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1.1 root 1: To make troff (actually a.out):
2:
3: make
4:
5: You must have an ANSI C compiler for this. In a pinch, the awk program
6: unansi may help you move backwards in time.
7:
8: You will also need a driver for your favorite output device.
9: d202.c provides a model, although it is specialized to a machine no
10: one has. There are also a variety of postscript drivers that are the
11: best thing to use if you have a postscript device. the default output
12: device is "post".
13:
14: You will also have to make a DESC file for your typesetter and some
15: font description files; see dev202 for examples. These describe the
16: named characters, widths, kerning information, and output codes.
17:
18: Nroff is the same program as troff, so you should
19:
20: cp a.out /usr/bin/troff
21: ln /usr/bin/troff /usr/bin/nroff
22:
23: or the equivalent.
24:
25: You will also need terminal description files for your terminals; see
26: tab.37, tab.450 and tab.lp for examples.
27:
28: DESC and font description files are normally stored in /usr/lib/font;
29: macro packages are in /usr/lib/tmac; nroff tables are in
30: /usr/lib/term. You can edit tdef.h to change these assumptions.
31:
32: There have been a few features since the last version, and a number of
33: significant internal changes. Not all are improvements, of course.
34: Most of the more recent changes, including bug fixes, are in FIXES,
35: which you should read also.
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