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NAME

       tbl - format tables for troff

SYNOPSIS

       tbl [-Cv] [file ...]

DESCRIPTION

       This  manual  page  describes  the GNU version of tbl, which is part of the groff document
       formatting system.  tbl compiles descriptions of tables embedded within troff input  files
       into  commands  that are understood by troff.  Normally, it should be invoked using the -t
       option of groff.  It is highly compatible with Unix tbl.  The output generated by GNU  tbl
       cannot be processed with Unix troff; it must be processed with GNU troff.  If no files are
       given on the command line or a filename of - is given, the standard input is read.

OPTIONS

       -C     Enable compatibility mode to  recognize  .TS  and  .TE  even  when  followed  by  a
              character  other  than  space  or  newline.   Leader characters (\a) are handled as
              interpreted.

       -v     Print the version number.

LANGUAGE OVERVIEW

       tbl expects to find table descriptions wrapped in the .TS (table  start)  and  .TE  (table
       end)  macros.   Within each such table sections, another table can be defined by using the
       request .T& before the final  command  .TE.   Each  table  definition  has  the  following
       structure:

       Global options
              This  is optional.  This table part can use several of these options distributed in
              1 or more lines.  The global option part must always be finished by a semi-colon  ;
              .

       Table format specification
              This  part  must be given, it is not optional.  It determines the number of columns
              (cells) of the table.  Moreover each cell is  classified  by  being  central,  left
              adjusted,  or  numerical, etc.  This specification can have several lines, but must
              be finished by a dot .  at the end of the last line.  After each  cell  definition,
              column specifiers can be appended, but that's optional.

       Cells  are  separated  by  a  tab character by default.  That can be changed by the global
       option tab(c), where c is an arbitrary character.

SIMPLE EXAMPLES

       The easiest table definition is.
              .TS
              c c c .
              This is   centered
              Well,     this also
              .TE
       By using c c c, each cell in the whole table will be centered.  The  separating  character
       is here the default tab.

       The result is

              This     is    centered
              Well,   this     also

       This definition is identical to
              .TS
              tab(@);
              ccc.
              This@is@centered
              Well,@this@also
              .TE
       Here, the separating tab character is changed to the letter @.

       Moreover  a  title  can be added and the centering directions can be changed to many other
       formats:
              .TS
              tab(@);
              c s s
              l c n .
              Title
              left@centers@123
              another@number@75
              .TE
       The result is

                       Title
              left      centers   123
              another   number     75
       Here l means left-justified, and n means numerical, which is here right-justified.

USAGE

   Global options
       The line immediately following the .TS macro may  contain  any  of  the  following  global
       options  (ignoring  the  case  of  characters  –  Unix  tbl  only accepts options with all
       characters lowercase or all characters uppercase), separated by spaces, tabs, or commas:

       allbox Enclose each item of the table in a box.

       box    Enclose the table in a box.

       center Center the table (default is left-justified).  The alternative keyword name  centre
              is also recognized (this is a GNU tbl extension).

       decimalpoint(c)
              Set the character to be recognized as the decimal point in numeric columns (GNU tbl
              only).

       delim(xy)
              Use x and y as start and end delimiters for eqn(1).

       doublebox
              Enclose the table in a double box.

       doubleframe
              Same as doublebox (GNU tbl only).

       expand Make the table as wide as the current line length (providing  a  column  separation
              factor).  Ignored if one or more ‘x’ column specifiers are used (see below).

              In  case  the  sum of the column widths is larger than the current line length, the
              column separation factor is set to zero; such tables extend into the right  margin,
              and there is no column separation at all.

       frame  Same as box (GNU tbl only).

       linesize(n)
              Set lines or rules (e.g. from box) in n-point type.

       nokeep Don't  use diversions to prevent page breaks (GNU tbl only).  Normally tbl attempts
              to prevent undesirable breaks in  boxed  tables  by  using  diversions.   This  can
              sometimes interact badly with macro packages' own use of diversions—when footnotes,
              for example, are used.

       nospaces
              Ignore leading and trailing spaces in data items (GNU tbl only).

       nowarn Turn off warnings related to tables exceeding  the  current  line  width  (GNU  tbl
              only).

       tab(x) Use the character x instead of a tab to separate items in a line of input data.

       The global options must end with a semicolon.  There might be whitespace between an option
       and its argument in parentheses.

   Table format specification
       After global options come lines describing the format of each line  of  the  table.   Each
       such  format line describes one line of the table itself, except that the last format line
       (which you must end with a period) describes all remaining lines of the table.  A  single-
       key  character  describes  each  column  of each line of the table.  Key characters can be
       separated by spaces or tabs.   You  may  run  format  specifications  for  multiple  lines
       together on the same line by separating them with commas.

       You  may  follow each key character with specifiers that determine the font and point size
       of the corresponding item, that determine column width, inter-column spacing, etc.

       The longest format line defines the  number  of  columns  in  the  table;  missing  format
       descriptors  at  the  end  of format lines are assumed to be L.  Extra columns in the data
       (which have no corresponding format entry) are ignored.

       The available key characters are:

       a,A    Center longest line in this column and then left-justifies all other lines in  this
              column  with  respect  to  that  centered line.  The idea is to use such alphabetic
              subcolumns (hence the name of the key character) in combination with  L;  they  are
              called  subcolumns  because  A  items  are  indented  by  1n relative to L entries.
              Example:

                     .TS
                     tab(;);
                     ln,an.
                     item one;1
                     subitem two;2
                     subitem three;3
                     .T&
                     ln,an.
                     item eleven;11
                     subitem twentytwo;22
                     subitem thirtythree;33
                     .TE

              Result:

                     item one                 1
                      subitem two             2
                      subitem three           3
                     item eleven             11
                      subitem twentytwo      22
                      subitem thirtythree    33

       c,C    Center item within the column.

       l,L    Left-justify item within the column.

       n,N    Numerically justify item in the column: Units  positions  of  numbers  are  aligned
              vertically.   If  there  is one or more dots adjacent to a digit, use the rightmost
              one for vertical alignment.  If there is  no  dot,  use  the  rightmost  digit  for
              vertical alignment; otherwise, center the item within the column.  Alignment can be
              forced to a certain position using ‘\&’; if there is one or more instances of  this
              special  (non-printing) character present within the data, use the leftmost one for
              alignment.  Example:

                     .TS
                     n.
                     1
                     1.5
                     1.5.3
                     abcde
                     a\&bcde
                     .TE

              Result:

                       1
                       1.5
                     1.5.3
                      abcde
                       abcde

              If numerical entries are combined with L or R entries –  this  can  happen  if  the
              table  format  is  changed with .T& – center the widest number (of the data entered
              under the N specifier regime) relative to the widest L or R entry,  preserving  the
              alignment  of all numerical entries.  Contrary to A type entries, there is no extra
              indentation.

              Using equations (to be processed with eqn) within columns which use the N specifier
              is  problematic  in  most  cases  due  to  tbl's algorithm for finding the vertical
              alignment, as described above.  Using the  global  delim  option,  however,  it  is
              possible to make tbl ignore the data within eqn delimiters for that purpose.

       r,R    Right-justify item within the column.

       s,S    Span previous item on the left into this column.  Not allowed for the first column.

       ^      Span down entry from previous row in this column.  Not allowed for the first row.

       _,-    Replace  this  entry with a horizontal line.  Note that ‘_’ and ‘-’ can be used for
              table fields only, not for column separator lines.

       =      Replace this entry with a double horizontal line.  Note that ‘=’ can  be  used  for
              table fields only, not for column separator lines.

       |      The  corresponding  column becomes a vertical rule (if two of these are adjacent, a
              double vertical rule).

       A vertical bar to the left of the first key letter  or  to  the  right  of  the  last  one
       produces a line at the edge of the table.

       To  change  the  data format within a table, use the .T& command (at the start of a line).
       It is followed by format and data lines  (but  no  global  options)  similar  to  the  .TS
       request.

   Column specifiers
       Here are the specifiers that can appear in suffixes to column key letters (in any order):

       b,B    Short form of fB (make affected entries bold).

       d,D    Start  an  item  that vertically spans rows, using the ‘^’ column specifier or ‘\^’
              data item, at the bottom of its range rather than vertically centering it (GNU  tbl
              only).  Example:

                     .TS
                     tab(;) allbox;
                     l l
                     l ld
                     r ^
                     l rd.
                     0000;foobar
                     T{
                     1111
                     .br
                     2222
                     T};foo
                     r;
                     T{
                     3333
                     .br
                     4444
                     T};bar
                     \^;\^
                     .TE

              Result:

                     ┌─────┬────────┐
                     │0000 │ foobar │
                     ├─────┼────────┤
                     │1111 │        │
                     │2222 │        │
                     ├─────┤        │
                     │   r │ foo    │
                     ├─────┼────────┤
                     │3333 │        │
                     │4444 │    bar │
                     └─────┴────────┘
       e,E    Make  equally-spaced  columns.  All columns marked with this specifier get the same
              width; this happens after the affected column widths have been computed (this means
              that the largest width value rules).

       f,F    Either  of  these  specifiers  may  be  followed  by a font name (either one or two
              characters long), font number (a single digit), or long name  in  parentheses  (the
              last form is a GNU tbl extension).  A one-letter font name must be separated by one
              or more blanks from whatever follows.

       i,I    Short form of fI (make affected entries italic).

       m,M    This is a GNU tbl extension.  Either of these specifiers may be followed by a macro
              name  (either  one  or  two  characters long), or long name in parentheses.  A one-
              letter macro name must be separated by one or more blanks  from  whatever  follows.
              The  macro  which  name  can  be specified here must be defined before creating the
              table.  It is called just before the table's cell text is output.   As  implemented
              currently,  this macro is only called if block input is used, that is, text between
              ‘T{’ and ‘T}’.  The macro should contain only simple troff requests to  change  the
              text block formatting, like text adjustment, hyphenation, size, or font.  The macro
              is called after other cell modifications like b, f or v are output.  Thus the macro
              can overwrite other modification specifiers.

       p,P    Followed  by  a  number, this does a point size change for the affected fields.  If
              signed, the current point size is incremented or decremented (using a signed number
              instead of a signed digit is a GNU tbl extension).  A point size specifier followed
              by a column separation number must be separated by one or more blanks.

       t,T    Start an item vertically spanning  rows  at  the  top  of  its  range  rather  than
              vertically centering it.

       u,U    Move the corresponding column up one half-line.

       v,V    Followed  by  a  number,  this  indicates the vertical line spacing to be used in a
              multi-line  table  entry.   If  signed,  the  current  vertical  line  spacing   is
              incremented  or  decremented  (using a signed number instead of a signed digit is a
              GNU tbl extension).  A  vertical  line  spacing  specifier  followed  by  a  column
              separation  number  must  be  separated  by  one  or more blanks.  No effect if the
              corresponding table entry isn't a text block.

       w,W    Minimum column width value.  Must be followed either by a troff(1) width expression
              in  parentheses  or  a  unitless  integer.  If no unit is given, en units are used.
              Also used as the default line length for included text blocks.   If  used  multiple
              times to specify the width for a particular column, the last entry takes effect.

       x,X    An  expanded column.  After computing all column widths without an x specifier, use
              the remaining line width for this column.  If  there  is  more  than  one  expanded
              column, distribute the remaining horizontal space evenly among the affected columns
              (this is a GNU extension).  This feature  has  the  same  effect  as  specifying  a
              minimum column width.

       z,Z    Ignore  the corresponding column for width-calculation purposes, this is, don't use
              the fields but only the specifiers of this column to compute its width.

       A number suffix on a key character is interpreted as  a  column  separation  in  en  units
       (multiplied  in  proportion  if  the expand option is on – in case of overfull tables this
       might be zero).  Default separation is 3n.

       The column specifier x is mutually exclusive with e and w (but e is not mutually exclusive
       with w); if specified multiple times for a particular column, the last entry takes effect:
       x unsets both e and w, while either e or w overrides x.

   Table data
       The format lines are followed by lines containing the actual data for the table,  followed
       finally  by  .TE.   Within such data lines, items are normally separated by tab characters
       (or the character specified with the tab option).  Long input lines can be  broken  across
       multiple  lines  if  the  last  character  on  the  line  is  ‘\’  (which  vanishes  after
       concatenation).

       Note that tbl computes the column widths line by line, applying \w  on  each  entry  which
       isn't a text block.  As a consequence, constructions like

              .TS
              c,l.
              \s[20]MM
              MMMM
              .TE

       fail; you must either say

              .TS
              cp20,lp20.
              MM
              MMMM
              .TE

       or

              .TS
              c,l.
              \s[20]MM
              \s[20]MMMM
              .TE

       A  dot  starting  a  line, followed by anything but a digit is handled as a troff command,
       passed through without changes.  The table position is unchanged in this case.

       If a data line consists of only ‘_’ or ‘=’, a single  or  double  line,  respectively,  is
       drawn across the table at that point; if a single item in a data line consists of only ‘_’
       or ‘=’, then that item is replaced by a single or double line, joining its neighbours.  If
       a data item consists only of ‘\_’ or ‘\=’, a single or double line, respectively, is drawn
       across the field at that point which does not join its neighbours.

       A data item consisting only of ‘\Rx’ (‘x’ any character) is  replaced  by  repetitions  of
       character ‘x’ as wide as the column (not joining its neighbours).

       A  data  item  consisting  only  of  ‘\^’ indicates that the field immediately above spans
       downward over this row.

   Text blocks
       A text block can be used to enter data as a single entry which would  be  too  long  as  a
       simple  string  between  tabs.   It is started with ‘T{’ and closed with ‘T}’.  The former
       must end a line, and the latter must start a line, probably followed by other data columns
       (separated with tabs or the character given with the tab global option).

       By  default,  the  text  block  is  formatted  with  the settings which were active before
       entering the table, possibly overridden by the m, v, and w tbl specifiers.   For  example,
       to  make  all  text blocks ragged-right, insert .na right before the starting .TS (and .ad
       after the table).

       If either ‘w’ or ‘x’ specifiers are not given for all columns of a text  block  span,  the
       default  length of the text block (to be more precise, the line length used to process the
       text block diversion) is computed as L×C/(N+1), where ‘L’ is the current line length,  ‘C’
       the  number  of  columns spanned by the text block, and ‘N’ the total number of columns in
       the table.  Note, however, that the actual diversion width as returned in register  \n[dl]
       is  used  eventually as the text block width.  If necessary, you can also control the text
       block width with a direct insertion of a .ll request right after ‘T{’.

   Miscellaneous
       The number register \n[TW] holds the table width; it can't be used within the table itself
       but is defined right before calling .TE so that this macro can make use of it.

       tbl  also  defines  a macro .T# which produces the bottom and side lines of a boxed table.
       While tbl does call this macro itself at the end of the table, it can  be  used  by  macro
       packages  to  create boxes for multi-page tables by calling it within the page footer.  An
       example of this is shown by the -ms macros which provide this  functionality  if  a  table
       starts with .TS H instead of the standard call to the .TS macro.

INTERACTION WITH EQN

       tbl(1)  should  always  be  called before eqn(1) (groff(1) automatically takes care of the
       correct order of preprocessors).

GNU TBL ENHANCEMENTS

       There is no limit on the number of columns in a table, nor any limit on the number of text
       blocks.   All  the lines of a table are considered in deciding column widths, not just the
       first 200.  Table continuation (.T&) lines are not restricted to the first 200 lines.

       Numeric and alphabetic items may appear in the same column.

       Numeric and alphabetic items may span horizontally.

       tbl uses register, string, macro and diversion names beginning with  the  digit  3.   When
       using tbl you should avoid using any names beginning with a 3.

GNU TBL WITHIN MACROS

       Since tbl defines its own macros (right before each table) it is necessary to use an ‘end-
       of-macro’ macro.  Additionally, the escape character has to  be  switched  off.   Here  an
       example.

              .eo
              .de ATABLE ..
              .TS
              allbox tab(;);
              cl.
              \$1;\$2
              .TE
              ...
              .ec
              .ATABLE A table
              .ATABLE Another table
              .ATABLE And "another one"

       Note,  however,  that not all features of tbl can be wrapped into a macro because tbl sees
       the input earlier than troff.  For example,  number  formatting  with  vertically  aligned
       decimal  points  fails  if those numbers are passed on as macro parameters because decimal
       point alignment is handled by tbl itself: It only sees ‘\$1’, ‘\$2’, etc.,  and  therefore
       can't recognize the decimal point.

BUGS

       You should use .TS H/.TH in conjunction with a supporting macro package for all multi-page
       boxed tables.  If there is no header that you wish to appear at the top of  each  page  of
       the  table,  place  the  .TH  line immediately after the format section.  Do not enclose a
       multi-page table within keep/release macros, or divert it in any other way.

       A text block within a table must be able to fit on one page.

       The bp request cannot be used to force a  page-break  in  a  multi-page  table.   Instead,
       define BP as follows

              .de BP
              .  ie '\\n(.z'' .bp \\$1
              .  el \!.BP \\$1
              ..

       and use BP instead of bp.

       Using  \a directly in a table to get leaders does not work (except in compatibility mode).
       This is correct behaviour: \a is an uninterpreted leader.   To  get  leaders  use  a  real
       leader, either by using a control A or like this:

              .ds a \a
              .TS
              tab(;);
              lw(1i) l.
              A\*a;B
              .TE

       A leading and/or trailing ‘|’ in a format line, such as

              |l r|.

       gives  output  which  has a 1n space between the resulting bordering vertical rule and the
       content of the adjacent column, as in

              .TS
              tab(#);
              |l r|.
              left column#right column
              .TE

       If it is desired to have zero space (so that the rule touches the content),  this  can  be
       achieved by introducing extra “dummy” columns, with no content and zero separation, before
       and/or after, as in

              .TS
              tab(#);
              r0|l r0|l.
              #left column#right column#
              .TE

       The resulting “dummy” columns are invisible and have zero width; note  that  such  columns
       usually don't work with TTY devices.

REFERENCE

       Lesk,  M.E.:  "TBL  –  A  Program  to  Format Tables".  For copyright reasons it cannot be
       included in the groff distribution, but copies can be found with a  title  search  on  the
       World Wide Web.

SEE ALSO

       groff(1), troff(1)