NAME¶
nroff - use groff to format documents for TTY devices
SYNOPSIS¶
  
    nroff | 
    [-CchipStUv] [-dcs] [-Mdir]
      [-mname] [-nnum] [-olist]
      [-rcn] [-Tname] [-Wwarning]
      [-wwarning] [file ...] | 
  
DESCRIPTION¶
nroff formats documents written in the roff(7) language for
  typewriter-like devices such as terminal emulators.
GNU nroff emulates the traditional Unix nroff
    command using groff(1). nroff generates output via
    grotty(1), groff's TTY output device, which needs to know the
    character encoding scheme used by the terminal. Consequently, acceptable
    arguments to the -T option are ascii, latin1,
    utf8, and cp1047; any others are ignored. If neither the
    GROFF_TYPESETTER environment variable nor the -T command-line
    option (which overrides the environment variable) specifies a (valid)
    device, nroff consults the locale to select an appropriate output
    device. It first tries the locale(1) program, then checks several
    locale-related environment variables; see “ENVIRONMENT”,
    below. If all of the foregoing fail, -Tascii is implied.
Whitespace is not permitted between an option and its argument.
    The -h and -c options are equivalent to grotty's
    options -h (using tabs in the output) and -c (using the old
    output scheme instead of SGR escape sequences). The -d, -C,
    -i, -M, -m, -n, -o, -r, -w,
    and -W options have the effect described in troff(1). In
    addition, nroff ignores -e, -q, and -s (which
    are not implemented in troff). The options -p (pic), -t
    (tbl), -S (safer), and -U (unsafe) are passed to groff.
    -v and --version show version information, while --help
    displays a usage message; all exit afterward.
ENVIRONMENT¶
  - GROFF_TYPESETTER
 
  - specifies the default output device for groff.
 
  - GROFF_BIN_PATH
 
  - is a colon-separated list of directories in which to search for the
      groff executable before searching in PATH. If unset,
      /usr/bin is used.
 
  - LC_ALL
 
  
  - LC_CTYPE
 
  
  - LANG
 
  
  - LESSCHARSET
 
  - are pattern-matched in this order for standard character encodings
      supported by groff in the event no -T option is given and
      GROFF_TYPESETTER is unset.
 
NOTES¶
Character definitions in the file
  /usr/share/groff/1.22.4/tmac/tty-char.tmac are loaded to replace
  unrepresentable glyphs.