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authorJohn Ankarström <john@ankarstrom.se>2022-06-15 18:29:41 +0200
committerJohn Ankarström <john@ankarstrom.se>2022-06-15 18:29:41 +0200
commitbda0c167e13282185609619c63dd0b12164ae3cf (patch)
tree4e55b1631730bf8dc9f565c3f6863436c0687468
parent4b03365723a61dcad79e6df3052621382702f0b3 (diff)
downloadlightroff-bda0c167e13282185609619c63dd0b12164ae3cf.tar.gz
Rename to lightroff.HEADmaster
-rw-r--r--.gitignore5
-rw-r--r--Makefile12
-rw-r--r--README48
-rw-r--r--README.l62
-rw-r--r--README.t32
-rw-r--r--README.x62
-rw-r--r--lightroff.el (renamed from xroff.el)58
-rw-r--r--lightroff.lex (renamed from xroff.lex)0
8 files changed, 140 insertions, 139 deletions
diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore
index f22fb6c..75ee7c2 100644
--- a/.gitignore
+++ b/.gitignore
@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
*~
lex.yy.c
-xroff
-xroff.exe
+lightroff
+lightroff.exe
*.pdf
*.ps
+ws/*
diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index 9cea09a..e511b22 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
CC = gcc
-xroff: lex.yy.c
- $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o xroff lex.yy.c
+lightroff: lex.yy.c
+ $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o lightroff lex.yy.c
-lex.yy.c: xroff.lex
- flex xroff.lex
+lex.yy.c: lightroff.lex
+ flex lightroff.lex
README: README.t
<README.t groff -ms -Tutf8 | sed "s/\x1b\[[0-9;]*[a-zA-Z]//g" >README
-README.t: README.x
- <README.x ./xroff >README.t
+README.t: README.l
+ <README.l ./lightroff >README.t
diff --git a/README b/README
index 466345a..e5623ce 100644
--- a/README
+++ b/README
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
- Xroff, an alternative troff syntax
+ Lightroff, an alternative troff syntax
John Ankarström
@@ -15,24 +15,24 @@
Introduction
-Xroff is an alternative syntax for troff, visually inspired
-by SGML/XML. It differs from troff’s default syntax in the
-following ways:
+Lightroff is an alternative syntax for troff, visually in‐
+spired by SGML/XML. It differs from troff’s default syntax
+in the following ways:
-1. Xroff requests begin with a less‐than sign and end with a
- greater‐than sign, e.g., <SH 1>. These symbols may be es‐
- caped with a backslash.*
+1. Lightroff requests begin with a less‐than sign and end
+ with a greater‐than sign, e.g., <SH 1>. These symbols may
+ be escaped with a backslash.*
-2. Xroff requests may be used inline. The following works as
- expected: (<ft B>bold<ft R>).**
+2. Lightroff requests may be used inline. The following
+ works as expected: (<ft B>bold<ft R>).**
-3. Xroff ignores empty lines.
+3. Lightroff ignores empty lines.
4. Default troff syntax may be used between <![ and ]>.
The similarities with XML end at the visual level. Unlike
-XML, xroff is unstructured and imperative. There is no con‐
-cept of closing tags.
+XML, lightroff is unstructured and imperative. There is no
+concept of closing tags.
Example
@@ -56,8 +56,8 @@ Example
with a newline and a control character, usually a
period or an apostrophe, and end with another new‐
line.
- ** Before an inline request, xroff automatically
-inserts a \c escape when appropriate.
+ ** Before an inline request, lightroff automati‐
+cally inserts a \c escape when appropriate.
@@ -70,22 +70,22 @@ inserts a \c escape when appropriate.
‐2‐
-Xroff
+Lightroff
-The program xroff translates xroff source to troff source.
+The program lightroff translates lightroff source to troff
+source.
-Xroff‐mode
+Lightroff‐mode
-For Emacs users, there is a major mode named xroff‐mode that
-provides syntax highlighting for xroff source. To further
-improve the writing experience, I also recommend olivetti‐
-mode.
+For Emacs users, there is a major mode named lightroff‐mode
+that provides syntax highlighting for lightroff source. To
+further improve the writing experience, I also recommend
+olivetti‐mode.
Caveats
-Xroff does not treat indented lines specially. As such, in‐
-dentation cannot be used to convey structure.
-
+Lightroff does not treat indented lines specially. As such,
+indentation cannot be used to convey structure.
diff --git a/README.l b/README.l
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3c92fa6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.l
@@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
+<!-- -*- mode: lightroff; mode: olivetti -*- -->
+
+
+<ss 12 0>
+<nr PI 0>
+<nr PD 0.5v>
+<if n .nr PD 1v>
+<de i>\\fI\\$*\\fR<.>
+<de bi>\\f(BI\\$*\\fB<.>
+<de cw>\\f(CW\\$*\\fR<.>
+<de cwb>\\f(CB\\$*\\fR<.>
+
+
+<TL><bi Lightroff>, an alternative troff syntax
+<AU>John Ankarstrm
+<DA 10 June 2022>
+
+
+<SH 1>Introduction
+<LP><i Lightroff> is an alternative syntax for troff, visually inspired by SGML/XML. It differs from troff's default syntax in the following ways:
+
+<IP 1. 3>Lightroff requests begin with a less-than sign and end with a greater-than sign, e.g., <cw <SH 1\>>. These symbols may be escaped with a backslash.*
+<IP 2.>Lightroff requests may be used inline. The following works as expected: <cw "(<ft B\>bold<ft R\>)">.**
+<IP 3.>Lightroff ignores empty lines.
+<IP 4.>Default troff syntax may be used between <cw <![> and <cw ]\>>.
+
+<LP>The similarities with XML end at the visual level. Unlike XML, lightroff is unstructured and imperative. There is no concept of closing tags.
+
+<FS *>For comparison, default troff requests begin with a newline and a control character, usually a period or an apostrophe, and end with another newline.<FE>
+
+<FS **>Before an inline request, <cw lightroff> automatically inserts a <cw \\\\c> escape when appropriate.<FE>
+
+
+<SH 1>Example
+<IP "" 3><nf><eo><![
+<de b>\\fB\\$*\\fR<.>
+
+<TL>Example document
+<AU>John Doe
+
+<AB>Pellentesque dapibus suscipit ligula. Donec posuere augue in quam.
+Etiam vel tortor sodales tellus ultricies commodo. Suspendisse
+potenti. Aenean in sem ac leo mollis blandit. Donec neque quam,
+dignissim in, mollis nec, sagittis eu, wisi.<AE>
+
+<SH 1>Introduction
+<LP><b Nullam eu ante> vel est convallis dignissim. Fusce suscipit,
+wisi nec facilisis facilisis, est dui fermentum leo, quis tempor
+ligula erat quis odio. Nunc porta vulputate tellus.
+]><ec>
+
+
+<SH 1><cwb Lightroff>
+<PP>The program <cw lightroff> translates lightroff source to troff source.
+
+
+<SH 1><cwb Lightroff-mode>
+<PP>For Emacs users, there is a major mode named <cw lightroff-mode> that provides syntax highlighting for lightroff source. To further improve the writing experience, I also recommend <cw olivetti-mode>.
+
+
+<SH 1>Caveats
+<LP>Lightroff does not treat indented lines specially. As such, indentation cannot be used to convey structure.
diff --git a/README.t b/README.t
index 7bc4f4a..35af93c 100644
--- a/README.t
+++ b/README.t
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
\\f(CB\\$*\\fR\c
..
.TL
-.bi Xroff
+.bi Lightroff
, an alternative troff syntax
.AU
John Ankarstrm
@@ -23,32 +23,32 @@ John Ankarstrm
.SH 1
Introduction
.LP
-.i Xroff
+.i Lightroff
is an alternative syntax for troff, visually inspired by SGML/XML. It differs from troff's default syntax in the following ways:
.IP 1. 3
-Xroff requests begin with a less-than sign and end with a greater-than sign, e.g., \c
+Lightroff requests begin with a less-than sign and end with a greater-than sign, e.g., \c
.cw \<SH 1>
\&. These symbols may be escaped with a backslash.*
.IP 2.
-Xroff requests may be used inline. The following works as expected: \c
-.cw "(\<ft B>bold\<ft R>)"
+Lightroff requests may be used inline. The following works as expected: \c
+.cw "(<ft B>bold<ft R>)"
\&.**
.IP 3.
-Xroff ignores empty lines.
+Lightroff ignores empty lines.
.IP 4.
Default troff syntax may be used between \c
-.cw \<![
+.cw <![
and \c
.cw ]>
\&.
.LP
-The similarities with XML end at the visual level. Unlike XML, xroff is unstructured and imperative. There is no concept of closing tags.
+The similarities with XML end at the visual level. Unlike XML, lightroff is unstructured and imperative. There is no concept of closing tags.
.FS *
For comparison, default troff requests begin with a newline and a control character, usually a period or an apostrophe, and end with another newline.\c
.FE
.FS **
Before an inline request, \c
-.cw xroff
+.cw lightroff
automatically inserts a \c
.cw \\\\c
escape when appropriate.\c
@@ -74,20 +74,20 @@ wisi nec facilisis facilisis, est dui fermentum leo, quis tempor
ligula erat quis odio. Nunc porta vulputate tellus.
.ec
.SH 1
-.cwb Xroff
+.cwb Lightroff
.PP
The program \c
-.cw xroff
- translates xroff source to troff source.
+.cw lightroff
+ translates lightroff source to troff source.
.SH 1
-.cwb Xroff-mode
+.cwb Lightroff-mode
.PP
For Emacs users, there is a major mode named \c
-.cw xroff-mode
- that provides syntax highlighting for xroff source. To further improve the writing experience, I also recommend \c
+.cw lightroff-mode
+ that provides syntax highlighting for lightroff source. To further improve the writing experience, I also recommend \c
.cw olivetti-mode
\&.
.SH 1
Caveats
.LP
-Xroff does not treat indented lines specially. As such, indentation cannot be used to convey structure.
+Lightroff does not treat indented lines specially. As such, indentation cannot be used to convey structure.
diff --git a/README.x b/README.x
deleted file mode 100644
index ea6bfc0..0000000
--- a/README.x
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,62 +0,0 @@
-<!-- -*- mode: xroff; mode: olivetti -*- -->
-
-
-<ss 12 0>
-<nr PI 0>
-<nr PD 0.5v>
-<if n .nr PD 1v>
-<de i>\\fI\\$*\\fR<.>
-<de bi>\\f(BI\\$*\\fB<.>
-<de cw>\\f(CW\\$*\\fR<.>
-<de cwb>\\f(CB\\$*\\fR<.>
-
-
-<TL><bi Xroff>, an alternative troff syntax
-<AU>John Ankarstrm
-<DA 10 June 2022>
-
-
-<SH 1>Introduction
-<LP><i Xroff> is an alternative syntax for troff, visually inspired by SGML/XML. It differs from troff's default syntax in the following ways:
-
-<IP 1. 3>Xroff requests begin with a less-than sign and end with a greater-than sign, e.g., <cw \<SH 1\>>. These symbols may be escaped with a backslash.*
-<IP 2.>Xroff requests may be used inline. The following works as expected: <cw "(\<ft B\>bold\<ft R\>)">.**
-<IP 3.>Xroff ignores empty lines.
-<IP 4.>Default troff syntax may be used between <cw \<![> and <cw ]\>>.
-
-<LP>The similarities with XML end at the visual level. Unlike XML, xroff is unstructured and imperative. There is no concept of closing tags.
-
-<FS *>For comparison, default troff requests begin with a newline and a control character, usually a period or an apostrophe, and end with another newline.<FE>
-
-<FS **>Before an inline request, <cw xroff> automatically inserts a <cw \\\\c> escape when appropriate.<FE>
-
-
-<SH 1>Example
-<IP "" 3><nf><eo><![
-<de b>\\fB\\$*\\fR<.>
-
-<TL>Example document
-<AU>John Doe
-
-<AB>Pellentesque dapibus suscipit ligula. Donec posuere augue in quam.
-Etiam vel tortor sodales tellus ultricies commodo. Suspendisse
-potenti. Aenean in sem ac leo mollis blandit. Donec neque quam,
-dignissim in, mollis nec, sagittis eu, wisi.<AE>
-
-<SH 1>Introduction
-<LP><b Nullam eu ante> vel est convallis dignissim. Fusce suscipit,
-wisi nec facilisis facilisis, est dui fermentum leo, quis tempor
-ligula erat quis odio. Nunc porta vulputate tellus.
-]><ec>
-
-
-<SH 1><cwb Xroff>
-<PP>The program <cw xroff> translates xroff source to troff source.
-
-
-<SH 1><cwb Xroff-mode>
-<PP>For Emacs users, there is a major mode named <cw xroff-mode> that provides syntax highlighting for xroff source. To further improve the writing experience, I also recommend <cw olivetti-mode>.
-
-
-<SH 1>Caveats
-<LP>Xroff does not treat indented lines specially. As such, indentation cannot be used to convey structure.
diff --git a/xroff.el b/lightroff.el
index 38272fd..ca49866 100644
--- a/xroff.el
+++ b/lightroff.el
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-;;; xroff.el --- major mode for xroff -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
+;;; lightroff.el --- major mode for lightroff -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
;; Copyright (C) 2022 John Ankarström
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
;; Version: 0.1
;; Keywords: troff groff
-;; URL: http://ankarstrom.se/~john/etc/xroff
+;; URL: http://ankarstrom.se/~john/etc/lightroff
;; This file is not part of GNU Emacs.
@@ -16,20 +16,20 @@
;;; Commentary:
-;; Major mode for xroff, an alternative, XML-like syntax for troff.
+;; Major mode for lightroff, an alternative, XML-like syntax for troff.
;;; Code:
-(defvar xroff--request-regexp
+(defvar lightroff--request-regexp
(rx "<"
(group (+ (or "\\>" (not (in "> ")))))
(group (* (or "\\>" (not ?>))))
">"))
-(defvar xroff--single-escape-regexp
+(defvar lightroff--single-escape-regexp
(rx "\\" any))
-(defvar xroff--identifier-escape-regexp
+(defvar lightroff--identifier-escape-regexp
(rx "\\"
(any "FfgkmnOsYZ*$")
(? (any "+-"))
@@ -37,50 +37,50 @@
(seq "(" any any)
(seq "[" (* (not "]")) "]"))))
-(defvar xroff--parameter-escape-regexp
+(defvar lightroff--parameter-escape-regexp
(rx "\\"
(any "ABbCDHhLlMNoRSVvwXxz")
"'" (* (not "'")) "'"))
-(defconst xroff-font-lock-keywords
+(defconst lightroff-font-lock-keywords
`(;; Comment.
("<!--.*-->"
(0 font-lock-comment-face))
;; Request.
- (,(concat xroff--request-regexp)
+ (,(concat lightroff--request-regexp)
(1 font-lock-keyword-face keep)
(2 font-lock-string-face keep))
- (,(concat "\\\\" xroff--request-regexp)
+ (,(concat "\\\\" lightroff--request-regexp)
(1 nil t)
(2 nil t))
;; Parameter escape (e.g., \l'...').
- (,xroff--parameter-escape-regexp
- (0 xroff-escape-face))
- (,(concat "\\\\" xroff--parameter-escape-regexp)
+ (,lightroff--parameter-escape-regexp
+ (0 lightroff-escape-face))
+ (,(concat "\\\\" lightroff--parameter-escape-regexp)
(0 nil t))
;; Identifier escape (e.g., \n(PI).
- (,xroff--identifier-escape-regexp
- (0 xroff-escape-face))
- (,(concat "\\\\" xroff--identifier-escape-regexp)
+ (,lightroff--identifier-escape-regexp
+ (0 lightroff-escape-face))
+ (,(concat "\\\\" lightroff--identifier-escape-regexp)
(0 nil t))
;; Single escape (e.g., \%).
- (,xroff--single-escape-regexp
- (0 xroff-escape-face))
- (,(concat "\\\\" xroff--single-escape-regexp)
+ (,lightroff--single-escape-regexp
+ (0 lightroff-escape-face))
+ (,(concat "\\\\" lightroff--single-escape-regexp)
(0 nil t))
;; Escaped backslash.
(,"\\\\\\\\"
- (0 xroff-escape-face t))))
+ (0 lightroff-escape-face t))))
-(defface xroff-escape
+(defface lightroff-escape
'((t (:foreground "gray")))
- "`xroff-mode' face used to highlight backslash escapes."
- :group 'xroff)
-(defvar xroff-escape-face 'xroff-escape)
+ "`lightroff-mode' face used to highlight backslash escapes."
+ :group 'lightroff)
+(defvar lightroff-escape-face 'lightroff-escape)
;;;###autoload
-(define-derived-mode xroff-mode text-mode "Xroff"
- "Major mode for editing documents with xroff syntax."
+(define-derived-mode lightroff-mode text-mode "Lightroff"
+ "Major mode for editing documents with lightroff syntax."
;; A start or end tag by itself on a line separates a paragraph.
;; This is desirable because SGML discards a newline that appears
;; immediately after a start tag or immediately before an end tag.
@@ -93,11 +93,11 @@
(setq-local comment-end " -->")
;; (setq-local comment-indent-function 'sgml-comment-indent)
;; (setq-local comment-line-break-function 'sgml-comment-indent-new-line)
- (setq-local font-lock-defaults '((xroff-font-lock-keywords)))
+ (setq-local font-lock-defaults '((lightroff-font-lock-keywords)))
;; (setq-local font-lock-multiline t)
(setq-local comment-start-skip "<!--[ \t]*")
(setq-local comment-end-skip "[ \t]*--[ \t\n]*>")
(visual-line-mode 1))
-(provide 'xroff)
-;;; xroff.el ends here
+(provide 'lightroff)
+;;; lightroff.el ends here
diff --git a/xroff.lex b/lightroff.lex
index 9326415..9326415 100644
--- a/xroff.lex
+++ b/lightroff.lex