Branden -- On Sat, Sep 02, 2023, G. Branden Robinson wrote: > > Question 1: > > Is \a only interpreted in copy mode as this would suggest? > > Yes. This has been documented for a long time, but I don't think very > clearly.
Precisely why I asked. :) > Until (he boasted) groff 1.23.0. > ... > -- Escape sequence: \a > Interpolate a leader in copy mode; see *note Copy Mode::. Perfectly accurate, but given the oddity (rarity?) of an escape sequence reserved for use in copy mode, I wonder if a little amplification might help in addition to the "see *note". > > Question 2: > > What is causing the erroneous justification of the third line? > > There's more than enough room for "air" and some leader. > > There is not, in the example you provided. You set one tab stop, at the > line length (meaning at the right margin), so there was no hope of > "air"+leader fitting on the line. That's not at all how I interpret what I see in the output, which is: The château into which my valet had ventured to make forcible en‐ trance, rather than permit me, in my deparately wounded condi‐ tion, to pass a night in the open air.................................. Since this can be rendered as The château into which my valet had ventured to make forcible en‐ trance, rather than permit me, in my deparately wounded condi‐ tion, to pass a night in the open air............................|<=unique tab stop i.e. there's plenty of room. The leader character is introduced at a point in the line where it should, according to "A leader character...behaves similarly to a tab character: it moves to the next tab stop. The difference is that for this movement, the default fill character is a period '.'." move to the tab stop at the right margin and fill the space with leaders, no? I can see where there might be problems in situations similar what the docs have to say about \R, but here I don't think that's the case. > > Question 3: > > Why do the leaders not respect .ta \n[.l]u? > > As I understand your example, the leader respected your tab stop > precisely; it was of the correct length to reach the configured right > margin _relative to the horizontal drawing position corresponding to the > start of the input line_, was formatted, was too long, could not be > hyphenated, and so was kicked to the next line. Leaders, like tabs, are > not considered break points. I'll repeat my example here for ease of discussion. cat <<EOF | groff -Kutf8 -k -Tutf8 .pl 3v .ta \n[.l]u The château into which my valet had ventured to make forcible entrance, rather than permit me, in my deparately wounded condition, to pass a night in the open air^A EOF As nearly as I can fathom, "the horizontal drawing position corresponding to the start of the input line" is at the word "to", which still leaves plenty of room for "air"+leaders (see above). I still don't understand what's going on. -- Peter Schaffter https://www.schaffter.ca