Command Section

GRODVI(1)		    General Commands Manual		     GRODVI(1)

NAME
       grodvi -	convert	groff output to	TeX DVI	format

SYNOPSIS
       grodvi [-dl] [-F	dir] [-p papersize] [-w	n] [file ...]

       grodvi --help

       grodvi -v
       grodvi --version

DESCRIPTION
       grodvi is a driver for groff that produces TeX DVI format.  Normally it
       should be run by	groff -Tdvi.  This will	run troff -Tdvi; it will  also
       input the macros	in /usr/local/share/groff/1.22.4/tmac/dvi.tmac.

       The  DVI	file generated by grodvi can be	printed	by any correctly-writ-
       ten DVI driver.	The troff drawing primitives are implemented using the
       tpic  version 2 specials.  If the driver	does not support these,	the \D
       commands	will not produce any output.

       There is	an additional drawing command available:

       \D'R dh dv'
	      Draw a rule (solid black rectangle), with	one corner at the cur-
	      rent position, and the diagonally	opposite corner	at the current
	      position +(dh,dv).  Afterwards the current position will	be  at
	      the  opposite  corner.  This produces a rule in the DVI file and
	      so can be	printed	even with a driver that	does not  support  the
	      tpic specials unlike the other \D	commands.

       The  groff  command \X'anything'	is translated into the same command in
       the DVI file as would be	produced by \special{anything}	in  TeX;  any-
       thing may not contain a newline.

       For inclusion of	EPS image files, -Tdvi loads pspic.tmac	automatically,
       providing the PSPIC macro.  Please check	groff_tmac(5) for  a  detailed
       description.

       Font  files for grodvi can be created from tfm files using tfmtodit(1).
       The font	description file should	contain	the following additional  com-
       mands:

       internalname name
	      The name of the tfm file (without	the .tfm extension) is name.

       checksum	n
	      The checksum in the tfm file is n.

       designsize n
	      The designsize in	the tfm	file is	n.

       These are automatically generated by tfmtodit.

       The default color for \m	and \M is black.  Currently, the drawing color
       for \D commands is always black,	and fill color values  are  translated
       to gray.

       In  troff  the  \N  escape sequence can be used to access characters by
       their position in the corresponding tfm file; all characters in the tfm
       file can	be accessed this way.

       By design, the DVI format doesn't care about physical dimensions	of the
       output medium.  Instead,	grodvi emits the  equivalent  to  TeX's	 \spe-
       cial{papersize=width,length}  on	 the  first  page; dvips (and possibly
       other DVI drivers) then sets the	page size accordingly.	If either  the
       page width or length is not positive, no	papersize special is output.

OPTIONS
       Whitespace is permitted between a command-line option and its argument.

       -d     Do  not  use tpic	specials to implement drawing commands.	 Hori-
	      zontal and vertical lines	will be	implemented by	rules.	 Other
	      drawing commands will be ignored.

       -Fdir  Prepend  directory  dir/devname  to the search path for font and
	      device description files;	name is	the name of the	 device,  usu-
	      ally dvi.

       -l     Specify landscape	orientation.

       -ppapersize
	      Specify  paper dimensions.  This overrides the papersize,	paper-
	      length, and paperwidth commands in the DESC file;	it accepts the
	      same  arguments  as the papersize	command	(see groff_font(5) for
	      details).

       -v     Print the	version	number.

       -wn    Set the default line thickness to	n thousandths of  an  em.   If
	      this  option  isn't  specified,  the  line thickness defaults to
	      0.04 em.

USAGE
       There are styles	called R, I, B,	and BI mounted	at  font  positions  1
       to 4.   The  fonts  are grouped into families T and H having members in
       each of these styles:

	      TR     CM	Roman (cmr10)
	      TI     CM	Text Italic (cmti10)
	      TB     CM	Bold Extended Roman (cmbx10)
	      TBI    CM	Bold Extended Text Italic (cmbxti10)
	      HR     CM	Sans Serif (cmss10)
	      HI     CM	Slanted	Sans Serif (cmssi10)
	      HB     CM	Sans Serif Bold	Extended (cmssbx10)
	      HBI    CM	Slanted	Sans Serif Bold	Extended (cmssbxo10)

       There are also the following fonts which	are not	members	of a family:

	      CW     CM	Typewriter Text	(cmtt10)
	      CWI    CM	Italic Typewriter Text (cmitt10)

       Special fonts are MI (cmmi10), S	(cmsy10), EX  (cmex10),	 SC  (cmtex10,
       only  for  CW),	and,  perhaps surprisingly, TR,	TI, and	CW, due	to the
       different font encodings	of text	fonts.	For italic fonts, CWI is  used
       instead of CW.

       Finally,	 the  symbol  fonts  of	 the American Mathematical Society are
       available as special fonts SA (msam10)  and  SB	(msbm10).   These  two
       fonts are not mounted by	default.

       Using  the  option  -mec	(which loads the file ec.tmac) provides	the EC
       and TC fonts.  The design of the	EC family is very similar to  that  of
       the  CM	fonts; additionally, they give a much better coverage of groff
       symbols.	 Note that ec.tmac must	be called before any language-specific
       files; it doesn't take care of hcode values.

ENVIRONMENT
       GROFF_FONT_PATH
	      A	 list of directories in	which to search	for the	devname	direc-
	      tory  in	addition  to  the  default  ones.   See	 troff(1)  and
	      groff_font(5) for	more details.

FILES
       /usr/local/share/groff/1.22.4/font/devdvi/DESC
	      Device description file.

       /usr/local/share/groff/1.22.4/font/devdvi/F
	      Font description file for	font F.

       /usr/local/share/groff/1.22.4/tmac/dvi.tmac
	      Macros for use with grodvi.

       /usr/local/share/groff/1.22.4/tmac/ec.tmac
	      Macros to	switch to EC fonts.

BUGS
       Dvi  files  produced  by	grodvi use a different resolution (57816 units
       per inch) from those produced  by  TeX.	 Incorrectly  written  drivers
       which  assume the resolution used by TeX, rather	than using the resolu-
       tion specified in the DVI file will not work with grodvi.

       When using the -d option	with boxed  tables,  vertical  and  horizontal
       lines  can  sometimes  protrude by one pixel.  This is a	consequence of
       the way TeX requires that the heights and widths	of rules be rounded.

SEE ALSO
       tfmtodit(1),   groff(1),	  troff(1),    groff_out(5),	groff_font(5),
       groff_char(7), groff_tmac(5)

groff 1.22.4		       17 December 2018			     GRODVI(1)

Command Section

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