refer man page on BSDi

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   6284 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
BSDi logo
[printable version]



REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

NAME
       refer - preprocess bibliographic references for groff

SYNOPSIS
       refer [ -benvCPRS ] [ -an ] [ -cfields ] [ -fn ]
	     [ -ifields ] [ -kfield ] [ -lm,n ] [ -pfilename ]
	     [ -sfields ] [ -tn ] [ -Bfield.macro ]
	     [ filename... ]

DESCRIPTION
       This file documents the GNU version  of	refer,	which  is
       part  of	 the  groff  document  formatting  system.  refer
       copies the contents of filename...  to the  standard  out-
       put,  except that lines between .[ and .]  are interpreted
       as citations, and lines between .R1  and	 .R2  are  inter-
       preted  as  commands  about  how	 citations are to be pro-
       cessed.

       Each citation specifies a  reference.   The  citation  can
       specify	a  reference that is contained in a bibliographic
       database by giving a set of keywords that only that refer-
       ence  contains.	 Alternatively it can specify a reference
       by supplying a database record in the citation.	A  combi-
       nation of these alternatives is also possible.

       For  each  citation, refer can produce a mark in the text.
       This mark consists of some label which  can  be	separated
       from  the text and from other labels in various ways.  For
       each reference it also outputs groff commands that can  be
       used  by	 a macro package to produce a formatted reference
       for each citation.  The output of refer must therefore  be
       processed using a suitable macro package.  The -ms and -me
       macros are both suitable.  The commands to format a  cita-
       tion's reference can be output immediately after the cita-
       tion, or the references may be accumulated, and	the  com-
       mands  output  at some later point.  If the references are
       accumulated, then multiple citations of the same reference
       will produce a single formatted reference.

       The  interpretation  of	lines between .R1 and .R2 as com-
       mands is a new feature of GNU refer.  Documents making use
       of  this feature can still be processed by Unix refer just
       by adding the lines

	      .de R1
	      .ig R2
	      ..
       to the beginning of the document.  This will  cause  troff
       to  ignore  everything between .R1 and .R2.  The effect of
       some commands can also  be  achieved  by	 options.   These
       options	are  supported mainly for compatibility with Unix
       refer.  It is usually more convenient to use commands.

       refer generates .lf  lines  so  that  filenames	and  line

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			1

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       numbers	in  messages produced by commands that read refer
       output will be correct; it also interprets lines beginning
       with  .lf  so  that filenames and line numbers in the mes-
       sages and .lf lines that it produces will be accurate even
       if  the	input  has been preprocessed by a command such as
       soelim(1).

OPTIONS
       Most options are equivalent to commands (for a description
       of these commands see the Commands subsection):

       -b     no-label-in-text; no-label-in-reference

       -e     accumulate

       -n     no-default-database

       -C     compatible

       -P     move-punctuation

       -S     label  "(A.n|Q) ', ' (D.y|D)"; bracket-label " (" )
	      "; "

       -an    reverse An

       -cfields
	      capitalize fields

       -fn    label %n

       -ifields
	      search-ignore fields

       -k     label L~%a

       -kfield
	      label field~%a

       -l     label A.nD.y%a

       -lm    label A.n+mD.y%a

       -l,n   label A.nD.y-n%a

       -lm,n  label A.n+mD.y-n%a

       -pfilename
	      database filename

       -sspec sort spec

       -tn    search-truncate n

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			2

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       These options are equivalent  to	 the  following	 commands
       with the addition that the filenames specified on the com-
       mand line are processed as if they were arguments  to  the
       bibliography command instead of in the normal way:

       -B     annotate X AP; no-label-in-reference

       -Bfield.macro
	      annotate field macro; no-label-in-reference

       The following options have no equivalent commands:

       -v     Print the version number.

       -R     Don't recognize lines beginning with .R1/.R2.

USAGE
   Bibliographic databases
       The  bibliographic  database  is a text file consisting of
       records separated by one or more blank lines.  Within each
       record  fields  start with a % at the beginning of a line.
       Each field has a one character name that immediately  fol-
       lows  the  %.  It is best to use only upper and lower case
       letters for the names of fields.	 The name  of  the  field
       should  be  followed by exactly one space, and then by the
       contents of the field.  Empty  fields  are  ignored.   The
       conventional meaning of each field is as follows:

       A      The  name	 of  an	 author.   If the name contains a
	      title such as Jr.	 at the end, it should	be  sepa-
	      rated  from the last name by a comma.  There can be
	      multiple occurrences of the A field.  The order  is
	      significant.  It is a good idea always to supply an
	      A field or a Q field.

       B      For an article that is part of a book, the title of
	      the book

       C      The place (city) of publication.

       D      The date of publication.	The year should be speci-
	      fied in full.  If the month is specified, the  name
	      rather than the number of the month should be used,
	      but only the first three letters are required.   It
	      is  a  good idea always to supply a D field; if the
	      date is unknown,	a  value  such	as  in	press  or
	      unknown can be used.

       E      For  an article that is part of a book, the name of
	      an editor of the book.  Where the work has  editors
	      and  no authors, the names of the editors should be
	      given as A fields and , (ed) or , (eds)  should  be
	      appended to the last author.

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			3

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       G      US Government ordering number.

       I      The publisher (issuer).

       J      For  an article in a journal, the name of the jour-
	      nal.

       K      Keywords to be used for searching.

       L      Label.

       N      Journal issue number.

       O      Other information.  This is usually printed at  the
	      end of the reference.

       P      Page  number.  A range of pages can be specified as
	      m-n.

       Q      The name of the author, if the author is not a per-
	      son.   This  will	 only  be  used if there are no A
	      fields.  There can only be one Q field.

       R      Technical report number.

       S      Series name.

       T      Title.  For an article in a book or  journal,  this
	      should be the title of the article.

       V      Volume number of the journal or book.

       X      Annotation.

       For  all	 fields except A and E, if there is more than one
       occurrence of a particular field in  a  record,	only  the
       last such field will be used.

       If accent strings are used, they should follow the charac-
       ter to be accented.  This means that the AM macro must  be
       used  with  the	-ms macros.  Accent strings should not be
       quoted: use one \ rather than two.

   Citations
       The format of a citation is
	      .[opening-text
	      flags keywords
	      fields
	      .]closing-text

       The opening-text, closing-text and  flags  components  are
       optional.   Only one of the keywords and fields components
       need be specified.

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			4

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       The keywords component says to  search  the  bibliographic
       databases  for  a reference that contains all the words in
       keywords.  It is an error if more than  one  reference  if
       found.

       The  fields  components	specifies  additional  fields  to
       replace or supplement those specified  in  the  reference.
       When  references	 are  being  accumulated and the keywords
       component is non-empty, then additional fields  should  be
       specified  only	on  the	 first occasion that a particular
       reference is cited, and will apply  to  all  citations  of
       that reference.

       The  opening-text  and  closing-text  component	specifies
       strings to be used to bracket the  label	 instead  of  the
       strings specified in the bracket-label command.	If either
       of these components is non-empty, the strings specified in
       the bracket-label command will not be used; this behaviour
       can be altered using the [ and ] flags.	Note that leading
       and  trailing spaces are significant for these components.

       The flags component is a list of non-alphanumeric  charac-
       ters each of which modifies the treatment of this particu-
       lar citation.  Unix refer will treat these flags	 as  part
       of  the	keywords  and  so will ignore them since they are
       non-alphanumeric.  The following flags are currently  rec-
       ognized:

       #      This  says to use the label specified by the short-
	      label command, instead of	 that  specified  by  the
	      label  command.	If no short label has been speci-
	      fied, the normal label will be used.  Typically the
	      short  label  is	used  with author-date labels and
	      consists of only the date	 and  possibly	a  disam-
	      biguating	 letter;  the # is supposed to be sugges-
	      tive of a numeric type of label.

       [      Precede opening-text with the first  string  speci-
	      fied in the bracket-label command.

       ]      Follow  closing-text  with the second string speci-
	      fied in the bracket-label command.

       One advantages of using the [  and  ]  flags  rather  than
       including the brackets in opening-text and closing-text is
       that you can change the style of bracket used in the docu-
       ment  just by changing the bracket-label command.  Another
       advantage is that sorting and merging  of  citations  will
       not necessarily be inhibited if the flags are used.

       If  a  label  is	 to be inserted into the text, it will be
       attached to the line preceding the .[ line.  If	there  is
       no  such	 line, then an extra line will be inserted before
       the .[ line and a warning will be given.

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			5

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       There is no special notation for making a citation to mul-
       tiple  references.   Just use a sequence of citations, one
       for each reference.  Don't put anything between the  cita-
       tions.	The labels for all the citations will be attached
       to the line preceding the first citation.  The labels  may
       also  be	 sorted or merged.  See the description of the <>
       label expression,  and  of  the	sort-adjacent-labels  and
       abbreviate-label-ranges	command.   A  label  will  not be
       merged if its citation has  a  non-empty	 opening-text  or
       closing-text.   However,	 the  labels for a citation using
       the ] flag and without any closing-text	immediately  fol-
       lowed by a citation using the [ flag and without any open-
       ing-text may be sorted and merged even  though  the  first
       citation's  opening-text or the second citation's closing-
       text is non-empty.  (If you wish to prevent this just make
       the first citation's closing-text \&.)

   Commands
       Commands are contained between lines starting with .R1 and
       .R2.  Recognition of these lines can be prevented  by  the
       -R  option.  When a .R1 line is recognized any accumulated
       references are flushed out.  Neither .R1	 nor  .R2  lines,
       nor anything between them is output.

       Commands	 are separated by newlines or ;s.  # introduces a
       comment that extends to the end of the line (but does  not
       conceal	the  newline).	 Each  command	is broken up into
       words.  Words are separated by spaces  or  tabs.	  A  word
       that  begins with " extends to the next " that is not fol-
       lowed by another ".  If	there  is  no  such  "	the  word
       extends	to  the	 end  of  the line.  Pairs of " in a word
       beginning with " collapse to a single ".	 Neither # nor	;
       are recognized inside "s.  A line can be continued by end-
       ing it with \; this works everywhere except after a #.

       Each command name that is marked with * has an  associated
       negative	 command  no-name that undoes the effect of name.
       For example, the no-sort command specifies that references
       should not be sorted.  The negative commands take no argu-
       ments.

       In the following description each argument must be a  sin-
       gle  word;  field is used for a single upper or lower case
       letter naming a field; fields is used for  a  sequence  of
       such letters; m and n are used for a non-negative numbers;
       string is used for an arbitrary string; filename	 is  used
       for the name of a file.

       abbreviate* fields string1 string2 string3 string4
				Abbreviate  the	 first	names  of
				fields.	 An initial  letter  will
				be separated from another initial
				letter by string1, from the  last
				name   by   string2,   and   from

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			6

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

				anything else (such as a  von  or
				de) by string3.	 These default to
				a period followed by a space.  In
				a hyphenated first name, the ini-
				tial of the  first  part  of  the
				name  will  be separated from the
				hyphen by string4; this	 defaults
				to  a period.  No attempt is made
				to handle  any	ambiguities  that
				might  result  from abbreviation.
				Names  are   abbreviated   before
				sorting	 and  before  label  con-
				struction.

       abbreviate-label-ranges* string
				Three  or  more	 adjacent  labels
				that  refer to consecutive refer-
				ences will be  abbreviated  to	a
				label  consisting  of  the  first
				label, followed	 by  string  fol-
				lowed by the last label.  This is
				mainly	 useful	  with	  numeric
				labels.	  If string is omitted it
				defaults to -.

       accumulate*		Accumulate references instead  of
				writing	 out each reference as it
				is encountered.	 Accumulated ref-
				erences will be written out when-
				ever a reference of the form

				       .[
				       $LIST$
				       .]

				is encountered, after  all  input
				files  hve  been  processed,  and
				whenever .R1 line is  recognized.

       annotate* field string	field  is an annotation; print it
				at the end of the reference as	a
				paragraph preceded by the line

				       .string

				If   macro  is	omitted	 it  will
				default to AP; if field	 is  also
				omitted	 it  will  default  to X.
				Only one field can be an  annota-
				tion.

       articles string...	string...  are definite or indef-
				inite  articles,  and  should  be
				ignored	 at  the  beginning  of T

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			7

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

				fields when sorting.   Initially,
				the,  a	 and an are recognized as
				articles.

       bibliography filename... Write out all the references con-
				tained	 in   the   bibliographic
				databases filename...

       bracket-label string1 string2 string3
				In the text, bracket  each  label
				with  string1  and  string2.   An
				occurrence of string2 immediately
				followed   by	string1	 will  be
				turned into string3.  The default
				behaviour is

				       bracket-label  \*([. \*(.]
				       ", "

       capitalize fields	Convert fields to caps and  small
				caps.

       compatible*		Recognize  .R1	and .R2 even when
				followed  by  a	 character  other
				than space or newline.

       database filename...	Search	    the	    bibliographic
				databases filename...	For  each
				filename  if  an index filename.i
				created	 by  indxbib(1)	  exists,
				then it will be searched instead;
				each  index  can  cover	 multiple
				databases.

       date-as-label* string	string is a label expression that
				specifies a string with which  to
				replace	 the  D	 field after con-
				structing  the	label.	 See  the
				Label  expressions subsection for
				a description  of  label  expres-
				sions.	This command is useful if
				you do not want	 explicit  labels
				in   the   reference   list,  but
				instead want to handle any neces-
				sary disambiguation by qualifying
				the date in some way.  The  label
				used  in the text would typically
				be some combination of the author
				and  date.   In	 most  cases  you
				should also use the  no-label-in-
				reference command.  For example,

				       date-as-label
				       D.+yD.y%a*D.-y

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			8

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

				would  attach  a   disambiguating
				letter	to the year part of the D
				field in the reference.

       default-database*	The default  database  should  be
				searched.   This  is  the default
				behaviour, so the  negative  ver-
				sion of this command is more use-
				ful.   refer  determines  whether
				the  default  database	should be
				searched on  the  first	 occasion
				that  it  needs	 to  do a search.
				Thus a	no-default-database  com-
				mand  must  be given before then,
				in order to be effective.

       discard* fields		When  the  reference   is   read,
				fields	should	be  discarded; no
				string	definitions  for   fields
				will   be   output.    Initially,
				fields are XYZ.

       et-al* string m n	Control use of et al in the eval-
				uation	of @ expressions in label
				expressions.  If  the  number  of
				authors needed to make the author
				sequence unambiguous is u and the
				total number of authors is t then
				the  last  t-u	authors	 will  be
				replaced  by string provided that
				t-u is not less than m and  t  is
				not  less  than	 n.   The default
				behaviour is

				       et-al " et al" 2 3

       include filename		Include	 filename  and	interpret
				the contents as commands.

       join-authors string1 string2 string3
				This  says  how authors should be
				joined together.  When there  are
				exactly two authors, they will be
				joined with string1.  When  there
				are  more  than	 two authors, all
				but the last two will  be  joined
				with  string2,	and  the last two
				authors	 will  be   joined   with
				string3.   If string3 is omitted,
				it will default	 to  string1;  if
				string2	 is  also omitted it will
				also  default  to  string1.   For
				example,

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995			9

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

				       join-authors  " and " ", "
				       ", and "

				will restore the  default  method
				for joining authors.

       label-in-reference*	When  outputting  the  reference,
				define the string [F  to  be  the
				reference's  label.   This is the
				default behaviour; so  the  nega-
				tive  version  of this command is
				more useful.

       label-in-text*		For each reference output a label
				in  the	 text.	The label will be
				separated  from	 the  surrounding
				text as described in the bracket-
				label  command.	  This	 is   the
				default	 behaviour;  so the nega-
				tive version of this  command  is
				more useful.

       label string		string	 is  a	label  expression
				describing how to label each ref-
				erence.

       separate-label-second-parts string
				When   merging	two-part  labels,
				separate the second part  of  the
				second label from the first label
				with string.  See the description
				of the <> label expression.

       move-punctuation*	In the text, move any punctuation
				at  the	 end  of  line	past  the
				label.	It is usually a good idea
				to give this command  unless  you
				are  using  superscripted numbers
				as labels.

       reverse* string		Reverse the  fields  whose  names
				are  in	 string.  Each field name
				can be followed by a number which
				says  how many such fields should
				be reversed.   If  no  number  is
				given	for  a	field,	all  such
				fields will be reversed.

       search-ignore* fields	While  searching  for	keys   in
				databases   for	 which	no  index
				exists, ignore	the  contents  of
				fields.	  Initially,  fields  XYZ
				are ignored.

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995		       10

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       search-truncate* n	Only require the first n  charac-
				ters  of  keys	to  be given.  In
				effect when searching for a given
				key  words  in	the  database are
				truncated to the maximum of n and
				the length of the key.	Initially
				n is 6.

       short-label* string	string is a label expression that
				specifies an alternative (usually
				shorter) style of label.  This is
				used  when the # flag is given in
				the citation.  When using author-
				date  style  labels, the identity
				of the author or authors is some-
				times clear from the context, and
				so it may be  desirable	 to  omit
				the  author  or	 authors from the
				label.	The  short-label  command
				will typically be used to specify
				a label containing  just  a  date
				and   possibly	a  disambiguating
				letter.

       sort* string		Sort  references   according   to
				string.	 References will automat-
				ically	be  accumulated.   string
				should	be a list of field names,
				each followed by a number,  indi-
				cating	how  many fields with the
				name should be used for	 sorting.
				+  can	be  used to indicate that
				all  the  fields  with	the  name
				should	be  used.  Also .  can be
				used to indicate  the  references
				should	be sorted using the (ten-
				tative)	  label.    (The    Label
				expressions  subsection describes
				the  concept   of   a	tentative
				label.)

       sort-adjacent-labels*	Sort  labels that are adjacent in
				the text according to their posi-
				tion in the reference list.  This
				command should usually	be  given
				if   the  abbreviate-label-ranges
				command has been given, or if the
				label  expression  contains  a <>
				expression.  This  will	 have  no
				effect	 unless	  references  are
				being accumulated.

   Label expressions
       Label expressions  can  be  evaluated  both  normally  and

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995		       11

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       tentatively.   The result of normal evaluation is used for
       output.	The result of tentative	 evaluation,  called  the
       tentative  label,  is  used to gather the information that
       normal evaluation needs to disambiguate the label.   Label
       expressions specified by the date-as-label and short-label
       commands are not evaluated tentatively.	Normal and tenta-
       tive  evaluation	 are the same for all types of expression
       other than @, *, and % expressions.  The description below
       applies to normal evaluation, except where otherwise spec-
       ified.

       field
       field n
	      The n-th part  of	 field.	  If  n	 is  omitted,  it
	      defaults to 1.

       'string'
	      The characters in string literally.

       @      All  the	authors	 joined as specified by the join-
	      authors command.	The whole of each  author's  name
	      will  be	used.	However,  if  the  references are
	      sorted by author (that is	 the  sort  specification
	      starts  with  A+), then authors' last names will be
	      used instead, provided that this does not introduce
	      ambiguity,  and  also an initial subsequence of the
	      authors may be used instead  of  all  the	 authors,
	      again provided that this does not introduce ambigu-
	      ity.  The use of only the last name  for	the  i-th
	      author  of  some	reference  is  considered  to  be
	      ambiguous if there is some  other	 reference,  such
	      that  the	 first	i-1 authors of the references are
	      the same, the i-th authors are not  the  same,  but
	      the  i-th	 authors'  last	 names	are  the same.	A
	      proper  initial  subsequence  of	the  sequence  of
	      authors  for  some  reference  is	 considered to be
	      ambiguous if there is a reference with  some  other
	      sequence of authors which also has that subsequence
	      as a proper initial subsequence.	When  an  initial
	      subsequence  of  authors	is  used,  the	remaining
	      authors are replaced by the string specified by the
	      et-al  command; this command may also specify addi-
	      tional requirements that must be met before an ini-
	      tial subsequence can be used.  @ tentatively evalu-
	      ates to a canonical representation of the	 authors,
	      such  that authors that compare equally for sorting
	      purpose will have the same representation.

       %n
       %a
       %A
       %i
       %I     The  serial  number  of  the  reference	formatted
	      according	 to  the  character following the %.  The

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995		       12

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

	      serial number of a reference is 1 plus  the  number
	      of  earlier references with same tentative label as
	      this  reference.	 These	expressions   tentatively
	      evaluate to an empty string.

       expr*  If  there is another reference with the same tenta-
	      tive label as this reference, then expr,	otherwise
	      an  empty	 string.   It tentatively evaluates to an
	      empty string.

       expr+n
       expr-n The first (+) or last (-) n  upper  or  lower  case
	      letters  or  digits of expr.  Troff special charac-
	      ters (such as  \('a)  count  as  a  single  letter.
	      Accent  strings  are  retained  but  do  not  count
	      towards the total.

       expr.l expr converted to lowercase.

       expr.u expr converted to uppercase.

       expr.c expr converted to caps and small caps.

       expr.r expr reversed so that the last name is first.

       expr.a expr  with  first	 names	abbreviated.   Note  that
	      fields  specified	 in  the  abbreviate  command are
	      abbreviated before any labels are evaluated.   Thus
	      .a  is  useful  only  when  you  want a field to be
	      abbreviated in a label but not in a reference.

       expr.y The year part of expr.

       expr.+y
	      The part of expr before the year, or the	whole  of
	      expr if it does not contain a year.

       expr.-y
	      The part of expr after the year, or an empty string
	      if expr does not contain a year.

       expr.n The last name part of expr.

       expr1~expr2
	      expr1 except that if the last character of expr1 is
	      - then it will be replaced by expr2.

       expr1 expr2
	      The concatenation of expr1 and expr2.

       expr1|expr2
	      If expr1 is non-empty then expr1 otherwise expr2.

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995		       13

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       expr1&expr2
	      If expr1 is non-empty then expr2 otherwise an empty
	      string.

       expr1?expr2:expr3
	      If expr1 is non-empty then expr2 otherwise expr3.

       <expr> The label is in two parts, which are  separated  by
	      expr.   Two adjacent two-part labels which have the
	      same first part will be  merged  by  appending  the
	      second  part  of	the  second  label onto the first
	      label separated by the string specified in the sep-
	      arate-label-second-parts	 command   (initially,	a
	      comma followed by a  space);  the	 resulting  label
	      will  also  be a two-part label with the same first
	      part as before merging, and  so  additional  labels
	      can be merged into it.  Note that it is permissible
	      for the first part to be empty; this  maybe  desir-
	      able  for	 expressions used in the short-label com-
	      mand.

       (expr) The same as expr.	 Used for grouping.

       The above expressions are listed in  order  of  precedence
       (highest first); & and | have the same precedence.

   Macro interface
       Each  reference	starts	with a call to the macro ]-.  The
       string [F will be defined to be the label for this  refer-
       ence,  unless  the  no-label-in-reference command has been
       given.  There then follows a series of string definitions,
       one for each field: string [X corresponds to field X.  The
       number register [P is set to 1 if the P field  contains	a
       range  of  pages.   The [T, [A and [O number registers are
       set to 1 according as the T, A and O fields end	with  one
       of the characters .?!.  The [E number register will be set
       to 1 if the [E string contains more than	 one  name.   The
       reference  is  followed	by  a  call to the ][ macro.  The
       first argument to this macro gives a  number  representing
       the  type  of  the reference.  If a reference contains a J
       field, it will be classified as type 1,	otherwise  if  it
       contains	 a  B field, it will type 3, otherwise if it con-
       tains a G or R field it will be type 4, otherwise if  con-
       tains  a	 I  field it will be type 2, otherwise it will be
       type 0.	The second argument is a symbolic  name	 for  the
       type:  other,  journal-article,	book,  article-in-book or
       tech-report.  Groups of references that have been  accumu-
       lated or are produced by the bibliography command are pre-
       ceded by a call to the ]< macro and followed by a call  to
       the ]> macro.

FILES
       /usr/share/dict/papers/Ind  Default database.

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995		       14

REFER(1)						 REFER(1)

       file.i			   Index files.

SEE ALSO
       indxbib(1), lookbib(1), lkbib(1)

BUGS
       In  label  expressions,	<> expressions are ignored inside
       .char expressions.

Groff Version 1.15	 5 December 1995		       15

[top]

List of man pages available for BSDi

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net