From: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
nroff formats "-" as the very short hyphen used for hyphenated terms
and for splitting a word across two lines. When you want a literal
ASCII "-", like for typing on a command line, you're supposed to use
"\-" instead.
Yeah, it sounds pedantic, but it actually makes a difference. With
modern Unicode-capable terminals, "man" actually renders these with
different characters, so if you try to search for "--create" in your
favorite pager, you won't find it unless the nroff source says
"\-\-create". This discrepancy doesn't generally show up with
non-Unicode terminals.
Signed-Off-By: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
From: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
Option names and example command lines seem to be boldface most of the
time, fix up the few that weren't.
Signed-Off-By: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
From: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
\(em renders as "--" in ASCII, and a nice em dash (i.e., a dash the
width of the letter "m") in more capable formats like PostScript.
Signed-Off-By: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
From: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
do not hyphenate terms:
"override", "therein", "overwrite", "superblock format".
Signed-Off-By: Peter Samuelson <peter@p12n.org>
This means the output of "mdadm -Es" can be used as a complete
mdadm.conf file .... if you really want to do that.
Signed-off-by: Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de>