Provided by: par_1.52-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       par - filter for reformatting paragraphs

SYNOPSIS

       par  [ help ] [ version ] [ Bopset ] [ Popset ] [ Qopset ] [ h[hang] ] [ p[prefix] ]
            [ r[repeat] ] [ s[suffix] ] [ T[Tab] ] [ w[width] ] [ b[body] ] [ c[cap] ] [ d[div] ]
            [ E[Err] ] [ e[expel] ] [ f[fit] ] [ g[guess] ] [ j[just] ] [ l[last] ] [ q[quote] ]
            [ R[Report] ] [ t[touch] ]

DESCRIPTION

       par is a filter which copies its input  to  its  output,  changing  all  white  characters
       (except newlines) to spaces, and reformatting each paragraph.  Paragraphs are separated by
       protected, blank, and bodiless lines (see the TERMINOLOGY section  for  definitions),  and
       optionally delimited by indentation (see the d option in the OPTIONS section).

       Each output paragraph is generated from the corresponding input paragraph as follows:

           1) An optional prefix and/or suffix is removed from each input line.

           2) The remainder is divided into words (separated by spaces).

           3) The words are joined into lines to make an eye-pleasing paragraph.

           4) The prefixes and suffixes are reattached.

       If  there  are  suffixes, spaces are inserted before them so that they all end in the same
       column.

QUICK START

       par is necessarily complex.  For those who wish to use it immediately  and  understand  it
       later, assign the PARINIT environment variable the following value:

              rTbgqR B=.,?_A_a Q=_s>|

       The  spaces,  question  mark, greater-than sign, and vertical bar will probably have to be
       escaped or quoted to prevent your shell from interpreting them.

       The documentation, though precise, is unfortunately not  well-written  for  the  end-user.
       Your  best  bet  is  probably  to  read quickly the DESCRIPTION, TERMINOLOGY, OPTIONS, and
       ENVIRONMENT sections, then read carefully the EXAMPLES  section,  referring  back  to  the
       OPTIONS and TERMINOLOGY sections as needed.

       For  the  "power  user", a full understanding of par will require multiple readings of the
       TERMINOLOGY, OPTIONS, DETAILS, and EXAMPLES sections.

TERMINOLOGY

       Miscellaneous terms:

              charset syntax
                     A way of representing a set of characters as a  string.   The  set  includes
                     exactly  those  characters  which  appear  in  the  string,  except that the
                     underscore (_) is an escape character.  Whenever it appears, it  must  begin
                     one of the following escape sequences:

                        __ = an underscore

                        _s = a space

                        _b = a backslash (\)

                        _q = a single quote (')

                        _Q = a double quote (")

                        _A = all upper case letters

                        _a = all lower case letters

                        _0 = all decimal digits

                      _xhh = the  character  represented  by the two hexadecimal digits hh (which
                             may be upper or lower case)

                     The NUL character must not appear in the string, but it may be  included  in
                     the set with the _x00 sequence.

              error  A condition which causes par to abort.  See the DIAGNOSTICS section.

              IP     Input paragraph.

              OP     Output paragraph.

              parameter
                     A  symbol  which  may  take  on unsigned integral values.  There are several
                     parameters whose values affect the  behavior  of  par.   Parameters  can  be
                     assigned values using command line options.

       Types of characters:

              alphanumeric character
                     An upper case letter, lower case letter, or decimal digit.

              body character
                     A  member  of  the  set  of  characters  defined  by the PARBODY environment
                     variable (see the ENVIRONMENT section) and/or the B option (see the  OPTIONS
                     section).

              protective character
                     A  member   of  the  set of characters defined by the PARPROTECT environment
                     variable and/or the P option.

              quote character
                     A member of the set  of  characters  defined  by  the  PARQUOTE  environment
                     variable and/or the Q option.

              terminal character
                     A period, question mark, exclamation point, or colon.

              white character
                     A space, formfeed, newline, carriage return, tab, or vertical tab.

       Functions:

              comprelen
                     Given a non-empty sequence S of lines, let c be their longest common prefix.
                     If the parameter body is 0, place a divider just after the leading  non-body
                     characters  in  c (at the beginning if there are none).  If body is 1, place
                     the divider just after the last non-space non-body character in  c  (at  the
                     beginning  if  there is none), then advance the divider over any immediately
                     following spaces.  The comprelen of S is the number of characters  preceding
                     the divider.

              comsuflen
                     Given  a  non-empty sequence S of lines, let p be the comprelen of S.  Let T
                     be the set of lines which result from stripping the first p characters  from
                     each  line  in S.  Let c be the longest common suffix of the lines in T.  If
                     body is 0, place a divider just before the trailing non-body characters in c
                     (at  the  end  if there are none), then advance the divider over all but the
                     last of any immediately following spaces.  If body is 1, place  the  divider
                     just before the first non-space non-body character, then back up the divider
                     over one immediately preceding space if there is one.  The comsuflen of S is
                     the number of characters following the divider.

              fallback prelen (suflen)
                     The  fallback  prelen (suflen) of an IP is: the comprelen (comsuflen) of the
                     IP, if the  IP  contains  at  least  two  lines;  otherwise,  the  comprelen
                     (comsuflen)  of  the block containing the IP, if the block contains at least
                     two lines; otherwise, the length of the longer of the prefixes (suffixes) of
                     the bodiless lines just above and below the block, if the segment containing
                     the block has  any  bodiless  lines;  otherwise,  0.   (See  below  for  the
                     definitions of block, segment, and bodiless line.)

              augmented fallback prelen
                     Let  fp  be  the fallback prelen of an IP.  If the IP contains more than one
                     line, or if quote is 0, then the augmented fallback  prelen  of  the  IP  is
                     simply  fp.   Otherwise,  it  is  fp  plus  the  number  of quote characters
                     immediately following the first fp characters of the line.

              quoteprefix
                     The quoteprefix of  a  line  is  the  longest  string  of  quote  characters
                     appearing  at the beginning of the line, after this string has been stripped
                     of any trailing spaces.

       Types of lines:

              blank line
                     An empty line, or a line whose first character is not protective  and  which
                     contains only spaces.

              protected line
                     An input line whose first character is protective.

              bodiless line
                     A line which is order k bodiless for some k.

              order k bodiless line
                     There  is  no  such  thing  as  an  order 0 bodiless line.  Suppose S is a a
                     contiguous subsequence of a segment (see  below)  containing  at  least  two
                     lines,  containing  no  order k-1 bodiless lines, bounded above and below by
                     order k-1 bodiless lines and/or the beginning/end of the segment.  Let p and
                     s  be  the comprelen and comsuflen of S.  Any member of S which, if stripped
                     of its first p and last s characters, would be blank (or, if  the  parameter
                     repeat  is  non-zero,  would consist of the same character repeated at least
                     repeat times), is order k bodiless.  The first p characters of the  bodiless
                     line  comprise  its  prefix; the last s characters comprise its suffix.  The
                     character which repeats in the middle is called its  repeat  character.   If
                     the middle is empty, the space is taken to be its repeat character.

              vacant line
                     A bodiless line whose repeat character is the space.

              superfluous line
                     Only  blank and vacant lines may be superfluous.  If contiguous vacant lines
                     lie at the beginning or end of a segment, they are all superfluous.  But  if
                     they  lie  between  two  non-vacant  lines  within  a  segment, then all are
                     superfluous except oneā€”the one which contains  the  fewest  non-spaces.   In
                     case  of  a  tie,  the  first  of  the  tied lines is chosen.  Similarly, if
                     contiguous blank lines lie outside of any segments at the beginning  or  end
                     of  the  input,  they  are  all  superfluous.   But  if they lie between two
                     segments and/or protected lines, then all are superfluous except the first.

       Groups of lines:

              segment
                     A contiguous sequence of input lines containing no protected or blank lines,
                     bounded  above  and  below  by  protected  lines,  blank  lines,  and/or the
                     beginning/end of the input.

              block  A contiguous subsequence of a segment containing no bodiless lines,  bounded
                     above and below by bodiless lines and/or the beginning/end of the segment.

       Types of words:

              capitalized word
                     If the parameter cap is 0, a capitalized word is one which contains at least
                     one alphanumeric character, whose first  alphanumeric  character  is  not  a
                     lower  case  letter.   If  cap  is 1, every word is considered a capitalized
                     word.  (See the c option in the OPTIONS section.)

              curious word
                     A word which contains  a  terminal  character  c  such  that  there  are  no
                     alphanumeric  characters  in  the  word  after  c, but there is at least one
                     alphanumeric character in the word before c.

OPTIONS

       Any command line argument may begin with one minus sign (-) which is ignored.   Generally,
       more  than  one  option  may  appear  in  a  single  command  line argument, but there are
       exceptions:  The help, version, B, P, and Q options  must  have  whole  arguments  all  to
       themselves.

       help      Causes  all  remaining  arguments  to  be  ignored.   No input is read.  A usage
                 message is printed on the output briefly describing the options used by par.

       version   Causes all remaining arguments to be ignored.  No input is read.  "par 1.52"  is
                 printed on the output.  Of course, this will change in future releases of Par.

       Bopset    op  is a single character, either an equal sign (=), a plus sign (+), or a minus
                 sign (-), and set is a string using charset syntax.  If op is an equal sign, the
                 set  of  body characters is set to the character set defined by set.  If op is a
                 plus/minus sign, the characters in the set  defined  by  set  are  added/removed
                 to/from  the  existing set of body characters defined by the PARBODY environment
                 variable and any previous B options.  It is okay  to  add  characters  that  are
                 already in the set or to remove characters that are not in the set.

       Popset    Just  like  the  B  option,  except  that  it  applies  to the set of protective
                 characters.

       Qopset    Just like the B option, except that it applies to the set of quote characters.

       All remaining options are used to set values of parameters.  Values set  by  command  line
       options  hold  for  all  paragraphs.   Unset  parameters  are  given  default values.  Any
       parameters whose default values depend on the IP  (namely  prefix  and  suffix),  if  left
       unset, are recomputed separately for each paragraph.

       The  approximate role of each variable is described here.  See the DETAILS section for the
       rest of the story.

       The first six parameters, hang, prefix, repeat, suffix, Tab, and width, may be set to  any
       unsigned decimal integer less than 10000.

       h[hang]   Mainly  affects the default values of prefix and suffix.  Defaults to 0.  If the
                 h option is given without a number, the value 1 is inferred.  (See  also  the  p
                 and s options.)

       p[prefix] The  first  prefix  characters  of each line of the OP are copied from the first
                 prefix characters of the corresponding line of the IP.  If there are  more  than
                 hang+1  lines  in the IP, the default value is the comprelen of all the lines in
                 the IP except the first hang of them.   Otherwise,  the  default  value  is  the
                 augmented fallback prelen of the IP.  If the p option is given without a number,
                 prefix is unset, even if it had been  set  earlier.   (See  also  the  h  and  q
                 options.)

       r[repeat] If  repeat  is  non-zero,  bodiless  lines have the number of instances of their
                 repeat characters increased or decreased until the length of the line is  width.
                 The  exact value of repeat affects the definition of bodiless line.  Defaults to
                 0.  If the r option is given without a number, the value 3  is  inferred.   (See
                 also the w option.)

       s[suffix] The  last  suffix  characters  of  each  line of the OP are copied from the last
                 suffix characters of the corresponding line of the IP.  If there are  more  than
                 hang+1  lines  in the IP, the default value is the comsuflen of all the lines of
                 the IP except the first hang of them.   Otherwise,  the  default  value  is  the
                 fallback suflen of the IP.  If the s option is given without a number, suffix is
                 unset, even if it had been set earlier.  (See also the h option.)

       T[Tab]    Tab characters in the input are expanded to spaces, assuming tab stops every Tab
                 columns.   Must  not  be  0.  Defaults to 1.  If the T option is given without a
                 number, the value 8 is inferred.

       w[width]  No line in the OP may contain more than  width  characters,  not  including  the
                 trailing  newlines.  Defaults to 72.  If the w option is given without a number,
                 the value 79 is inferred.

       The remaining thirteen parameters, body, cap, div, Err, expel, fit,  guess,  invis,  just,
       last,  quote,  Report, and touch, may be set to either 0 or 1.  If the number is absent in
       the option, the value 1 is inferred.

       b[body]   If body is 1, prefixes  may  not  contain  any  trailing  body  characters,  and
                 suffixes  may not contain any leading body characters.  (Actually, the situation
                 is complicated  by  space  characters.   See  comprelen  and  comsuflen  in  the
                 Terminology  section.)   If body is 0, prefixes and suffixes may not contain any
                 body characters at all.  Defaults to 0.

       c[cap]    If cap is 1, all words are considered capitalized.  This currently affects  only
                 the application of the g option.  Defaults to 0.

       d[div]    If  div  is  0, each block becomes an IP.  If div is 1, each block is subdivided
                 into IPs as follows:  Let p be the comprelen of the block.  Let a line's  status
                 be  1 if its (p+1)st character is a space, 0 otherwise.  Every line in the block
                 whose status is the same as the status of  the  first  line  will  begin  a  new
                 paragraph.  Defaults to 0.

       E[Err]    If Err is 1, messages to the user (caused by the help and version options, or by
                 errors) are sent to the error stream instead of the output stream.  Defaults  to
                 0.

       e[expel]  If expel is 1, superfluous lines are withheld from the output.  Defaults to 0.

       f[fit]    If  fit  is 1 and just is 0, par tries to make the lines in the OP as nearly the
                 same length as possible, even if it means making the OP narrower.   Defaults  to
                 0.  (See also the j option.)

       g[guess]  If  guess  is 1, then when par is choosing line breaks, whenever it encounters a
                 curious word followed by a  capitalized  word,  it  takes  one  of  two  special
                 actions.   If  the  two words are separated by a single space in the input, they
                 will be merged into one word with an embedded non-breaking space.   If  the  two
                 words  are separated by more than one space, or by a line break, par will insure
                 that they are separated by two spaces, or  by  a  line  break,  in  the  output.
                 Defaults to 0.

       i[invis]  If invis is 1, then vacant lines inserted because quote is 1 are invisible; that
                 is, they are not output.  If quote is 0, invis has no effect.   Defaults  to  0.
                 (See also the q option.)

       j[just]   If  just  is 1, par justifies the OP, inserting spaces between words so that all
                 lines in the OP have length width (except the last, if last is 0).  Defaults  to
                 0.  (See also the w, l, and f options.)

       l[last]   If last is 1, par tries to make the last line of the OP about the same length as
                 the others.  Defaults to 0.

       q[quote]  If quote is 1, then before each segment  is  scanned  for  bodiless  lines,  par
                 supplies  vacant  lines  between  different quotation nesting levels as follows:
                 For each pair of adjacent lines in the segment,  (scanned  from  the  top  down)
                 which have different quoteprefixes, one of two actions is taken.  If invis is 0,
                 and either line consists entirely of quote characters and spaces (or is  empty),
                 that  line  is truncated to the longest common prefix of the two lines (both are
                 truncated if both qualify).  Otherwise, a line consisting of the longest  common
                 prefix  of  the  two  lines  is  inserted  between them.  quote also affects the
                 default value of prefix.  Defaults to 0.  (See also the p and i options.)

       R[Report] If Report is 1, it is considered an error for an input word to contain more than
                 L =  (width -  prefix -  suffix)  characters.  Otherwise, such words are chopped
                 after each Lth character into shorter words.  Defaults to 0.

       t[touch]  Has no effect if suffix is 0 or just is 1.  Otherwise, if touch is 0, all  lines
                 in  the  OP  have  length  width.   If  touch  is  1, the length of the lines is
                 decreased until the suffixes touch the body of the OP.  Defaults to the  logical
                 OR of fit and last.  (See also the s, j, w, f, and l options.)

       If  an argument begins with a number, that number is assumed to belong to a p option if it
       is 8 or less, and to a w option otherwise.

       If the value of any parameter is set more than once, the last value is used.   When  unset
       parameters are assigned default values, hang and quote are assigned before prefix, and fit
       and last are assigned before touch (because of the dependencies).

       It is an error if width <= prefix + suffix.

ENVIRONMENT

       PARBODY   Determines the initial set of body characters (which are  used  for  determining
                 comprelens  and  comsuflens),  using charset syntax.  If PARBODY is not set, the
                 set of body characters is initially empty.

       PARINIT   If set, par will read command line options from PARINIT  before  it  reads  them
                 from  the command line.  Within the value of PARINIT, arguments are separated by
                 white characters.

       PARPROTECT
                 Determines  the  set  of  protective  characters,  using  charset  syntax.    If
                 PARPROTECT is not set, the set of protective characters is initially empty.

       PARQUOTE  Determines  the  set  of quote characters, using charset syntax.  If PARQUOTE is
                 not set, the set of quote characters initially contains  only  the  greater-than
                 sign (>) and the space.

       If a NUL character appears in the value of an environment variable, it and the rest of the
       string will not be seen by par.

       Note that the PARINIT variable, together with the B, P, and Q options, renders  the  other
       environment variables unnecessary.  They are included for backward compatibility.

DETAILS

       Lines  are  terminated  by  newline  characters, but the newlines are not considered to be
       included in the lines.  If the last character of the input is  a  non-newline,  a  newline
       will  be  inferred  immediately  after  it  (but if the input is empty, no newline will be
       inferred; the number of input lines will be 0).  Thus, the input can always be viewed as a
       sequence of lines.

       Protected lines are copied unchanged from the input to the output.  All other input lines,
       as they are read, have any NUL characters  removed,  and  every  white  character  (except
       newlines)  turned  into  a  space.  Actually, each tab character is turned into Tab - (n %
       Tab) spaces, where n is the number of characters preceding the tab character on  the  line
       (evaluated after earlier tab characters have been expanded).

       Blank lines in the input are transformed into empty lines in the output.

       If  repeat  is  0,  all  bodiless  lines  are  vacant, and they are all simply stripped of
       trailing spaces before being output.  If repeat is not 0, only vacant lines whose suffixes
       have  length  0 are treated that way; other bodiless lines have the number of instances of
       their repeat characters increased or decreased until the length of the line is width.

       If expel is 1, superfluous lines are not output.  If quote and invis are both 1, there may
       be invisible lines; they are not output.

       The  input is divided into segments, which are divided into blocks, which are divided into
       IPs.  The exact process depends on the values of quote and div (see q and d in the OPTIONS
       section).   The  remainder  of  this  section  describes  the  process  which  is  applied
       independently to each IP to construct the corresponding OP.

       After the values of the parameters are determined (see the  OPTIONS  section),  the  first
       prefix  characters  and  the  last  suffix  characters  of each input line are removed and
       remembered.  It is an error for any line to contain fewer than prefix + suffix characters.

       The remaining text is treated as a sequence of characters, not lines.  The text is  broken
       into  words,  which are separated by spaces.  That is, a word is a maximal sub-sequence of
       non-spaces.  If guess is 1, some words might be merged (see g  in  the  OPTIONS  section).
       The first word includes any spaces that precede it on the same line.

       Let L = width - prefix - suffix.

       If  Report  is  0,  some  words  may  get  chopped  up at this point (see R in the OPTIONS
       section).

       The words are reassembled, preserving their order, into lines.  If  just  is  0,  adjacent
       words within a line are separated by a single space, (or sometimes two if guess is 1), and
       line breaks are chosen so that the paragraph satisfies the following properties:

              1) No line contains more than L characters.

              2) If fit is 1, the difference between the lengths  of  the  shortest  and  longest
                 lines is as small as possible.

              3) The shortest line is as long as possible, subject to properties 1 and 2.

              4) Let target be L if fit is 0, or the length of the longest line if fit is 1.  The
                 sum of the squares of the differences between target  and  the  lengths  of  the
                 lines is as small as possible, subject to properties 1, 2, and 3.

            If  last  is 0, the last line does not count as a line for the purposes of properties
            2, 3, and 4 above.

            If all the words fit on a single line, the properties as worded above don't make much
            sense.  In that case, no line breaks are inserted.

       If just is 1, adjacent words within a line are separated by one space (or sometimes two if
       guess is 1) plus zero or more extra spaces.  The value of fit  is  disregarded,  and  line
       breaks are chosen so that the paragraph satisfies the following properties:

              1) Every line contains exactly L characters.

              2) The  largest inter-word gap is as small as possible, subject to property 1.  (An
                 inter-word gap consists only of the extra spaces, not the regular spaces.)

              3) The sum of the squares of the lengths of the inter-word  gaps  is  as  small  as
                 possible, subject to properties 1 and 2.

            If  last is 0, the last line does not count as a line for the purposes of property 1,
            and it does not require or contain any extra spaces.

            Extra spaces are distributed as uniformly as possible among the  inter-word  gaps  in
            each line.

            In  a justified paragraph, every line must contain at least two words, but that's not
            always possible  to  accomplish.   If  the  paragraph  cannot  be  justified,  it  is
            considered an error.

       If the number of lines in the resulting paragraph is less than hang, empty lines are added
       at the end to bring the number of lines up to hang.

       If just is 0 and touch is 1, L is changed to be the length of the longest line.

       If suffix is not 0, each line is padded at the end with spaces to bring its length  up  to
       L.

       To  each line is prepended prefix characters.  Let n be the number of lines in the IP, let
       afp be the augmented fallback prelen of the IP, and let fs be the fallback suflen  of  the
       IP.  The characters which are prepended to the ith line are chosen as follows:

           1) If  i  <=  n,  the  characters  are copied from the ones that were removed from the
              beginning of the nth input line.

           2) If i > n > hang, the characters are copied from the ones that were removed from the
              beginning of the last input line.

           3) If i > n and n <= hang, the first min(afp,prefix) of the characters are copied from
              the ones that were removed from the beginning of the last input line, and the  rest
              are all spaces.

       Then to each line is appended suffix characters.  The characters which are appended to the
       ith line are chosen as follows:

           1) If i <= n, the characters are copied from the ones that were removed from  the  end
              of the nth input line.

           2) If i > n > hang, the characters are copied from the ones that were removed from the
              end of the last input line.

           3) If i > n and n <= hang, the first min(fs,suffix) of the characters are copied  from
              the  ones that were removed from the beginning of the last input line, and the rest
              are all spaces.

       Finally, the lines are printed to the output as the OP.

DIAGNOSTICS

       If there are no errors, par returns EXIT_SUCCESS (see <stdlib.h>).

       If there is an error, an error message will be printed to the output, and par will  return
       EXIT_FAILURE.   If the error is local to a single paragraph, the preceding paragraphs will
       have been output before the error was detected.  Line numbers in error messages are  local
       to  the  IP  in which the error occurred.  All error messages begin with "par error:" on a
       line by itself.  Error messages concerning command line or environment variable syntax are
       accompanied by the same usage message that the help option produces.

       Unless  the  option E is set, trying to print an error message would be futile if an error
       resulted from an output function, so par doesn't bother doing any error checking on output
       functions if E is 0.

EXAMPLES

       The  superiority  of  par's dynamic programming algorithm over a greedy algorithm (such as
       the one used by fmt) can be seen in the following example:

       Original paragraph (note that each line begins with 8 spaces):

          We the people of the United States,
          in order to form a more perfect union,
          establish justice,
          insure domestic tranquility,
          provide for the common defense,
          promote the general welfare,
          and secure the blessing of liberty
          to ourselves and our posterity,
          do ordain and establish the Constitution
          of the United States of America.

       After a greedy algorithm with width = 39:

          We the people of the United
          States, in order to form a more
          perfect union, establish
          justice, insure domestic
          tranquility, provide for the
          common defense, promote the
          general welfare, and secure the
          blessing of liberty to
          ourselves and our posterity, do
          ordain and establish the
          Constitution of the United
          States of America.

       After "par 39":

          We the people of the United
          States, in order to form a
          more perfect union, establish
          justice, insure domestic
          tranquility, provide for the
          common defense, promote the
          general welfare, and secure
          the blessing of liberty to
          ourselves and our posterity,
          do ordain and establish the
          Constitution of the United
          States of America.

       The line breaks chosen by par are clearly more eye-pleasing.

       par is most useful in conjunction with the text-filtering features of an editor,  such  as
       the ! commands of vi.  You may wish to add the following lines to your .exrc file:

          " use Bourne shell for speed:
          set shell=/bin/sh
          "
          " reformat paragraph with no arguments:
          map ** {!}par^M}
          "
          " reformat paragraph with arguments:
          map *^V  {!}par

       Note  that  the leading spaces must be removed, and that what is shown as ^M and ^V really
       need to be ctrl-M and ctrl-V.  Also note that the last map  command  contains  two  spaces
       following the ctrl-V, plus one at the end of the line.

       To  reformat  a  simple  paragraph  delimited by blank lines in vi, you can put the cursor
       anywhere in it and type "**" (star star). If you need to supply arguments to par, you  can
       type "* " (star space) instead, then type the arguments.

       The  rest  of  this  section is a series of before-and-after pictures showing some typical
       uses of par.  In all cases, no environment variables are set.

       Before:

          /*   We the people of the United States, */
          /* in order to form a more perfect union, */
          /* establish justice, */
          /* insure domestic tranquility, */
          /* provide for the common defense, */
          /* promote the general welfare, */
          /* and secure the blessing of liberty */
          /* to ourselves and our posterity, */
          /* do ordain and establish the Constitution */
          /* of the United States of America. */

       After "par 59":

          /*   We the people of the United States, in      */
          /* order to form a more perfect union, establish */
          /* justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide */
          /* for the common defense, promote the general   */
          /* welfare, and secure the blessing of liberty   */
          /* to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain     */
          /* and establish the Constitution of the United  */
          /* States of America.                            */

       Or after "par 59f":

          /*   We the people of the United States,  */
          /* in order to form a more perfect union, */
          /* establish justice, insure domestic     */
          /* tranquility, provide for the common    */
          /* defense, promote the general welfare,  */
          /* and secure the blessing of liberty to  */
          /* ourselves and our posterity, do ordain */
          /* and establish the Constitution of the  */
          /* United States of America.              */

       Or after "par 59l":

          /*   We the people of the United States, in      */
          /* order to form a more perfect union, establish */
          /* justice, insure domestic tranquility,         */
          /* provide for the common defense, promote       */
          /* the general welfare, and secure the           */
          /* blessing of liberty to ourselves and our      */
          /* posterity, do ordain and establish the        */
          /* Constitution of the United States of America. */

       Or after "par 59lf":

          /*   We the people of the United States,  */
          /* in order to form a more perfect union, */
          /* establish justice, insure domestic     */
          /* tranquility, provide for the common    */
          /* defense, promote the general welfare,  */
          /* and secure the blessing of liberty     */
          /* to ourselves and our posterity, do     */
          /* ordain and establish the Constitution  */
          /* of the United States of America.       */

       Or after "par 59lft0":

          /*   We the people of the United States,         */
          /* in order to form a more perfect union,        */
          /* establish justice, insure domestic            */
          /* tranquility, provide for the common           */
          /* defense, promote the general welfare,         */
          /* and secure the blessing of liberty            */
          /* to ourselves and our posterity, do            */
          /* ordain and establish the Constitution         */
          /* of the United States of America.              */

       Or after "par 59j":

          /*   We  the people  of  the  United States,  in */
          /* order to form a more perfect union, establish */
          /* justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide */
          /* for the  common defense, promote  the general */
          /* welfare, and  secure the blessing  of liberty */
          /* to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and */
          /* establish  the  Constitution  of  the  United */
          /* States of America.                            */

       Or after "par 59jl":

          /*   We  the   people  of  the   United  States, */
          /* in   order    to   form   a    more   perfect */
          /* union,  establish  justice,  insure  domestic */
          /* tranquility, provide for  the common defense, */
          /* promote  the  general   welfare,  and  secure */
          /* the  blessing  of  liberty to  ourselves  and */
          /* our  posterity, do  ordain and  establish the */
          /* Constitution of the United States of America. */

       Before:

          Preamble      We the people of the United States,
          to the US     in order to form
          Constitution  a more perfect union,
                        establish justice,
                        insure domestic tranquility,
                        provide for the common defense,
                        promote the general welfare,
                        and secure the blessing of liberty
                        to ourselves and our posterity,
                        do ordain and establish
                        the Constitution
                        of the United States of America.

       After "par 52h3":

          Preamble      We the people of the United
          to the US     States, in order to form a
          Constitution  more perfect union, establish
                        justice, insure domestic
                        tranquility, provide for the
                        common defense, promote the
                        general welfare, and secure
                        the blessing of liberty to
                        ourselves and our posterity,
                        do ordain and establish the
                        Constitution of the United
                        States of America.

       Before:

           1  We the people of the United States,
           2  in order to form a more perfect union,
           3  establish justice,
           4  insure domestic tranquility,
           5  provide for the common defense,
           6  promote the general welfare,
           7  and secure the blessing of liberty
           8  to ourselves and our posterity,
           9  do ordain and establish the Constitution
          10  of the United States of America.

       After "par 59p12l":

           1  We the people of the United States, in order to
           2  form a more perfect union, establish justice,
           3  insure domestic tranquility, provide for the
           4  common defense, promote the general welfare,
           5  and secure the blessing of liberty to ourselves
           6  and our posterity, do ordain and establish the
           7  Constitution of the United States of America.

       Before:

          > > We the people
          > > of the United States,
          > > in order to form a more perfect union,
          > > establish justice,
          > > ensure domestic tranquility,
          > > provide for the common defense,
          >
          > Promote the general welfare,
          > and secure the blessing of liberty
          > to ourselves and our posterity,
          > do ordain and establish
          > the Constitution of the United States of America.

       After "par 52":

          > > We the people of the United States, in
          > > order to form a more perfect union,
          > > establish justice, ensure domestic
          > > tranquility, provide for the common
          > > defense,
          >
          > Promote the general welfare, and secure
          > the blessing of liberty to ourselves and
          > our posterity, do ordain and establish
          > the Constitution of the United States of
          > America.

       Before:

          >   We the people
          > of the United States,
          > in order to form a more perfect union,
          > establish justice,
          > ensure domestic tranquility,
          > provide for the common defense,
          >   Promote the general welfare,
          > and secure the blessing of liberty
          > to ourselves and our posterity,
          > do ordain and establish
          > the Constitution of the United States of America.

       After "par 52d":

          >   We the people of the United States,
          > in order to form a more perfect union,
          > establish justice, ensure domestic
          > tranquility, provide for the common
          > defense,
          >   Promote the general welfare, and secure
          > the blessing of liberty to ourselves and
          > our posterity, do ordain and establish
          > the Constitution of the United States of
          > America.

       Before:

          # 1. We the people of the United States.
          # 2. In order to form a more perfect union.
          # 3. Establish justice, ensure domestic
          #    tranquility.
          # 4. Provide for the common defense
          # 5. Promote the general welfare.
          # 6. And secure the blessing of liberty
          #    to ourselves and our posterity.
          # 7. Do ordain and establish the Constitution.
          # 8. Of the United States of America.

       After "par 37p13dh":

          # 1. We the people of the
          #    United States.
          # 2. In order to form a more
          #    perfect union.
          # 3. Establish justice,
          #    ensure domestic
          #    tranquility.
          # 4. Provide for the common
          #    defense
          # 5. Promote the general
          #    welfare.
          # 6. And secure the blessing
          #    of liberty to ourselves
          #    and our posterity.
          # 7. Do ordain and establish
          #    the Constitution.
          # 8. Of the United States of
          #    America.

       Before:

          /*****************************************/
          /*   We the people of the United States, */
          /* in order to form a more perfect union, */
          /* establish justice, insure domestic    */
          /* tranquility,                          */
          /*                                       */
          /*                                       */
          /*   [ provide for the common defense, ] */
          /*   [ promote the general welfare,    ] */
          /*   [ and secure the blessing of liberty ] */
          /*   [ to ourselves and our posterity, ] */
          /*   [                                 ] */
          /*                                       */
          /* do ordain and establish the Constitution */
          /* of the United States of America.       */
          /******************************************/

       After "par 42r":

          /********************************/
          /*   We the people of the       */
          /* United States, in order to   */
          /* form a more perfect union,   */
          /* establish justice, insure    */
          /* domestic tranquility,        */
          /*                              */
          /*                              */
          /*   [ provide for the common ] */
          /*   [ defense, promote the   ] */
          /*   [ general welfare, and   ] */
          /*   [ secure the blessing of ] */
          /*   [ liberty to ourselves   ] */
          /*   [ and our posterity,     ] */
          /*   [                        ] */
          /*                              */
          /* do ordain and establish the  */
          /* Constitution of the United   */
          /* States of America.           */
          /********************************/

       Or after "par 42re":

          /********************************/
          /*   We the people of the       */
          /* United States, in order to   */
          /* form a more perfect union,   */
          /* establish justice, insure    */
          /* domestic tranquility,        */
          /*                              */
          /*   [ provide for the common ] */
          /*   [ defense, promote the   ] */
          /*   [ general welfare, and   ] */
          /*   [ secure the blessing of ] */
          /*   [ liberty to ourselves   ] */
          /*   [ and our posterity,     ] */
          /*                              */
          /* do ordain and establish the  */
          /* Constitution of the United   */
          /* States of America.           */
          /********************************/

       Before:

          Joe Public writes:
          > Jane Doe writes:
          > >
          > >
          > > I can't find the source for uncompress.
          > Oh no, not again!!!
          >
          >
          > Isn't there a FAQ for this?
          >
          >
          That wasn't very helpful, Joe. Jane,
          just make a link from uncompress to compress.

       After "par 40q":

          Joe Public writes:

          > Jane Doe writes:
          >
          >
          > > I can't find the source for
          > > uncompress.
          >
          > Oh no, not again!!!
          >
          >
          > Isn't there a FAQ for this?
          >

          That wasn't very helpful, Joe.
          Jane, just make a link from
          uncompress to compress.

       Or after "par 40qe":

          Joe Public writes:

          > Jane Doe writes:
          >
          > > I can't find the source for
          > > uncompress.
          >
          > Oh no, not again!!!
          >
          > Isn't there a FAQ for this?

          That wasn't very helpful, Joe.
          Jane, just make a link from
          uncompress to compress.

       Or after "par 40qi":

          Joe Public writes:
          > Jane Doe writes:
          > >
          > >
          > > I can't find the source for
          > > uncompress.
          > Oh no, not again!!!
          >
          >
          > Isn't there a FAQ for this?
          >
          >
          That wasn't very helpful, Joe.
          Jane, just make a link from
          uncompress to compress.

       Or after "par 40qie":

          Joe Public writes:
          > Jane Doe writes:
          > > I can't find the source for
          > > uncompress.
          > Oh no, not again!!!
          >
          > Isn't there a FAQ for this?
          That wasn't very helpful, Joe.
          Jane, just make a link from
          uncompress to compress.

       Before:

          I sure hope there's still room
          in Dr. Jones' section of archaeology.
          I've heard he's the bestest.  [sic]

       After "par 50g":

          I sure hope there's still room in
          Dr. Jones' section of archaeology.  I've
          heard he's the bestest. [sic]

       Or after "par 50gc":

          I sure hope there's still room in
          Dr. Jones' section of archaeology.  I've
          heard he's the bestest.  [sic]

       Before:

          John writes:
          : Mary writes:
          : + Anastasia writes:
          : + > Hi all!
          : + Hi Ana!
          : Hi Ana & Mary!
          Please unsubscribe me from alt.hello.

       After "par Q+:+ q":

          John writes:

          : Mary writes:
          :
          : + Anastasia writes:
          : +
          : + > Hi all!
          : +
          : + Hi Ana!
          :
          : Hi Ana & Mary!

          Please unsubscribe me from alt.hello.

       Before:

          amc> The b option was added primarily to deal with
          amc> this new style of quotation
          amc> which became popular after Par 1.41 was released.
          amc>
          amc> Par still pays attention to body characters.
          amc> Par should not mistake "Par" for part of the prefix.
          amc> Par should not mistake "." for a suffix.

       After "par B=._A_a 50bg":

          amc> The b option was added primarily to
          amc> deal with this new style of quotation
          amc> which became popular after Par 1.41
          amc> was released.
          amc>
          amc> Par still pays attention to body
          amc> characters.  Par should not mistake
          amc> "Par" for part of the prefix.  Par
          amc> should not mistake "." for a suffix.

SEE ALSO

       par.doc

LIMITATIONS

       The guess feature guesses wrong in cases like the following:

          I calc'd the approx.
          Fermi level to 3 sig. digits.

       With guess = 1, par will incorrectly assume that "approx."  ends a sentence.  If the input
       were:

          I calc'd the approx. Fermi
          level to 3 sig. digits.

       then  par  would  refuse  to put a line break between "approx." and "Fermi" in the output,
       mainly to avoid creating the first situation (in case the paragraph were to  be  fed  back
       through  par  again).   This  non-breaking  space policy does come in handy for cases like
       "Mr. Johnson" and "Jan. 1", though.

       The guess feature only goes  one  way.   par  can  preserve  wide  sentence  breaks  in  a
       paragraph, or remove them, but it can't insert them if they aren't already in the input.

       If  you  use  tabs,  you  may  not  like the way par handles (or doesn't handle) them.  It
       expands them into spaces.  I didn't let par output tabs because  tabs  don't  make  sense.
       Not  everyone's  terminal  has  the  same  tab settings, so text files containing tabs are
       sometimes mangled.  In fact, almost every text file  containing  tabs  gets  mangled  when
       something is inserted at the beginning of each line (when quoting e-mail or commenting out
       a section of a shell script, for example), making them a pain to edit.  In my opinion, the
       world  would  be a nicer place if everyone stopped using tabs, so I'm doing my part by not
       letting par output them.  (Thanks to Eric Stuebe for showing me the light about tabs.)

       There is currently no way for the length of the output prefix to differ from the length of
       the  input  prefix.   Ditto  for  the  suffix.  I may consider adding this capability in a
       future release, but right now I'm not sure how I'd want it to work.

APOLOGIES

       Par began in July 1993 as a small program designed to  do  one  narrow  task:  reformat  a
       single  paragraph that might have a border on either side.  It was pretty clean back then.
       Over the next three months, it very rapidly expanded to handle multiple paragraphs,  offer
       more options, and take better guesses, at the cost of becoming extremely complex, and very
       unclean.  It is nowhere near the optimal design for  the  larger  task  it  now  tries  to
       address.   Its  only  redeeming  features  are  that  it  is  extremely  useful (I find it
       indispensable), extremely portable, and very stable (between the release of  version  1.41
       on  1993-Oct-31  and the release of version 1.52 on 2001-Apr-29, no incorrect behavior was
       reported).

       Back in 1993 I had very little experience at  writing  documentation  for  users,  so  the
       documentation  for  Par became rather nightmarish.  There is no separation between how-it-
       works (which is painfully complex) and how-to-use-it (which is fairly simple, if  you  can
       ever figure it out).

       Someday I ought to reexamine the problem, and redesign a new, clean solution from scratch.
       I don't know when I might get enough free time to start on such a project.  Text files may
       be obsolete by then.

BUGS

       If  I knew of any bugs, I wouldn't release the package.  Of course, there may be bugs that
       I haven't yet discovered.

       If you find any bugs (in the program  or  in  the  documentation),  or  if  you  have  any
       suggestions, please send e-mail to:

              amc@cs.berkeley.edu

       When  reporting  a  bug, please include the exact input and command line options used, and
       the version number of par, so that I can reproduce it.

       The latest release of Par is available on the Web at:

              http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~amc/Par/

       These addresses will change.  I'll try to leave forward pointers.