Two more possibilities:
man [man Page] -t groff | ps2ascii > [man page].txt
man [man Page] -t groff | lpr
> 2 possible ways, there are others as well.
> man -t | lpr
> groff -man -pte /path/to/some/man/page | lpr
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsub
On Sat, Sep 21, 2002 at 09:47:31PM -0400, fred smith wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 22, 2002 at 09:05:21AM +1200, Linux wrote:
> >
> > >From time to time it is good to have printed copies of man pages.
> > when I issue the command "man binary > /path
> > When I do this most of the text works out OK. The he
On Sun, Sep 22, 2002 at 09:05:21AM +1200, Linux wrote:
>
> >From time to time it is good to have printed copies of man pages.
> when I issue the command "man binary > /path
> When I do this most of the text works out OK. The headings end up with
> double or triple characters or have squares betwe
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Saturday 21 September 2002 05:05 pm, Linux wrote:
> From time to time it is good to have printed copies of man pages.
> when I issue the command "man binary > /path
> When I do this most of the text works out OK. The headings end up with
> double o
>From time to time it is good to have printed copies of man pages.
when I issue the command "man binary > /path
When I do this most of the text works out OK. The headings end up with
double or triple characters or have squares between the repeated characters.
Does anyone know of a method for con