8. What are the font
conventions?
First of all: don't use direct font operators like
\fB, \fP etc. Use macros
which take arguments. This way you avoid a common glitch:
forgetting the font change at the end of the word and having the
bold or italic extend up to the next font change. Believe me, it
happens more often than you think. The tmac.an
macros provide the following type faces:
.B Bold
.BI Bold alternating with italics
.BR Bold alternating with Roman
.I Italics
.IB Italics alternating with bold
.IR Italics alternating with Roman
.RB Roman alternating with bold
.RI Roman alternating with italics
.SM Small (scaled 9/10 of the regular size)
.SB Small bold (not small alternating
with bold)
X alternating with Y means that the odd arguments are typeset
in X while the even arguments are typeset in Y. For example
.BI "Arg 1 is Bold, " "Arg 2 is Italics,
" "and Bold, " "and Italics."
The double quotes are needed to include white space into an
argument; without them, no white space appears between the
alternating typefaces. In fact, you'll only need the macros for
alternating typefaces in cases where you want
to avoid white space between typeface changes. So much for
what's available. Here's how you should make use of the
different typefaces: (portions shamelessly stolen from
man(7))
Although there are many arbitrary conventions for man pages
in the UNIX world, the existence of several hundred Linux-specific
man pages defines our standards: For functions, the arguments are
always specified using italics, even in the SYNOPSIS section, where
the rest of the function is specified in bold:
.BI "myfunction(int " argc ", char **"
argv );
Filenames are always in italics, except in the SYNOPSIS
section, where included files are in bold. So you should use
.I /usr/include/stdio.h
and
.B #include <stdio.h>
Special macros, which are usually in upper case, are in
bold:
.B MAXINT
When enumerating a list of error codes, the codes are in
bold. This list usually uses the .TP (paragraph with hanging tag)
macro as follows:
.TP.B EBADF.I fd is not a valid file descriptor..TP.B
EINVAL.I fd is unsuitable for reading
Any reference to another man page (or to the subject of the
current man page) is in bold. If the manual section number is
given, it is given in roman, without any spaces:
.BR man (7)
Acronyms look best when typeset in small type face. So I
recommend
.SM UNIX
.SM ASCII
.SM TAB
.SM NFS
.SM LALR(1)