7 Here two ports using the gcc compiler and other GNU tools:
9 Thomer M. Gil <tmgil@cs.vu.nl>:
11 http://www.cs.vu.nl/~tmgil/misc/wingroff.html
13 Kees Zeelenberg <c.zeelenberg@hccnet.nl>:
15 ftp://ftp.franken.de/pub/win32/develop/gnuwin32/
16 cygwin/porters/Zeelenberg_Kees/B20/index.html
21 Binaries for Eli Zaretskii's port using the djgpp compiler
24 ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/gro*b.zip
26 and its mirrors; for installation details please read `arch/djgpp/README'.
31 An implementation of Kernighan & Bentley's grap language for typesetting
32 graphs. Written by Ted Faber <faber@lunabase.org>. The actual version
35 http://www.lunabase.org/~faber/Vault/software/grap/
37 A djgpp port which runs on MS-DOS and all Win32 systems (Win95, Win98,
38 WinNT) done by Kees Zeelenberg <c.zeelenberg@hccnet.nl> is available from
40 ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2apps/
42 It is intended to be used with the djgpp port of groff.
47 This utility program can convert plot graphics to either pic or gremlin
48 files. It has been written by Richard Murphey <richard-murphey@rice.edu>
49 and Daniel Senderowicz <daniel@synchrods.com> (who has added the gremlin
50 driver). The actual version can be found as
52 ftp://ftp.ffii.org/pub/groff/plot2dev-x.x.tar.gz
59 troffcvt is a translator that turns troff input into a form that can be
60 more easily processed. The troffcvt distribution comes with
61 postprocessors that turn troffcvt into various destination formats such
62 as HTML (Hypertext Markup Language), RTF (Rich Text Format) or plain
65 Note that you need a lot of additional packages to compile troffcvt;
66 everything is available from
68 http://www.primate.wisc.edu/software/troffcvt/
75 Unroff is a Scheme-based, programmable, extensible troff translator with
76 a back-end for the Hypertext Markup Language. Unroff is free software
77 and is distributed both as source and as precompiled binaries.
79 http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/~net/unroff/unroff.html
81 You need als Elk, the Scheme based Extension Language Kit, which is
84 http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/~net/elk
89 . Dr. Robert Hermann's groff gems are available from
91 http://www.eas.slu.edu/People/RBHerrmann/GROFF/index.html
93 At present there are examples for
95 o creating business cards
96 o using groff to make large format posters for presentations
98 . Robert Marks's collection of useful macros and scripts is available from
100 http://www.agsm.edu.au/~bobm/odds+ends/scripts.html
104 o `polish': Is a sed (= the Unix stream editor) script that does many
105 things to ASCII text. Amongst other things, it breaks lines at new
106 sentences, reduces upper-case acronyms by one point size, adds
107 diacriticals, changes simple quotes into smart quotes, and makes a few
108 simple grammar checks. The best way to see what it does is to run it as
109 a sed script file (or files) on a text file and then compare the output
110 file with the original.
112 o `DropCaps' is a troff script which replaces the initial letters of
113 paragraphs immediately after H1 and H2 headings with drop-capitals of
114 specified point size, and automatically flows the text around the new
117 o `AJM Header' is a set of troff macros used in production of the
118 Australian Journal of Management. They use the Memorandum Macros (mm)
119 of AT&T, and so should be invoked with the UNIX troff -mm flag; they
120 should also work with the GNU troff -mm flag.
122 . Thomas Baruchel <baruchel@libertysurf.fr> has developed Meta-tbl, a tbl
123 postprocessor to manipulate table cells (like adding gray shades). The
124 latest version can be found at
126 http://perso.libertysurf.fr/baruchel/
131 Many documents related to the original versions of troff, ditroff, pic, and
132 others can be accessed from the following web page:
134 http://www.cs.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/cstr.html