A line prefix request to make e.g. French quotation possible: He said: >> blablablabla >> blablabla blabla bla >> blabla blabla bla bla >> bla bla bla blablabla >> blabla. << Give a more helpful error message when the indent is set to a value greater than the line-length. Tracing. This is a pain to implement because requests are responsible for reading their own arguments. Possibly implement -s option (stop every N pages). This functionality would be more appropriate in a postprocessor. Line breaking should be smarter. In particular, it should be possible to shrink spaces. Also avoid having a line that's been shrunk a lot next to a line that's been stretched a lot. The difficulty is to design a mechanism that allows the user complete control over the decision of where to break the line. Provide a mechanism to control the shape of the rag in non-justified text. Add a discretionary break escape sequence. \='...'...'...' like TeX. Think about kerning between characters and spaces. (Need to implement get_breakpoints and split methods for kern_pair_node class.) In troff, if .L > 1 when a diversion is reread in no-fill mode, then extra line-spacing is added on. Groff at the moment treats line-spacing like vertical spacing and doesn't do this. Suppose \(ch comes from a special font S, and that the current font is R. Suppose that R contains a hyphen character and that S does not. Suppose that the current font is R. Suppose that \(ch is in a word and has a non-zero hyphen-type. Then we ought to be able to hyphenate, but we won't be able to because we will look for the hyphen only in font S and not in font R. Perhaps the current input level should be accessible in a number register. Should \w deal with a newline like \X? Have another look at uses of token::delimiter. Perhaps we need to distinguish the case where we want to see if a token could start a number, from the case where we want to see if it could occur somewhere in a number expression. Provide a facility like copy thru in pic. Fancier implementation of font families which doesn't group fonts into families purely on the basis of their names. In the DESC file make the number of fonts optional if they are all on one line. Number register to give the diversion level. Time various alternative implementations of scale (both in font.c and number.c). On a sparc it's faster to always do it in floating point. Devise a more compact representation for the hyphenation patterns trie. Have a per-environment parameter to increase letter-spacing. Request to set character height. Request to set character slant. Provide some way to upcase or downcase strings. Support non-uniformly scalable fonts. Perhaps associate a suffix with a particular range of sizes. eg sizesuffix .display 14-512 Then is you ask for R at pointsize 16, groff will first look for R.display and then R. Probably necessary to be able to specify a separate unitwidth for each sizesuffix (eg. for X). Make it possible to suppress hyphenation on a word-by-word basis. (Perhaps store hyphenation flags in tfont.) Possibly allow multiple simultaneous input line traps. Unpaddable, breakable space escape sequence. Support hanging punctuation. In justified text, if the last line of a paragraph is only a little bit short it might be desirable to justify the line. Allow the user control over this. The pm request could print where the macro was defined. Also could optionally print the contents of a macro. Provide some way to round numbers to multiples of the current horizontal or vertical resolution. Better string-processing support (search). Generalized ligatures. Request to remove an environment. (Maintain a count of the references to the environment from the environment table, environment dictionary or environment stack.) Perhaps in the nr request a leading `-' should only be recognized as a decrement when it's at the same input level as the request. Don't ever change a charinfo. Create new variants instead and chain them together. Unix troff appears to read the first character of a request name in copy mode. Should we do the same? Number register giving name of end macro. More thorough range checking. Provide syntax for octal and hexadecimal numeric constants. Perhaps o#100 and x#7f as per Scheme. Or perhaps PostScript 16#7f. Ambiguity between whether `c' is treated as digit or scaling indicator. Local variables.