[Groff] Format of german Date in MS (de.tmac)

2009-01-04 Thread Axel Kielhorn
de.tmac defines the german date for MS as: ds DY \n[dy] \*[MO] \n[year] which leads to 4 Januar 2009. IMO this should be ds DY \n[dy]. \*[MO] \n[year] which will result in 4. Januar 2009 The code for MM already has the ".". Axel

Re: [Groff] Building groff.pdf

2009-01-04 Thread Werner LEMBERG
> I've just updated to the current (10:00 CET today) version of groff > and had a problem building groff.pdf with the texinfo.tex file > supplied by groff and an almost current (2008-12-26) Texlive 2008. > > The texinfo in groff/doc is 2004-11-25.16, the version in Texlive > 2008 is 2008-11-09.14

[Groff] Building groff.pdf

2009-01-04 Thread Axel Kielhorn
I've just updated to the current (10:00 CET today) version of groff and had a problem building groff.pdf with the texinfo.tex file supplied by groff and an almost current (2008-12-26) Texlive 2008. The texinfo in groff/doc is 2004-11-25.16, the version in Texlive 2008 is 2008-11-09.14 Wit

Re: [Groff] Format of german Date in MS (de.tmac)

2009-01-04 Thread Werner LEMBERG
> de.tmac defines the german date for MS as: > > ds DY \n[dy] \*[MO] \n[year] > > which leads to > > 4 Januar 2009. > > IMO this should be > > ds DY \n[dy]. \*[MO] \n[year] Fixed in CVS, thanks. Werner

Re: [Groff] Local/global/my/common

2009-01-04 Thread Miklos Somogyi
Werner thank you, Just out of interest. As someone who hates typing a lot and loves silly 2 character names, I would write a Perl script to list and sort number registers in source files. Is there a utility that does that regarding groff and other compiled companions? Perhaps done using th

Re: [Groff] Local/global/my/common

2009-01-04 Thread Werner LEMBERG
> Just out of interest. As someone who hates typing a lot and loves > silly 2 character names, I would write a Perl script to list and > sort number registers in source files. Is there a utility that does > that regarding groff and other compiled companions? Perhaps done > using the source just

Re: [Groff] Local/global/my/common

2009-01-04 Thread Miklos Somogyi
Yes. In the request index there are names and page numbers, e.g. `pnr ... 168' If one is looking for a function but does not know the request's name, it takes a long time to find what one wants. Try this, no, try that, no, try this, yeah. However, if there was some text between r