NAME
grops - PostScript driver for groff
SYNOPSIS
[files ...]
It is possible to have whitespace between a command line option and its
parameter.
DESCRIPTION
grops translates the output of GNU troff to PostScript. Normally grops
should be invoked by using the groff command with a -Tps option.
(Actually, this is the default for groff.) If no files are given,
grops reads the standard input. A filename of - also causes grops to
read the standard input. PostScript output is written to the standard
output. When grops is run by groff options can be passed to grops
using groff’s -P option.
Note that grops doesn’t produce a valid document structure (conforming
to the Document Structuring Convention) if called with multiple file
arguments. To print such concatenated output it is necessary to
deactivate DSC handling in the printing program or previewer. See
section FONT INSTALLATION below for a guide how to install fonts for
grops.
OPTIONS
-bn Provide workarounds for older printers, broken spoolers, and
previewers. Normally grops produces output at PostScript
LanguageLevel 2 that conforms to the Document Structuring
Conventions version 3.0. Some older printers, spoolers, and
previewers can’t handle such output. The value of n controls
what grops does to make its output acceptable to such programs.
A value of 0 causes grops not to employ any workarounds.
Add 1 if no %%BeginDocumentSetup and %%EndDocumentSetup comments
should be generated; this is needed for early versions of
TranScript that get confused by anything between the %%EndProlog
comment and the first %%Page comment.
Add 2 if lines in included files beginning with %! should be
stripped out; this is needed for Sun’s pageview previewer.
Add 4 if %%Page, %%Trailer and %%EndProlog comments should be
stripped out of included files; this is needed for spoolers that
don’t understand the %%BeginDocument and %%EndDocument comments.
Add 8 if the first line of the PostScript output should be %!PS-
Adobe-2.0 rather than %!PS-Adobe-3.0; this is needed when using
Sun’s Newsprint with a printer that requires page reversal.
Add 16 if no media size information should be included in the
document (this is, neither use %%DocumentMedia nor the
setpagedevice PostScript command). This was the behaviour of
groff version 1.18.1 and earlier; it is needed for older
printers which don’t understand PostScript LanguageLevel 2. It
is also necessary if the output is further processed to get an
encapsulated PS (EPS) file – see below.
The default value can be specified by a
broken n
command in the DESC file. Otherwise the default value is 0.
-cn Print n copies of each page.
-Fdir Prepend directory dir/devname to the search path for prologue,
font, and device description files; name is the name of the
device, usually ps.
-g Guess the page length. This generates PostScript code that
guesses the page length. The guess is correct only if the
imageable area is vertically centered on the page. This option
allows you to generate documents that can be printed both on
letter (8.5×11) paper and on A4 paper without change.
-Idir This option may be used to add a directory to the search path
for files on the command line and files named in \X’ps: import’
and \X’ps: file’ escapes. The search path is initialized with
the current directory. This option may be specified more than
once; the directories are then searched in the order specified
(but before the current directory). If you want to make the
current directory be read before other directories, add -I. at
the appropriate place.
No directory search is performed for files with an absolute file
name.
-l Print the document in landscape format.
-m Turn manual feed on for the document.
-ppaper-size
Set physical dimension of output medium. This overrides the
papersize, paperlength, and paperwidth commands in the DESC
file; it accepts the same arguments as the papersize command.
See groff_font (5) for details.
-Pprologue-file
Use the file prologue-file (in the font path) as the prologue
instead of the default prologue file prologue. This option
overrides the environment variable GROPS_PROLOGUE.
-wn Lines should be drawn using a thickness of n thousandths of an
em. If this option is not given, the line thickness defaults to
0.04 em.
-v Print the version number.
USAGE
The input to grops must be in the format output by troff(1). This is
described in groff_out(5).
In addition, the device and font description files for the device used
must meet certain requirements: The resolution must be an integer
multiple of 72 times the sizescale. The ps device uses a resolution of
72000 and a sizescale of 1000.
The device description file must contain a valid paper size; see
groff_font(5) for more information.
Each font description file must contain a command
internalname psname
which says that the PostScript name of the font is psname. It may also
contain a command
encoding enc_file
which says that the PostScript font should be reencoded using the
encoding described in enc_file; this file should consist of a sequence
of lines of the form:
pschar code
where pschar is the PostScript name of the character, and code is its
position in the encoding expressed as a decimal integer; valid values
are in the range 0 to 255. Lines starting with # and blank lines are
ignored. The code for each character given in the font file must
correspond to the code for the character in encoding file, or to the
code in the default encoding for the font if the PostScript font is not
to be reencoded. This code can be used with the \N escape sequence in
troff to select the character, even if the character does not have a
groff name. Every character in the font file must exist in the
PostScript font, and the widths given in the font file must match the
widths used in the PostScript font. grops assumes that a character
with a groff name of space is blank (makes no marks on the page); it
can make use of such a character to generate more efficient and compact
PostScript output.
Note that grops is able to display all glyphs in a PostScript font, not
only 256. enc_file (or the default encoding if no encoding file
specified) just defines the order of glyphs for the first 256
characters; all other glyphs are accessed with additional encoding
vectors which grops produces on the fly.
grops can automatically include the downloadable fonts necessary to
print the document. Such fonts must be in PFA format. Use pfbtops(1)
to convert a Type 1 font in PFB format. Any downloadable fonts which
should, when required, be included by grops must be listed in the file
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/font/devps/download; this should consist of
lines of the form
font filename
where font is the PostScript name of the font, and filename is the name
of the file containing the font; lines beginning with # and blank lines
are ignored; fields may be separated by tabs or spaces; filename is
searched for using the same mechanism that is used for groff font
metric files. The download file itself is also searched for using this
mechanism; currently, only the first found file in the font path is
used.
If the file containing a downloadable font or imported document
conforms to the Adobe Document Structuring Conventions, then grops
interprets any comments in the files sufficiently to ensure that its
own output is conforming. It also supplies any needed font resources
that are listed in the download file as well as any needed file
resources. It is also able to handle inter-resource dependencies. For
example, suppose that you have a downloadable font called Garamond, and
also a downloadable font called Garamond-Outline which depends on
Garamond (typically it would be defined to copy Garamond’s font
dictionary, and change the PaintType), then it is necessary for
Garamond to appear before Garamond-Outline in the PostScript document.
grops handles this automatically provided that the downloadable font
file for Garamond-Outline indicates its dependence on Garamond by means
of the Document Structuring Conventions, for example by beginning with
the following lines
%!PS-Adobe-3.0 Resource-Font
%%DocumentNeededResources: font Garamond
%%EndComments
%%IncludeResource: font Garamond
In this case both Garamond and Garamond-Outline would need to be listed
in the download file. A downloadable font should not include its own
name in a %%DocumentSuppliedResources comment.
grops does not interpret %%DocumentFonts comments. The %%Document‐
NeededResources, %%DocumentSuppliedResources, %%IncludeResource,
%%BeginResource, and %%EndResource comments (or possibly the old
%%DocumentNeededFonts, %%DocumentSuppliedFonts, %%IncludeFont, %%Begin‐
Font, and %%EndFont comments) should be used.
In the default setup there are styles called R, I, B, and BI mounted at
font positions 1 to 4. The fonts are grouped into families A, BM, C,
H, HN, N, P, and T having members in each of these styles:
AR AvantGarde-Book AI AvantGarde-BookOblique AB AvantGarde-
Demi ABI AvantGarde-DemiOblique BMR Bookman-Light BMI
Bookman-LightItalic BMB Bookman-Demi BMBI Bookman-
DemiItalic CR Courier CI Courier-Oblique CB Courier-Bold
CBI Courier-BoldOblique HR Helvetica HI Helvetica-Oblique
HB Helvetica-Bold HBI Helvetica-BoldOblique HNR
Helvetica-Narrow HNI Helvetica-Narrow-Oblique HNB
Helvetica-Narrow-Bold HNBI Helvetica-Narrow-BoldOblique
NR NewCenturySchlbk-Roman NI NewCenturySchlbk-Italic NB
NewCenturySchlbk-Bold NBI NewCenturySchlbk-BoldItalic PR
Palatino-Roman PI Palatino-Italic PB Palatino-Bold PBI
Palatino-BoldItalic TR Times-Roman TI Times-Italic TB
Times-Bold TBI Times-BoldItalic
There is also the following font which is not a member of a family:
ZCMI ZapfChancery-MediumItalic
There are also some special fonts called S for the PS Symbol font, and
SS, containing slanted lowercase Greek letters taken from PS Symbol.
Zapf Dingbats is available as ZD, and a reversed version of
ZapfDingbats (with symbols pointing in the opposite direction) is
available as ZDR; most characters in these fonts are unnamed and must
be accessed using \N.
The default color for \m and \M is black; for colors defined in the
‘rgb’ color space setrgbcolor is used, for ‘cmy’ and ‘cmyk’
setcmykcolor, and for ‘gray’ setgray. Note that setcmykcolor is a
PostScript LanguageLevel 2 command and thus not available on some older
printers.
grops understands various X commands produced using the \X escape
sequence; grops only interprets commands that begin with a ps: tag.
\X’ps: exec code’
This executes the arbitrary PostScript commands in code. The
PostScript currentpoint is set to the position of the \X command
before executing code. The origin is at the top left corner of
the page, and y coordinates increase down the page. A
procedure u is defined that converts groff units to the
coordinate system in effect (provided the user doesn’t change
the scale). For example,
.nr x 1i
\X’ps: exec \nx u 0 rlineto stroke’
draws a horizontal line one inch long. code may make changes to
the graphics state, but any changes persist only to the end of
the page. A dictionary containing the definitions specified by
the def and mdef is on top of the dictionary stack. If your
code adds definitions to this dictionary, you should allocate
space for them using \X’ps mdef n’. Any definitions persist
only until the end of the page. If you use the \Y escape
sequence with an argument that names a macro, code can extend
over multiple lines. For example,
.nr x 1i
.de y
ps: exec
\nx u 0 rlineto
stroke
..
\Yy
is another way to draw a horizontal line one inch long. Note
the single backslash before ‘nx’ – the only reason to use a
number register while defining the macro ‘y’ is to convert a
user-specified dimension ‘1i’ to internal groff units which are
in turn converted to PS units with the u procedure.
grops wraps user-specified PostScript code into a dictionary,
nothing more. In particular, it doesn’t start and end the
inserted code with save and restore, respectively. This must be
supplied by the user, if necessary.
\X’ps: file name’
This is the same as the exec command except that the PostScript
code is read from file name.
\X’ps: def code’
Place a PostScript definition contained in code in the prologue.
There should be at most one definition per \X command. Long
definitions can be split over several \X commands; all the code
arguments are simply joined together separated by newlines. The
definitions are placed in a dictionary which is automatically
pushed on the dictionary stack when an exec command is executed.
If you use the \Y escape sequence with an argument that names a
macro, code can extend over multiple lines.
\X’ps: mdef n code’
Like def, except that code may contain up to n definitions.
grops needs to know how many definitions code contains so that
it can create an appropriately sized PostScript dictionary to
contain them.
\X’ps: import file llx lly urx ury width [ height ]’
Import a PostScript graphic from file. The arguments llx, lly,
urx, and ury give the bounding box of the graphic in the default
PostScript coordinate system; they should all be integers; llx
and lly are the x and y coordinates of the lower left corner of
the graphic; urx and ury are the x and y coordinates of the
upper right corner of the graphic; width and height are integers
that give the desired width and height in groff units of the
graphic.
The graphic is scaled so that it has this width and height and
translated so that the lower left corner of the graphic is
located at the position associated with \X command. If the
height argument is omitted it is scaled uniformly in the x and
y directions so that it has the specified width.
Note that the contents of the \X command are not interpreted by
troff; so vertical space for the graphic is not automatically
added, and the width and height arguments are not allowed to
have attached scaling indicators.
If the PostScript file complies with the Adobe Document
Structuring Conventions and contains a %%BoundingBox comment,
then the bounding box can be automatically extracted from within
groff by using the psbb request.
See groff_tmac(5) for a description of the PSPIC macro which
provides a convenient high-level interface for inclusion of
PostScript graphics.
\X’ps: invis’
\X’ps: endinvis’ No output is generated for text and drawing
commands that are bracketed with these \X commands. These
commands are intended for use when output from troff is
previewed before being processed with grops; if the previewer is
unable to display certain characters or other constructs, then
other substitute characters or constructs can be used for
previewing by bracketing them with these \X commands.
For example, gxditview is not able to display a proper \(em
character because the standard X11 fonts do not provide it; this
problem can be overcome by executing the following request
.char \(em \X’ps: invis’\
\Z’\v’-.25m’\h’.05m’\D’l .9m 0’\h’.05m’’\
\X’ps: endinvis’\(em
In this case, gxditview is unable to display the \(em character
and draws the line, whereas grops prints the \(em character and
ignores the line (this code is already in file Xps.tmac which is
loaded if a document intended for grops is previewed with
gxditview).
If a PostScript procedure BPhook has been defined via a ‘ps: def’ or
‘ps: mdef’ device command, it is executed at the beginning of every
page (before anything is drawn or written by groff). For example, to
underlay the page contents with the word ‘DRAFT’ in light gray, you
might use
.de XX
ps: def
/BPhook
{ gsave .9 setgray clippath pathbbox exch 2 copy
.5 mul exch .5 mul translate atan rotate pop pop
/NewCenturySchlbk-Roman findfont 200 scalefont setfont
(DRAFT) dup stringwidth pop -.5 mul -70 moveto show
grestore }
def
..
.devicem XX
Or, to cause lines and polygons to be drawn with square linecaps and
mitered linejoins instead of the round linecaps and linejoins normally
used by grops, use
.de XX
ps: def
/BPhook { 2 setlinecap 0 setlinejoin } def
..
.devicem XX
(square linecaps, as opposed to butt linecaps (0 setlinecap), give true
corners in boxed tables even though the lines are drawn unconnected).
Encapsulated PostScript
grops itself doesn’t emit bounding box information. With the help of
Ghostscript the following simple script, groff2eps, produces an
encapsulated PS file.
#! /bin/sh
groff -P-b16 $1 >$1.ps
gs -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=bbox -- $1.ps 2>$1.bbox
cat $1.ps \
| sed -e "/^%%Orientation/r$1.bbox" \
-e "/^%!PS-Adobe-3.0/s/$/ EPSF-3.0/" >$1.eps
rm $1.ps $1.bbox
Just say
groff2eps foo
to convert file foo to foo.eps.
TrueType and other font formats
TrueType fonts can be used with grops if converted first to Type 42
format, a special PostScript wrapper equivalent to the PFA format
mentioned in pfbtops(1). There are several different methods to
generate a type42 wrapper and most of them involve the use of a
PostScript interpreter such as Ghostscript – see gs(1).
Yet, the easiest method involves the use of the application
ttftot42(1). This program uses freetype(3) (version 1.3.1) to generate
type42 font wrappers and well-formed AFM files that can be fed to the
afmtodit(1) script to create appropriate metric files. The resulting
font wrappers should be added to the download file. ttftot42 source
code can be downloaded from ftp://www.giga.or.at/pub/nih/ttftot42/
Another solution for creating type42 wrappers is to use FontForge,
available from http://fontforge.sf.net This font editor can convert
most outline font formats.
FONT INSTALLATION
This section gives a summary of the above explanations; it can serve as
a step-by-step font installation guide for grops.
· Convert your font to something groff understands. This is either a
PostScript Type 1 font in PFA format or a PostScript Type 42 font,
together with an AFM file.
The very first characters in a PFA file look like this:
%!PS-AdobeFont-1.0:
A PFB file has this also in the first line, but the string is
preceded with some binary bytes.
The very first characters in a Type 42 font file look like this:
%!PS-TrueTypeFont
This is a wrapper format for TrueType fonts. Old PS printers might
not support it (this is, they don’t have a built-in TrueType font
interpreter).
If your font is in PFB format (such fonts normally have ‘.pfb’ as
the file extension), you might use groff’s pfbtops(1) program to
convert it to PFA. For TrueType fonts, try ttftot42 or fontforge.
For all other font formats use fontforge which can convert most
outline font formats.
· Convert the AFM file to a groff font description file with the
afmtodit(1) program. An example call is
afmtodit Foo-Bar-Bold.afm textmap FBB
which converts the metric file ‘Foo-Bar-Bold.afm’ to the groff font
‘FBB’. If you have a font family which comes with normal, bold,
italic, and bold italic faces, it is recommended to use the letters
R, B, I, and BI, respectively, as postfixes in the groff font names
to make groff’s ‘.fam’ request work. An example is groff’s built-
in Times-Roman font: The font family name is T, and the groff font
names are TR, TB, TI, and TBI.
· Install both the groff font description files and the fonts in a
‘devps’ subdirectory of the font path which groff finds. See the
ENVIRONMENT section in the troff(1) man page which lists the actual
value of the font path. Note that groff doesn’t use the AFM files
(but it is a good idea to store them anyway).
· Register all fonts which must be downloaded to the printer in the
‘devps/download’ file. Only the first occurrence of this file in
the font path is read. This means that you should copy the default
‘download’ file to the first directory in your font path and add
your fonts there. To continue the above example we assume that the
PS font name for Foo-Bar-Bold.pfa is ‘XY-Foo-Bar-Bold’ (the PS font
name is stored in the internalname field in the ‘FBB’ file), thus
the following line should be added to ‘download’.
XY-Foo-Bar-Bold Foo-Bar-Bold.pfa
OLD FONTS
groff versions 1.19.2 and earlier contain a slightly different set of
the 35 Adobe core fonts; the difference is mainly the lack of the
‘Euro’ glyph and a reduced set of kerning pairs. For backwards
compatibility, these old fonts are installed also in the
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/oldfont/devps
directory.
To use them, make sure that grops finds the fonts before the default
system fonts (with the same names): Either add command line option -F
to grops
groff -Tps -P-F -P/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/oldfont ...
or add the directory to groff’s font path environment variable
GROFF_FONT_PATH=/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/oldfont
ENVIRONMENT
GROPS_PROLOGUE
If this is set to foo, then grops uses the file foo (in the font
path) instead of the default prologue file prologue. The option
-P overrides this environment variable.
GROFF_FONT_PATH
A list of directories in which to search for the devname
directory in addition to the default ones. See troff(1) and
groff_font(5) for more details.
FILES
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/font/devps/DESC
Device description file.
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/font/devps/F
Font description file for font F.
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/font/devps/download
List of downloadable fonts.
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/font/devps/text.enc
Encoding used for text fonts.
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/tmac/ps.tmac
Macros for use with grops; automatically loaded by troffrc
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/tmac/pspic.tmac
Definition of PSPIC macro, automatically loaded by ps.tmac.
/usr/share/groff/1.20.1/tmac/psold.tmac
Macros to disable use of characters not present in older
PostScript printers (e.g., ‘eth’ or ‘thorn’).
/tmp/gropsXXXXXX
Temporary file.
SEE ALSO
afmtodit(1), groff(1), troff(1), pfbtops(1), groff_out(5),
groff_font(5), groff_char(7), groff_tmac(5)
PostScript Language Document Structuring Conventions Specification