Annotation of researchv10dc/vol2/contents/contents.ms, revision 1.1.1.1

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                      2: .XX \& 3 "Contents"
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                     52: .TL
                     53: Table of Contents
                     54: .SP 2
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                     56: .LP
                     57: .XX intro 1 intro/intro.ms "Introduction"
                     58: A. G. Hume.
                     59: .X1
                     60: Supplementary material for the Research
                     61: .UX
                     62: system.
                     63: .X2
                     64: .X3
                     65: .SH
                     66: Document Preparation
                     67: .XX ms 7 ms/ms "Typing Documents on the UNIX System" ": Using the \f(CW-ms\fP and \f(CW-mcs\fP Macros with Troff"
                     68: L.\ L.\ Cherry and
                     69: M. E. Lesk.
                     70: .X1
                     71: The basic
                     72: .I troff
                     73: macro packages: the 
                     74: .CW -ms
                     75: document style is useful for most purposes,
                     76: and
                     77: .CW -mcs
                     78: handles Bell Labs cover sheets.
                     79: .X2
                     80: .XX pm 21 pm/pm.ms "The \f(CW\-mpm\fP Macro Package"
                     81: B. W. Kernighan and
                     82: C. J. Van Wyk.
                     83: .X1
                     84: Describes the
                     85: .CW -mpm
                     86: macros,
                     87: a version of
                     88: .CW -ms
                     89: that does automatic page balancing.
                     90: .X2
                     91: .XX eqn 25 eqn/guide.ms "Typesetting Mathematics \(em User's Guide"
                     92: B. W. Kernighan and L. L. Cherry.
                     93: .X1
                     94: Describes
                     95: .I eqn ,
                     96: an easy-to-learn language for doing high-quality mathematical typesetting.
                     97: .X2
                     98: .XX tbl 35 tbl/tbl.ms "Tbl \(em A Program to Format Tables"
                     99: L. L. Cherry and
                    100: M. E. Lesk.
                    101: .X1
                    102: A program to permit easy specification of tabular material
                    103: for typesetting.
                    104: Again, easy to learn and use.
                    105: .X2
                    106: .XX pic 53 pic/pic.ms "Pic \(em A Graphics Language for Typesetting"
                    107: B. W. Kernighan
                    108: .X1
                    109: A language for describing line drawings.
                    110: .I Pic
                    111: descriptions included
                    112: in manuscripts make high-quality drawings
                    113: when typeset.
                    114: .X2
                    115: .XX ideal 79 ideal/user.ms "Ideal \(em A Picture-specification Language"
                    116: C. J. Van Wyk
                    117: .X1
                    118: This relative of
                    119: .I pic
                    120: specifies pictures with constraints and equations.
                    121: Although harder to use than
                    122: .I pic ,
                    123: it supports generalized pens, region filling and opaqueing.
                    124: .X2
                    125: .XX grap 109 grap/paper.ms "Grap \(em A Language for Typesetting Graphs"
                    126: J. L. Bentley and
                    127: B. W. Kernighan.
                    128: .X1
                    129: Converts numerical data into beautifully typeset
                    130: graphs and charts.
                    131: Instructions to
                    132: .I grap
                    133: may be included in any manuscript.
                    134: .X2
                    135: .XX dag 147 dag/dag.ms "Dag \(em A Program for Drawing Directed Graphs"
                    136: E. R. Gansner,
                    137: S. C. North, and
                    138: K.\ P.\ Vo.
                    139: .X1
                    140: Given the connection list (and labels) for a graph,
                    141: .I dag
                    142: generates an uncluttered layout for typesetting.
                    143: .X2
                    144: .XX prefer 163 prefer/prefer.m "Formatting References with Prefer"
                    145: M. A. Derr.
                    146: .X1
                    147: .I Prefer ,
                    148: the modern replacement for
                    149: .I refer ,
                    150: replaces symbolic citations in
                    151: a text with properly sequenced bibliographic references
                    152: and prepares a bibliography.
                    153: .X2
                    154: .XX cip 175 cip/cip.ms "Cip User's Manual" ": One Picture is Worth a Thousand Words"
                    155: S. A. Browning.
                    156: .X1
                    157: How to interactively draw
                    158: .I pic
                    159: pictures for your documents on a screen instead
                    160: of programming them.
                    161: .X2
                    162: .XX troffref 187 troff/man.ms "Troff User's Manual"
                    163: J. F. Ossanna and
                    164: B. W. Kernighan.
                    165: .X1
                    166: The basic text-formatting program.
                    167: .X2
                    168: .XX trofftut 223 troff/tut.ms "A Troff Tutorial"
                    169: B. W. Kernighan.
                    170: .X1
                    171: An introduction to
                    172: .I troff
                    173: for those who
                    174: really want to know such things.
                    175: .X2
                    176: .XX monk 239 monk/monk.m "Typing Documents on the UNIX System: Using Monk 0.6"
                    177: S. L. Murrel and
                    178: T.\ J.\ Kowalski.
                    179: .X1
                    180: How to format documents with
                    181: .I troff
                    182: without ever writing
                    183: .I troff
                    184: code.
                    185: .X2
                    186: .XX latex 259 latex/latex.tex "Latex User Guide"
                    187: H. Trickey.
                    188: .X1
                    189: Local variations to the Latex book.
                    190: .X2
                    191: .X3
                    192: .SH
                    193: Programming
                    194: .XX mk 269 mk/mk.ms "Mk \(em A Successor to Make"
                    195: A. G. Hume.
                    196: .X1
                    197: The best tool for making sure that large programs
                    198: are properly compiled with minimal effort.
                    199: .X2
                    200: .XX rc 283 rc/rc.ms "Rc \(em A Shell for Plan 9 and UNIX"
                    201: T. Duff.
                    202: .X1
                    203: The next stage in symbolic shells.
                    204: .X2
                    205: .XX snocone 297 snocone/snocone.ms "The Snocone Programming Language"
                    206: A. Koenig.
                    207: .X1
                    208: A
                    209: .SM SNOBOL
                    210: with syntactic sugar.
                    211: .X2
                    212: .XX f77 311 f77/f77.ms "A Portable Fortran 77 Compiler"
                    213: S. I. Feldman and P. J. Weinberger.
                    214: .X1
                    215: Details about the local Fortran.
                    216: .X2
                    217: .XX cin 325 cin/cin.m "The C Interpreter: A Tutorial for Cin Version 0.18"
                    218: T. J. Kowalski,
                    219: H. H. Goguen, and
                    220: J.\ J.\ Puttress.
                    221: .X1
                    222: A surprisingly effective approach to C.
                    223: Interpreted code can be combined with compiled code for both flexibility
                    224: and speed.
                    225: .X2
                    226: .XX pi 335 pi/feel.ms "The Feel of Pi"
                    227: T. A. Cargill.
                    228: .X1
                    229: How to use an amazing multi-window debugger for C programs.
                    230: .X2
                    231: .X3
                    232: .SH
                    233: Supporting Tools and Languages
                    234: .XX yacc 347 yacc/yacc.ms "Yacc: A Parser Generator"
                    235: S. C. Johnson and
                    236: R. Sethi.
                    237: .X1
                    238: Converts a BNF specification of a language
                    239: and semantic actions written in C into a compiler for the language.
                    240: .X2
                    241: .XX lex 375 lex/lex.ms "Lex \(em A Lexical Analyzer Generator"
                    242: M. E. Lesk and E. Schmidt.
                    243: .X1
                    244: Creates a recognizer for a set of regular expressions;
                    245: each regular expression can be followed by arbitrary C code
                    246: which will be executed when the regular expression is found.
                    247: .X2
                    248: .XX sed 389 sed/sed.ms "Sed \(em A Non-interactive Text Editor"
                    249: L. E. McMahon.
                    250: .X1
                    251: A variant of the editor for hands-off processing
                    252: in a single pass.
                    253: .X2
                    254: .XX sam 399 sam/sam.ms "The Text Editor Sam"
                    255: R. Pike.
                    256: .X1
                    257: The design and use of a remarkable programmable editor with a slick mouse interface.
                    258: .X2
                    259: .XX pico 423 pico/pico.ms "Pico \(em A Language For Composing Digital Images"
                    260: G. J. Holzmann.
                    261: .X1
                    262: A sophisticated, programmable transformer of digitized pictures.
                    263: .X2
                    264: .XX spin 429 spin/spin.ms "Spin \(em A Protocol Analyzer"
                    265: G. J. Holzmann.
                    266: .X1
                    267: A small and powerful tool for the analysis of distributed systems.
                    268: .X2
                    269: .XX anim 451 anim/anim.ms "A System for Algorithm Animation"
                    270: J. L. Bentley and
                    271: B. W. Kernighan.
                    272: .X1
                    273: A system for displaying data that varies over time.
                    274: Outputs include an interactive viewer and snapshots
                    275: for inclusion in a
                    276: .I troff
                    277: document.
                    278: .X2
                    279: .XX music 477 music/music.ms "Computer Music Under the 10th Edition UNIX System"
                    280: T. J. Killian.
                    281: .X1
                    282: Programs that convert
                    283: .SM ASCII
                    284: to audio.
                    285: .X2
                    286: .XX raster 483 graphics/cmd.ms "The 10th Edition Raster Graphics System"
                    287: T. Duff.
                    288: .X1
                    289: How to make, process, and display high quality color images.
                    290: .X2
                    291: .X3
                    292: .SH
                    293: Implementation and Maintenance
                    294: .XX setup 497 setup/setup.ms "Setting Up a Research UNIX System"
                    295: N. Wilson.
                    296: .X1
                    297: How to configure your system and get it running.
                    298: .X2
                    299: .XX streams 503 streams/streams.ms "A Stream Input-Output System"
                    300: D. M. Ritchie.
                    301: .X1
                    302: The way data is passed among processes and communication devices.
                    303: .X2
                    304: .XX netb 513 netb/netb.ms "A Look at the Ninth Edition Network File System"
                    305: S. A. Rago.
                    306: .X1
                    307: Details of the current network file system protocol for Research
                    308: .UX .
                    309: .X2
                    310: .XX ipc 523 ipc/ipc.ms "Interprocess Communication" " in the Ninth Edition UNIX System"
                    311: D. L. Presotto and
                    312: D.\ M.\ Ritchie.
                    313: .X1
                    314: A description of the current IPC system;
                    315: both the underlying system primitives
                    316: and the user-level code.
                    317: .X2
                    318: .XX authmgr 531 auth/auth.ms "Authmgr \(em An Authentication Service for Datakit"
                    319: D. Cohrs.
                    320: .X1
                    321: A Datakit service for authenticating users.
                    322: .X2
                    323: .XX security 543 security/security.ms "UNIX System Security"
                    324: F. T. Grampp and
                    325: R. H. Morris.
                    326: .X1
                    327: How the bad guys can get you if you don't watch out.
                    328: .X2
                    329: .XX upas 557 upas/upas.ms "Upas \(em A Simpler Approach to Network Mail"
                    330: D. L. Presotto and
                    331: W. R. Cheswick.
                    332: .X1
                    333: How the mail system is organized and how it deals
                    334: with networks.
                    335: .X2
                    336: .XX uucp 563 uucp/admin.ms "Uucp Administration"
                    337: D. A. Nowitz.
                    338: .X1
                    339: How
                    340: .I uucp
                    341: works, and how to administer it.
                    342: .X2
                    343: .XX fsck 581 fsck/fsck.m "Fsck \(em The UNIX File System Check Program"
                    344: T. J. Kowalski.
                    345: .X1
                    346: Semi-automatic diagnosis and repair of
                    347: .UX
                    348: file systems.
                    349: .X2
                    350: .XX backup 593 fm/fm.ms "The File Motel: An Owner's Manual"
                    351: A. G. Hume.
                    352: .X1
                    353: The design and maintenance of the 10th Edition incremental file backup system.
                    354: .X2
                    355: .XX lp 603 lp/lp.ms "A Guide to the Lp Printer Spooler"
                    356: P. Glick.
                    357: .X1
                    358: The intricacies of running your printers.
                    359: .X2
                    360: .SP
                    361: .XX index 609 index/index.ms "Index"
                    362: L. L. Cherry.
                    363: .X1
                    364: An almost mechanically generated index.
                    365: .X2
                    366: .BP
                    367: photo page with lee macmahons picture

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