I need guidance from real typographers. GNU troff has long borne the following feature.
groff(7): .hlm Set the consecutive automatically hyphenated line limit to -1 (the default), meaning “no limit”. .hlm n Set the consecutive automatically hyphenated line limit to to n. A negative value means “no limit”. \n[.hlc] Count of immediately preceding consecutive hyphenated lines in environment. \n[.hlm] Maximum quantity of consecutive hyphenated lines allowed in environment. I presume that this is configurable because it becomes uncomfortable for the reader to see a river of hyphens at the right margin. My question is: should a page break reset this count? $ cat EXPERIMENTS/hlc-check.groff .na .ll 25n .pl 1v antidisestablishmentarianism .tm .hlc=\n[.hlc] $ nroff EXPERIMENTS/hlc-check.groff .hlc=1 antidisestablishmentari‐ anism Regards, Branden
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