|
|
1.1 ! root 1: .TH NFPRINT 1 "University of Illinois" ! 2: .SH NAME ! 3: nfprint \- Print the contents of a notesfile ! 4: .SH SYNOPSIS ! 5: .B nfprint ! 6: [ ! 7: .B "-p" ! 8: ] [ ! 9: .BR "-l" "#" ! 10: ] [ ! 11: .B "-d" ! 12: or ! 13: .B "-nd" ! 14: ] [ ! 15: .B "-c" ! 16: ] [ ! 17: .B "-t" ! 18: ] ! 19: topic ! 20: [ ! 21: .I "note-list" ! 22: ] ! 23: .SH DESCRIPTION ! 24: .B Nfprint ! 25: gives the user the ability to print the contents of notesfiles. ! 26: .B Nfprint ! 27: writes to standard output. ! 28: The text is formatted with ! 29: .IR "pr" "(1)." ! 30: When the ! 31: .B "-c" ! 32: option is used, ! 33: the output is filtered through ! 34: .IR "cat" "(1)" ! 35: instead. ! 36: .PP ! 37: The ! 38: .BR "-l" "#" ! 39: parameter specifies the page length to use ! 40: (66 lines/page is the default). ! 41: By specifying ! 42: .BR "-p" "," ! 43: the printout is arranged so each base note starts on a new page. ! 44: The ! 45: .B "-d" ! 46: and ! 47: .B "-nd" ! 48: options specify only notes with the ! 49: .I "director flag" ! 50: on or off respectively are to be printed. ! 51: Use ! 52: .B "-t" ! 53: to generate a list of titles only; ! 54: the text of notes and responses is suppressed. ! 55: .PP ! 56: The ! 57: .B "note list" ! 58: is the set of notes which are to be printed. ! 59: An example note list is: ! 60: 1,30-36,13,10,42-50. ! 61: .SH FILES ! 62: .PD 0 ! 63: .TP 35 ! 64: /bin/pr ! 65: Output filter ! 66: .TP 35 ! 67: /etc/passwd ! 68: for the users name ! 69: .TP 35 ! 70: /etc/group ! 71: for the users group(s) ! 72: .TP 35 ! 73: /usr/spool/notes ! 74: the default notesfile data base ! 75: .PD ! 76: .SH SEE ALSO ! 77: notes(1), ! 78: pr(1), ! 79: .br ! 80: .ul ! 81: The Notesfile Reference Manual ! 82: .SH AUTHORS ! 83: .nf ! 84: Ray Essick (uiucdcs!essick, essick%[email protected]) ! 85: Department of Computer Science ! 86: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ! 87: Urbana, IL ! 88: .sp ! 89: Rob Kolstad ([email protected]) ! 90: CONVEX Computer Corporation ! 91: Richardson, TX ! 92: .fi
This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.