Hi SGT, > in the following (abbreviated) .UR can not be used out side of the > T{...T} block. or else it's interpreted literally: > > .mso man.tmac > .fam A > .ps -4 > .vs -4 > .TH Résumé CS > .TS > tab(:) center; > l l l l. > 2014-2015::T{ > It is neither this nor that while it's both this and that > T}:T{ > .UR http://example.com > .UE > T}:Rumi > .TE > > is that intended?
Yes. > > FWIW, if you're not familiar with it, the troff.org web site > > <http://troff.org/papers.html> has lots of information that can be a > > real help. > > i always google around before asking. in the link you posted searching > for .UR in this: http://cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/doc/76/tbl.ps.gz didn't > return anything either. make me think that it could be a silly > question... URLs didn't exist when tbl or that paper were written, so neither did .UR. The paper says Troff commands within tables — An input line beginning with a . followed by anything but a number is assumed to be a command to troff and is passed through unchanged, retaining its position in the table. So, for example, vertical space within a table may be produced by .sp commands in the data. GNU groff's tbl(1) says Table data ... A dot starting a line, followed by anything but a digit is handled as a troff command, passed through without changes. The table position is unchanged in this case. You can use the zero-width space character \& to stop `.' being at the start of a line, e.g. \&.UR foo:///bar \&.UE Cheers, Ralph.