217;t. Quad right
+ means the right margin is flush, the left isn&#8217;t. Quad centre
+ means neither the left nor the right margin is flush; rather,
+ lines of type are quadded on both sides so that type appears
+ centred on the page.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="rag">Rag</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Describes a margin that isn&#8217;t flush. Rag right means the right
+ margin isn&#8217;t flush. Rag left means the left margin isn&#8217;t flush.
+ The expression "flush left/rag right" is sometimes used to
+ describe type that is
+ <a href="#quad">quadded</a>
+ left.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="shape">Shape</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The degree of slant and/or the width of characters.
+ (Technically speaking, this is not a proper typesetting term;
+ however, it may help clarify some concepts presented in these
+ documents.)
+
+ <p>
+ Some typical shapes are:
+ </p>
+
+ <ul style="margin-top: -.5em; margin-bottom: -.5em">
+ <li>&#8220;Roman&#8221;, which has no slant, and has letterforms of
+ average width</li>
+ <li>&#8220;Italic&#8221;, which is slanted, and has letterforms
+ of average width</li>
+ <li>&#8220;Condensed&#8221;, which has no slant, but has
+ letterforms narrower than the average represented by Roman</li>
+ <li>&#8220;Condensed Italic&#8221;, which is slanted, with letterforms narrower
+ than average</li>
+ </ul>
+
+ <p>
+ The term
+ <a href="#font">font</a>,
+ as it is used in these documents, refers to a combination of
+ <a href="#weight">weight</a>
+ and shape.
+ </p>
+
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="solid">Solid/set solid</dt>
+ <dd>
+ When no
+ <a href="#leading">lead</a>
+ is added between lines of type (i.e. the
+ <a href="#ps">point size</a>
+ and linespacing are the same), the lines are said to be &#8220;set
+ solid.&#8221;
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="trackkerning">Track kerning/Line kerning</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Sometimes, it&#8217;s advantageous to increase or decrease the amount
+ of space between every letter in a line by an equal (usually
+ small) amount, in order to fit more (or fewer) characters on the
+ line. The correct term is letter spacing, but track kerning and
+ line kerning (and sometimes, just "kerning") have come to mean
+ the same thing.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="unbreakablespace">Unbreakable space</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Equal to
+ <a href="#wordspace">word space</a>,
+ however words separated by an unbreakable space will always be
+ kept together on the same line. Expands and contracts like word
+ space. Useful for proper names, which one should, whenever
+ possible, avoid splitting onto two lines. In groff, unbreakable
+ space is entered with
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \~ (backslash followed by a tilde)
+ </span>
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="weight">Weight</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The thickness of the strokes of letterforms. Medium and Book
+ have average thicknesses and are the weights used for most
+ of the text in books, magazines, newspapers, etc. Light has
+ strokes slightly thinner than Medium or Book, but is still
+ acceptable for most text. Semibold, Bold, Heavy and Black all
+ have strokes of increasing thickness, making them suitable for
+ heads, subheads, headlines and the like.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="wordspace">Word space</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The amount of whitespace between words. When text is
+ <a href="#just">justified</a>,
+ word space expands or contracts to make the margins flush.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="xheight">x-height</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The height of a lower case letter x in a given font at a given
+ point size. Generally used to mean the average height of the
+ bowl of lower case letters.
+ </dd>
+</dl>
+
+<h3 id="groff-terms" class="docs">Groff terms</h3>
+
+<dl>
+ <dt id="alias">Alias</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A
+ <a href="#macros">macro</a>
+ invoked by a name different from its &#8220;official&#8221;
+ name. For example, the official name of the macro to change
+ <a href="#family">family</a>
+ is <kbd>FAMILY</kbd>. Its alias is <kbd>FAM</kbd>.
+ Aliases may be created for any macro (via the
+ <a href="goodies.html#alias"><kbd>ALIAS</kbd></a>
+ macro) provided the alias uses a name not already taken by the
+ mom macros or one of the groff
+ <a href="#primitives">primitives</a>.
+ For a complete list of words or names you must not use, see the
+ <a href="reserved.html#reserved">list of reserved words</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="arguments">Arguments</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Parameters or information needed by a
+ <a href="#macros">macro</a>
+ to do its job. For example, in the macro
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ .PT_SIZE 12
+ </span>
+
+ <kbd>12</kbd> is the argument. In the macro
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ .QUAD LEFT
+ </span>
+
+ <kbd>LEFT</kbd> is the argument. Arguments are separated from
+ macros by spaces. Some macros require several arguments; each
+ is separated by a space.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="commentlines">Comment Lines</dt>
+ <dd>
+ <a href="#inputline">Input lines</a>
+ introduced with the comment character
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \# (backslash followed by the pound sign)
+ </span>
+
+ When processing output, groff silently ignores everything on a
+ line that begins with the comment character.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="controllines">Control Lines</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Instructions to groff that appear on a line by themselves, which
+ means that &#8220;control lines&#8221; are either
+ <a href="#macros">macros</a>
+ or groff
+ <a href="#primitives">primitives</a>.
+ Control lines begin with a period or, occasionally, an apostrophe.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="filled">Filled lines/fill mode</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Automatic
+ <a href="#just">justification</a>
+ or
+ <a href="#quad">quadding</a>.
+ In fill mode, the ends of lines as they appear in your text
+ editor are ignored. Instead, words from adjoining
+ <a href="#inputline">input lines</a>
+ are added one at a time to the output line until no more words
+ fit. Then, depending whether text is to be
+ <a href="#just">justified</a>
+ or
+ <a href="#quad">quadded</a>
+ (left, right, or centre), and depending on whether automatic
+ hyphenation is turned on, groff attempts to hyphenate the last
+ word, or, barring that, spreads and breaks the line (when
+ justification is turned on) or breaks and quads the line (when
+ quadding is turned on).
+
+ <p>
+ Nofill mode (non-filled text) means that groff respects the ends
+ of lines exactly as they appear in your text editor.
+ </p>
+
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="inlines">Inline escapes</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Instructions issued to groff that appear as part of an
+ <a href="#inputline">input line</a>
+ (as opposed to
+ <a href="#macros">macros</a>,
+ which must appear on a line by themselves). Inline escapes are
+ always introduced by the backslash character. For example,
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ A line of text with the word T\*[BU 2]oronto in it
+ </span>
+
+ contains the inline escape <kbd>\*[BU 2]</kbd> (which means
+ &#8220;move the letter &#8216;o&#8217; 2
+ <a href="#kernunit">kern units</a>
+ closer to the letter &#8216;T&#8217;&#8221;).
+
+ <p style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ Mom&#8217;s inline escapes always take the form
+ <kbd>\*[&lt;ESCAPE&gt;]</kbd>, where <kbd>ESCAPE</kbd> is
+ composed of capital letters, sometimes followed immediately by a
+ digit, sometimes followed by a space and a
+ <a href="#numericargument">numeric argument</a>.
+ Groff&#8217;s escapes begin with the backslash
+ character but typically have no star and are in lower case. For
+ example, the mom escapes to move forward 6
+ points on a line are either
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \*[FP6]&nbsp;&nbsp;or&nbsp;&nbsp;\*[FWD 6p]
+ </span>
+
+ while the groff escape for the same thing is
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \h&#8217;6p&#8217;
+ </span>
+ </p>
+
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="inputline" style="margin-top: -1em;">Input line</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A line of text as it appears in your text editor.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="macros">Macros</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Instructions embedded in a document that determine how groff
+ processes the text for output. mom&#8217;s macros
+ always begin with a period, on a line by themselves, and must
+ be typed in capital letters. Typically, macros contain complex
+ commands issued to groff&mdash;behind the scenes&mdash;via
+ groff
+ <a href="#primitives">primitives</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="units">Machine units</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A machine unit is 1/1000 of a
+ <a href="#picaspoints">point</a>
+ when the groff device is ps. (&#8220;ps&#8221; means
+ &#8220;PostScript&#8221;&mdash;the default device for
+ which groff prepares output, and the device for which
+ mom was specifically designed.)
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="numericargument">Numeric argument</dt>
+ <dd>
+ An
+ <a href="#arguments">argument</a>
+ that has the form of a digit. Numeric arguments can be built
+ out of arithmetic expressions using +, -, *, and / for plus,
+ minus, times, and divided-by respectively. If a numeric
+ argument requires a
+ <a href="#unitofmeasure">unit of measure</a>,
+ a unit of measure must be appended to <em>every</em> digit in
+ the argument. For example:
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ .ALD 1i-1v
+ </span>
+
+ <div class="box-important" style="margin-right: 2.5em;">
+ <p class="tip">
+ <span class="important">IMPORTANT:</span> groff does not
+ respect the order of operations, but rather evaluates
+ arithmetic expressions from left to right. Parentheses must
+ be used to circumvent this peculiarity. Not to worry, though.
+ The likelihood of more than just the occasional plus or minus
+ sign when using mom&#8217;s macros is slim.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="outputline">Output line</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A line of text as it appears in output copy.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="primitives">Primitives</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The lowercase instructions, introduced with a period, that groff
+ uses as its native command language, and out of which macros
+ are built. The majority of groff&#8217;s primitive requests are two
+ letters long.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="stringargument">String Argument</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Technically, any
+ <a href="#arguments">argument</a>
+ that is not numeric. In this documentation, string argument
+ means an argument that requires the user to input text. For
+ example, in the
+ <a href="#macros">macro</a>
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ .TITLE "My Pulitzer Novel"
+ </span>
+
+ <kbd>"My Pulitzer Novel"</kbd> is a string argument.
+
+ <p>
+ Because string arguments must be enclosed by double-quotes, you
+ can&#8217;t use double-quotes as part of the string argument. If you
+ need double-quotes to be part of a string argument, use the
+ <a href="#inlines">inline escapes</a>
+ <kbd>\(lq</kbd> and <kbd>\(rq</kbd> (leftquote and
+ rightquote respectively) in place of the double-quote character
+ (<kbd>"</kbd>).
+ </p>
+
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="unitofmeasure">Unit of measure</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The single letter after a
+ <a href="#numericargument">numeric argument</a>
+ that tells mom what measurement scale the
+ argument should use. Common valid units are:
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ i (inches)
+ p (points)
+ P (Picas)
+ c (centimetres)
+ m (ems)
+ n (ens)
+ u (machine units)
+ v (the current leading [line space])
+ </span>
+
+ <p style="margin-top: -1em;">
+ Units of measure must come immediately after the numeric
+ argument (i.e. with no space between the argument and the unit
+ of measure), like this:
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ .ALD 2v
+ .LL 39P
+ .IL 1i
+ </span>
+
+ The above example advances 2 line spaces and sets the line
+ length to 39 picas with a left indent of 1 inch.
+ </p>
+
+ <div class="box-important" style="margin-right: 2.5em;">
+ <p class="tip">
+ <span class="important">IMPORTANT:</span>
+ Most mom macros that set the size or measure of something must
+ be given a unit of measure since most of the macros do not have
+ default units of measure. There are a couple of exceptions,
+ the most notable of which are <kbd>PT_SIZE</kbd> and
+ <kbd class="bold">LS</kbd>. Both use
+ <a href="#picaspoints">points</a>
+ as the default unit of measure, which means you don&#8217;t have to
+ append &#8220;p&#8221; to their argument.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>
+ You can enter decimal values for any unit of measure. Different
+ units may be combined by adding them together (e.g. 1.5i+2m,
+ which gives a measure of 1-1/2 inches plus 2 ems).
+ </p>
+
+ <div class="box-tip" style="margin-right: 2.5em;">
+ <p class="tip">
+ <span class="note">Note:</span>
+ a pica is composed of 12 points, therefore 12.5 picas is 12
+ picas and 6 points, not 12 picas and 5 points. If you want 12
+ picas and 5 points, you have to enter the measure as 12P+5p.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="zerowidthcharacter">Zero-width character</dt>
+ <dd>
+ The
+ <a href="#inlines">inline escape</a>
+ that allows you to print a literal period, apostrophe and, if
+ <a href="#outputline">output lines</a>
+ are
+ <a href="#filled">filled</a>,
+ a space that falls at the beginning of an
+ <a href="#inputline">input line</a>.
+ It looks like this:
+
+ <span class="pre" style="margin-bottom: -2em;">
+ \&amp; (backslash followed by an ampersand)
+ </span>
+
+ Normally, groff interprets a period (or an apostrophe) at the
+ beginning of an input line as meaning that what follows is a
+ <a href="#controllines">control line</a>.
+ In fill modes, groff treats a space at the beginning of an input
+ line as meaning &#8220;start a new line and put a space at the
+ beginning of it.&#8221; If you want groff to interpret periods
+ and apostrophes at the beginning of input lines literally (i.e.
+ print them), or spaces at the beginning of input lines as just
+ garden variety word spaces, you must start the line with the
+ zero-width character.
+ </dd>
+</dl>
+
+<h3 id="mom-terms" class="docs">Mom terms</h3>
+<dl>
+ <dt id="blockquote">Blockquote</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Cited material other than
+ <a href="#quote">quotes</a>.
+ Typically set at a smaller point size than paragraph text,
+ indented from the left and right margins. Blockquotes are
+ <a href="#filled">filled</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="controlmacro">Control macro</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Macros used in
+ <a href="docprocessing.html#docprocessing">document processing</a>
+ to control/alter the appearance of document elements (e.g.
+ heads, quotes, footnotes,
+ <a href="#header">headers</a>,
+ etc.).
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="docheader">Document header/docheader</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Document information (title, subtitle, author, etc) output at
+ the top of page one.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="epigraph">Epigraph</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A short, usually cited passage that appears at the beginning of
+ a chapter, story, or other document.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="footer">Footer/page footer</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Document information (frequently author and title) output in
+ the bottom margin of pages <em>after</em> page one. Not to be
+ confused with footnotes, which are considered part of
+ <a href="#running">running text</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="head">Head</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A title that introduces a major section of a document.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="header">Header/page header</dt>
+ <dd>
+ Document information (frequently author and title) output in the
+ top margin of pages <em>after</em> page one.
+
+ <div class="box-tip" style="margin-right: 2.5em;">
+ <p class="tip">
+ <span class="note">Note:</span> In terms of content and style,
+ headers and
+ <a href="#footer">footers</a>
+ are the same; they differ only in their placement on the page.
+ In most places in this documentation, references to the content
+ or style of headers applies equally to footers.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="linebreak">Linebreak/author linebreak</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A gap in the vertical flow of
+ <a href="#running">running text</a>,
+ frequently set off by typographic symbols such as asterisks or
+ daggers. Used to indicate a shift in the content of a document
+ (e.g. a scene change in a short story). Also commonly called a
+ scene break or a section break.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="parahead">Paragraph head</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A title joined to the body of a paragraph; hierarchically one
+ level beneath
+ <a href="#subhead">subheads</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="quote">Quote</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A quote, to mom, is a line-for-line setting
+ of quoted material (e.g. poetry, song lyrics, or a snippet of
+ programming code). You don&#8217;t have to use
+ <a href="typesetting.html#br"><kbd>BR</kbd></a>
+ with quotes.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="running">Running text</dt>
+ <dd>
+ In a document formatted with mom, running
+ text means text that forms the body of the document, including
+ elements such as heads and subheads.
+ <a href="#docheader">Docheaders</a>,
+ <a href="#header">headers</a>,
+ <a href="#footer">footers</a>
+ and page numbers are not part of running text.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="subhead">Subhead</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A title used to introduce secondary sections of a document;
+ hierarchically one level beneath sections introduced by
+ <a href="#head">heads</a>.
+ </dd>
+
+ <dt id="toggle">Toggle</dt>
+ <dd>
+ A macro or tag that, when invoked without an argument, begins
+ something or turns a feature on, and, when invoked with ANY
+ argument, ends something or turns a feature off. See
+ <a href="intro.html#toggle-example">Example 3</a>
+ of the section
+ <a href="intro.html#macro-args">How to read macro arguments</a>.
+ </dd>
+</dl>
+
+<div class="rule-long"><hr/></div>
+
+<!-- Navigation links -->
+<table style="width: 100%;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style="width: 33%;"><a href="toc.html">Back to Table of Contents</a></td>
+ <td style="width: 33%; text-align: center;"><a href="#top">Top</a></td>
+ <td style="width: 33%; text-align: right;"><a href="using.html#top">Next: Using mom</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="bottom-spacer"><br/></div>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+<!-- vim: fileencoding=utf-8: nomodified:-->