bionic (1) lgrind.1.gz

Provided by: lgrind_3.67-3.1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       lgrind - grind nice program listings using LaTeX

NOTE

       This man page is not yet much outdated, but might be soon except somebody asks me to work on it. Consider
       the LaTeX docs the real docs.

SYNOPSIS

       lgrind [ -e ] [ -i ] [ - ] [ -n ] [ -c ] [ -t <width> ] [ -h <header> ]  [  -d  <description  file>  ]  [
       -l<language> ] [ -s ] <name> ...

DESCRIPTION

       LGrind formats program sources in a nice style using LaTeX(1).  Comments are placed in roman, keywords in
       bold face, variables in italics, and strings in typewriter font. Source file line numbers appear  in  the
       right margin (every 10 lines).

       LGrind  processes  its  input file(s) and writes the result to standard output.  This output can be saved
       for later editting, inclusion in a larger document, etc.

       The options are:

       -e     process a LaTeX file for embedded code.

       -i     process source code file for inclusion in a LaTeX document.

       -      take input from standard input.

       -n     don't boldface keywords.

       -c     don't treat @, etc. specially in comments.

       -t     change tab width (default 8).

       -h     specifies text to go into the header.

       -d     specifies the language definitions file (default is /usr/lib/texmf/tex/latex/lgrind/lgrindef).

       -d!    same as above, but write patched executable.

       -l     specifies the language to use.

       -s     shows a list of currently known languages.

       If LGrind is called without parameters, a help screen will be shown.  If neither -e nor -i are specified,
       a  complete  LaTeX file is produced. When no language is specified, LGrind tries to find out the language
       used itself; C is used when this fails.

USAGE

       For example, to include a C file named foo.c into your LaTeX document, first give the command:

           lgrind -i -lc foo.c > foo.tex

       This will generate foo.tex, which will have the pretty-printed version of  foo.c  with  a  lot  of  LaTeX
       commands.

       Then  include  lgrind.sty as you include any other style, namely with the \usepackage{lgrind} line at the
       beginning of your LaTeX document. Having done this, within the document you can include foo.tex using one
       of the following commands:

       \lgrindfile{foo.tex}
              which  will  simply  include the file at that point of text, and will draw horizontal lines before
              and after the listing.

       \lagrind[htbp]{foo.tex}{caption}{label}
              which will put the listing also within a figure environment, using the float options, caption  and
              label you gave.

       To produce a standalone LaTeX file from, say, a Yacc file:

           lgrind -ly bary.y > bary.tex
              This uses Piet van Oostrum's fancyhdr.sty to make the headers and footers.

       For a more detailed explanation of these commands, refer to /usr/TeX/texmf/doc/latex/lgrind.dvi.

EMBEDDED PROGRAMS WITHIN A LaTeX FILE

       (From Jerry Leichter's notes.)

       Within  the  text  of  your LaTeX file, you mark groups of lines as either text- or display-style program
       code:

       Text style:

           The expression
           %(
           a + 3
           %)
           produces 10.
       prints something like:  "The expression a + 3 produces 10."  (with "a + 3" set as a program.)

       The same effect can be achieved with inline @'s.

           The expression @a + 3@ produces 10.

       Display style:

           The statement
           %[
           a += 3;
           %]
           is an example of an incrementing operator.
       prints something like:

           The statement
                 a += 3;
           is an example of an incrementing operator.

       Important rules:

              % and the following character must be the first two characters on the line to be recognized.

              Put nothing on the line after the % and the key character.  If you do that, LGrind will provide  a
              default  environment  that  will  produce an \hbox for %( )%, and a \vbox for %[ - %].  If you put
              stuff on the line, LGrind assumes you want to control the format completely.  Doing this  requires
              understanding exactly what the code LGrind produces is doing. (Sometimes I'm not sure I do!)

              %) and %] are, if I remember right, simply ignored outside of a code group, but any extra %( or %[
              produces a warning, so a missing %) or %] is usually caught.

       You can insert your own code by using a line starting with %= in the program text.   Whatever  you  enter
       after that is left in the output, exactly as you typed it.  It will be executed in a strange environment,
       so doing anything fancy is very tricky.  A macro, \Line, is provided to help you do simple  things.   For
       example,

       %[
       %=\Line{________\vdots}
               a = 1;
       %]
       produces:

               .
               .
               .
               a = 1;

       (Within  the  program  text, _ is active and expands to a fixed-width space.  A whole bunch of macros are
       also defined.  If you understand how LGrind sets lines up, you can replace the 8 _'s with a call to  \Tab
       — but I'll let you hang yourself on that one.)

       The output of LGrind always contains exactly one output line for each input line.  Hence, you can look up
       line numbers in TeX error messages in your original file, rather than in the lgrind'ed  (lground?)  file.
       (Of course, if the problem is in the LGrind output....)

       Many  things  are  controllable by re-defining various macros.  You can change what fonts LGrind will use
       for various kinds of things, how much it indents the output, whether it adds line numbers, and if  so  at
       what  interval  it prints them and whether it sticks them on the left or right, and so on.  This stuff is
       all described in lgrind.dvi, though probably not very well. The  default  settings  produce  output  that
       looks  reasonable to me, though I can't say I'm ecstatic about it.  Doing a really good job would require
       defining some special fonts.

FILES

       /usr/bin/lgrind
              Executable

       /usr/doc/lgrind/lgrind.dvi
              Documentation

       /usr/lib/texmf/tex/latex/lgrind/lgrind.sty
              LaTeX style file

       /usr/lib/texmf/tex/latex/lgrind/lgrindef
              Language descriptions

AUTHORS

       Van Jacobson, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (based on "vgrind" by  Dave  Presotto  &  William  Joy  of  UC
       Berkeley), wrote it for TeX.

       Jerry Leichter of Yale University modified it for LaTeX.

       George  V.  Reilly  of  Brown University changed the name to lgrind, fixed up the man page, and added the
       program-text-within-comments and @-within-LaTeX features.

       Michael Piefel of Humboldt-University Berlin adapted it to LaTeX2e and wrote decent documentation.

SEE ALSO

       latex(1), tex(1), vgrind(1), lgrindef(5)