- .Fn and .Fc now print a final semicolon (`;') after a
function declaration in the SYNOPSIS
- .%I implemented
- .At outputs ``AT&T UNIX'' if called without arguments
- minor cleanup
Obtained from: CSRG archives
- spell the abbreviation of 1003.1 as ``POSIX.1''
- fixed the description of -p1003.1-90; it was sold as ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990
- removed -p1003.1b; it only existed as 1003.1b-1993 (-p1003.1b-93), and
is part of 1003.1 since 1003.1-1996.
- replaced -p1003.1g (project) with -p1003.1g-2000 (approved draft)
- changed abbreviation of -isoC from ``ISO C'' to ``ISO C89''
- removed -iso9899 alias for -isoC
- IEC was missing from some names
- added abbreviation for -susv2 (``SUSv2'')
the argument is a known FreeBSD version or not.
Output an nroff error if .Fx is used with an unknown FreeBSD version.
Change .Nx and .Ox macros to always display the argument, whether
the argument is a known version or not. This eliminates much of the
need to syncrhonize .Nx and .Ox with their source OS's -- only the
exceptions (like ".Nx 1.2a" -> "NetBSD 1.2A") where the argument is
not directly copied to the output need to be added.
The .Fx macro was missing 2.1.7.
Add 2.2.5 to both .Os and .Fx. If I'm wrong about the version
number, no big deal - it can be removed later, but I wanted
to be able to get this into 2.2 so that when I'm using a
2.2 system ome months down the line, man pages intended for (what I
think will be the next 2.2 release) will be formatted properly.
Also fix a typo in a comment.
Add the .Fx macro for specifying FreeBSD releases.
Add a bunch of missing standards to the .St macro.
Add Version 1 AT&T UNIX to .At macro
Updated the ".St -ansiC" macro to report "ISO 9899: 1990 (``ISO C'')"
You can also specify -iso9899, or -isoC. Use -ansiC-89 if you still need
the X3.159-1989 string reported.
Original author: mpp