1
0

ptx.1 2.4 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135
  1. .TH PTX 1
  2. .CT 1 writing_aids
  3. .SH NAME
  4. ptx \- permuted index
  5. .SH SYNOPSIS
  6. .B ptx
  7. [
  8. .I option ...
  9. ]
  10. [
  11. .I input
  12. ]
  13. .SH DESCRIPTION
  14. .I Ptx
  15. place on standard output a permuted index to file
  16. .I input
  17. or to standard input.
  18. It has three phases: the first does the permutation, generating
  19. one line for each keyword in an input line.
  20. The keyword is rotated to the front.
  21. The permuted file is then
  22. sorted.
  23. Finally, the sorted lines are rotated so the keyword
  24. comes at the middle of the page.
  25. The output is exemplified by:
  26. .br
  27. .IP
  28. .L
  29. \&.xx "tail" "before" "keyword and after" "head"
  30. .LP
  31. where
  32. .L .xx
  33. may be defined as a
  34. .IR troff (1)
  35. macro
  36. for user-defined formatting.
  37. The
  38. .I before
  39. and
  40. .I keyword and after
  41. fields incorporate as much of the line as will fit
  42. around the keyword when it is printed at the middle of the page.
  43. .I Tail
  44. and
  45. .I head,
  46. at least one of which is an empty string,
  47. are wrapped-around pieces small enough to fit
  48. in the unused space at the opposite end of the line.
  49. When original text must be discarded,
  50. .L /
  51. marks the spot.
  52. .PP
  53. The following options can be applied:
  54. .TP
  55. .BR -f
  56. Fold upper and lower case letters for sorting.
  57. .TP
  58. .BR -t
  59. Prepare the output for
  60. .RI troff (1).
  61. .TP
  62. .BI -w " w"
  63. The width of the permuted output is
  64. .IR w ;
  65. default is
  66. .B 72n
  67. in
  68. .I nroff,
  69. .B 100n
  70. in
  71. .I troff.
  72. .TP
  73. .BI -g " w"
  74. The width of the gutter before the third part
  75. of the line is
  76. .IR w ;
  77. default is
  78. .BR 3n .
  79. .TP
  80. .BI -h " w"
  81. The minimum width hole between the
  82. first and second or third and and fourth parts
  83. of the line is
  84. .IR w ;
  85. default is the gutter width.
  86. .TP
  87. .BI -c " cmds"
  88. Use the (newline-separated)
  89. .I troff
  90. commands to determine widths of input characters.
  91. Implies
  92. .BR -t .
  93. .TP
  94. .BI -o " only"
  95. Use as keywords only the words given in the
  96. .I only
  97. file.
  98. .TP
  99. .BI -i " ignore"
  100. Do not use as keywords any words given in the
  101. .I
  102. ignore
  103. file.
  104. If the
  105. .B -i
  106. and
  107. .B -o
  108. options are missing, use
  109. .F /sys/lib/man/permind/eign
  110. as the
  111. .I
  112. ignore
  113. file.
  114. .TP
  115. .BI -b " break"
  116. Use the characters in the
  117. .I break
  118. file to separate words.
  119. In any case, tab, newline, and space characters are always used as break characters.
  120. .TP
  121. .B -r
  122. Take any leading nonblank characters of each input line to
  123. be a reference identifier (as to a page or chapter)
  124. separate from the text of the line.
  125. Attach that identifier as a 5th field on each output line.
  126. .PP
  127. The index for this manual was generated using
  128. .I ptx.
  129. .SH FILES
  130. .TF junk*
  131. .TP
  132. .B junk*
  133. temporary files
  134. .TP
  135. .B /sys/lib/man/permin/ignore