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Re: [Groff] What is 'loom'?
From: |
Jon Snader |
Subject: |
Re: [Groff] What is 'loom'? |
Date: |
Tue, 8 Jan 2002 07:25:05 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.2.5i |
On Tue, Jan 08, 2002 at 07:21:26AM -0500, Larry Kollar wrote:
>
> Jon Snader wrote:
>
> > > I gather that it's main purpose is to prepare source code for
> > > inclusion in a troff document. ...
> >
> > It's actually pretty useful. You can mark regions of code to include,
> > and you can also run the code through a filter before it gets sucked
> > into the troff source--that's useful for things like mapping \n -> \\n
> > and adjusting spacing. I used it extensively in my book.
>
> Which begs the question... why isn't "Effective TCP/IP Programming"
> listed in the troff.org books? :-)
>
I sent the reference and book cover jpeg to Ralph yesterday.
Jon Snader
- [Groff] What is 'loom'?, Larry Kollar, 2002/01/07
- Re: [Groff] What is 'loom'?, Stewart C. Russell, 2002/01/07
- Re: [Groff] What is 'loom'?, Jon Snader, 2002/01/07
- Re: [Groff] What is 'loom'?, Larry Kollar, 2002/01/08
- Re: [Groff] What is 'loom'?,
Jon Snader <=
- Re: [Groff] What is 'loom'?, ralph, 2002/01/09
- [Groff] troff.org, Bernd Warken, 2002/01/09
- [Groff] Re: troff.org, ralph, 2002/01/09
- Re: [Groff] Re: troff.org, Larry Kollar, 2002/01/09
- Re: [Groff] Re: troff.org, ralph, 2002/01/10