The `\(lq` and `\(rq` and special character escape sequences are not universally portable.
Traditionally, AT&T troff did not bother to identify these special
characters at all; it was apparently felt that adjacently setting
directional single quotes sufficed. You can discern this fact in
materials typeset by AT&T troff by observing what one might call
generous kerning of these glyphs when used as "double" quotes.
However, someone at the Berkeley CSRG had a brainwave, and for 4BSD in
1980, added strings named `lq` and `rq` to the man(7) package so that
man pages could access double quotes by whatever means the underlying
implementation had for realizing them. This excellent idea made it into
Unix System V (1988/9), so that every surviving troff implementation
known to me, including DWB and Solaris 10, supports them--save one. The
exception is Plan 9. Fortunately, the Plan 9 from User Space
("plan9port") project accepted a patch from me on 10 October to add
support there as well.[1]
Like the \*" string, \*(lq and \*(rq should not be used in quoted macro
arguments if one desires portability to AT&T troff-descended formatters
(other than Heirloom Doctools troff); if the implementation defines
these strings such that their interpolations contain `"`, undesired
output is the likely result.
[1] https://github.com/9fans/plan9port/pull/735
---
find/find.1 | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/find/find.1 b/find/find.1
index ccec8cd3..199f5240 100644
--- a/find/find.1
+++ b/find/find.1
@@ -2795,7 +2795,7 @@ .SS "Operator precedence surprises"
and when there is no operator specified between tests,
.B \-a
is assumed.
-.SS "\(lqpaths must precede expression\(rq error message"
+.SS "\*(lqpaths must precede expression\*(rq error message"
.nf
.B $ find .\& \-name *.c \-print
find: paths must precede expression
--
2.30.2
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
