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diff --git a/HACKING.t b/HACKING.t new file mode 100644 index 0000000..10d2a31 --- /dev/null +++ b/HACKING.t @@ -0,0 +1,162 @@ +.so u.tmac +. +.de @h +. sp |36p +. if \\n%>1 .tl ''-%-'' +. sp |1i +.. +.de @f +.sp |\\n(.pu-36p +.tl ''\\*(#e'' +.. +. +.t +Hacking on the +.x µ +macro package +.d +John Ankarström +. +. +.h +What is +.x µ ? +.p +.i µ +or +.i mu +is a simple macro package for troff +designed to abstract as little as possible from troff itself, +while still providing a powerful framework for +writing advanced documents. +. +. +.h +How is the source code of +.x µ +organized? +.p +If you run +.c "grep -n [-]-" +on the +.i u.tmac +source file, you are presented with an overview of +.i µ 's +macros: +.l +.eo +!grep -n [-]- u.tmac +.ec +.p +This is a sufficient summary of the entire +.i µ +source code, as nothing is performed outside of these macros. +All initialization is performed in the +.c @a +macro, which is automatically called at the first invocation +of any other macro. +.p +The above summary reflects a categorization in the macros defined by +.i µ . +There are internal and external macros. +The former are to be used within +.i u.tmac +itself, while the latter are to be used in +.i µ +documents. +Among the external macros, there are inline, environment (or block-level) +and other macros. +.p +The inline macros all follow the same pattern. +They take three arguments: +the string to be formatted, +an optional suffix +and an optional prefix. +.p +The environment or block-level macros generally take no arguments +(except +.c d ). +Instead, they activate a given environment, +affecting the formatting of the following text. +Each environment macro is associated with a specific environment, +carrying the same one-letter name as the macro itself. +.p +As you can see, +the macros in each category are arranged alphabetically. +. +. +.h +Where is document state stored? +.p +Most state is stored by troff itself within the different environments. +In addition, +.i µ +associates three extra registers with each environment: +.c sp , +the amount of space to be added by +.c @e +before an environment; +.c sq , +the same (except the space is not added +if the new environment is identical to the previous one); and +.c ti , +the indentation of the first line in the +.c p +environment. +These are stored in registers named +.c @ENV_sp , +.c @ENV_sq +and +.c @ENV_ti , +where +.c ENV +is the name of the associated environment. +.p +The strings +.c %env +and +.c %penv +contain the name of the current and previous environment. +.p +The +.c @a +register is set to 1 if the document has been initialized +(i.e. if +.c @a +has been invoked). +.p +The +.c @m +register is non-zero if +." "manual footer" +mode is active. +If +.c @m +is non-zero, +.c @tf +decrements it by one and exits when invoked, +unless called with the +.c f +(force) argument. +This is useful if you want to trigger the footer manually, +but do not want the printed footer to trigger the footer trap again. +.p +.c @.t +contains the absolute vertical position of the first trap +following the first footnote reference on a page; +it is set and used by +.c ) +to place the footnote trap in the correct vertical position. +.c @dn +contains the height of all collected footnotes on a page; +it is set by +.c ) +and reset to zero by +.c @tn . +.c @n +contains the total number of collected footnotes. +.p +Note that none of these registers and strings should be +directly accessed or modified by +.i µ +documents. |