grohtml(1) User Commands grohtml(1)

grohtml, post-grohtml, pre-grohtml - groff output driver for HTML

pre-grohtml [-epV] [-a anti-aliasing-text-bits] [-D image-directory] [-F font-directory] [-g anti-aliasing-graphic-bits] [-i resolution] [-I image-stem] [-o image-vertical-offset] [-x html-dialect] troff-command troff-argument ...
pre-grohtml --help
pre-grohtml -v
pre-grohtml --version
post-grohtml [-bCGhlnrVy] [-F font-directory] [-j output-stem] [-s base-point-size] [-S heading-level] [-x html-dialect] [file ...]
post-grohtml --help
post-grohtml -v
post-grohtml --version

The GNU roff system's HTML support consists of a preprocessor, pre-grohtml, and an output driver, post-grohtml; together, they translate roff(7) documents to HTML. Because a preprocessor is (uniquely) required for this output driver, users should invoke grohtml via the groff(1) command with the -Thtml or -Txhtml options. (In this installation, ps is the default output device.) Use groff's -P option to pass any options shown above to grohtml. If no operands are given, or if file is “-”, grohtml reads the standard input stream. Output is written to the standard output stream.

grohtml invokes groff twice. In the first pass, the preprocessor pre-grohtml renders pictures, equations, and tables as images in PostScript format using the ps output device. In the second pass, the output driver post-grohtml translates the output of gtroff(1) to HTML.

grohtml writes output encoded in UTF-8 and has built-in HTML entities for all non-composite Unicode characters. In spite of this, groff may issue warnings about unknown special characters if they can't be found during the first pass. Such warnings can be safely ignored unless the special characters appear inside a table or equation.

grohtml supports the standard four styles: R (roman), I (italic), B (bold), and BI (bold-italic). Fonts are grouped into families T and C having members in each style.

Times roman
Times italic
Times bold
Times bold-italic
Courier roman
Courier italic
Courier bold
Courier bold-italic

A special font, S, is also provided to accommodate roff documents that expect it to always be available.

The font description files used with grohtml expose the same glyph repertoire in their charset sections. See groff_font(5).

pre-grohtml generates an image whenever an geqn equation, gtbl table, or gpic picture is encountered in the input. grohtml therefore may run several commands as part of its operation. These include the Netpbm tools pnmcrop, pnmcut, and pnmtopng; Ghostscript (gs); and the PSUtils tool psselect.

--help displays a usage message, while -v and --version show version information; all exit afterward.

Number of bits of antialiasing information to be used by text when generating PNG images. The default is 4 but 0, 1, and 2 are also valid. Your system's version of gs must support the -dTextAlphaBits option in order to exploit antialiasing. A value of 0 stops grohtml from issuing antialiasing commands to gs.
Initialize the background color to white.
Suppress output of “CreationDate:” HTML comment.
Instruct grohtml to place all image files into directory image-directory.
Direct geqn to produce MathML.
This option should not be manually specified; it is synthesized by groff depending on whether it was given the -Thtml or -Txhtml option.
Prepend directory font-directory/devname to the search path for font and device description files; name is the name of the device, usually html.
Number of bits of antialiasing information to be used by graphics when generating PNG images. The default is 4 but 0, 1, and 2 are also valid. Your system's version of gs must support the -dGraphicAlphaBits option in order to exploit antialiasing. A value of 0 stops grohtml from issuing antialiasing commands to gs.
Suppress output of “Creator:” HTML comment.
Generate section headings by using HTML B elements and increasing the font size, rather than HTML H elements.
Set the image resolution in pixels per inch; the default is 100.
Determine the image file name stem. If omitted, grohtml uses grohtml-XXXXX (where XXXXX is the process ID). A dash is appended to the stem to separate it from the following image number.
Instruct grohtml to split the HTML output into multiple files. Output is written to a new file at each section heading (but see option -S below) named output-stem-n.html.
Turn off the production of automatic section links at the top of the document.
Generate simple heading anchors whenever a section/number heading is found. Without the option the anchor value is the textual heading. This can cause problems when a heading contains a “?” on older versions of some browsers. This feature is automatically enabled if a heading contains an image.
Specify the vertical offset of images in points.
Display page rendering progress to the standard error stream. grohtml displays a page number only when an image is required.
Turn off the automatic header and footer line (HTML rule).
Set the document's base type size in points. When this size is used in the source, it corresponds to the HTML base type size. Every increase of two points in the source will produce a “big” element, and conversely when a decrease of two points is seen, a “small” element is emitted.
When splitting HTML output (see option -j above), split at each nested heading level defined by heading-level, or higher). The default is 1.
Create an XHTML or HTML validator button at the bottom of each page of the document.
Select HTML dialect. Currently, html-dialect should be either the digit 4 or the letter x, which indicates whether grohtml should generate HTML 4 or XHTML, respectively.
This option should not be manually specified; it is synthesized by groff depending on whether it was given the -Thtml or -Txhtml option.
Produce a right-aligned groff signature at the end of the document (only if -V is also specified).

lists directories in which to search for devhtml, grohtml's directory of device and font description files. See gtroff(1) and groff_font(5).
A timestamp (expressed as seconds since the Unix epoch) to use as the output creation timestamp in place of the current time. The time is converted to human-readable form using ctime(3) and recorded in an HTML comment.
The time zone to use when converting the current time (or value of SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH) to human-readable form; see tzset(3).

/usr/share/groff/1.23.0/font/devhtml/DESC
describes the html output device.
/usr/share/groff/1.23.0/font/devhtml/F
describes the font known as F on device html.
/usr/share/groff/1.23.0/tmac/html.tmac
defines font mappings, special characters, and colors for use with the html output device. It is automatically loaded by troffrc when either of the html or xhtml output devices is selected.
/usr/share/groff/1.23.0/tmac/html-end.tmac
finalizes setup of the html output device. It is automatically loaded by troffrc-end when either of the html or xhtml output devices is selected.

grohtml uses temporary files. See groff(1) for details about where such files are created.

grohtml is still beta code.

grohtml does not truly support hyphenation, but you can fool it into hyphenating long input lines, which can appear in HTML output with a hyphenated word followed by a space but no line break.

groff(1), gtroff(1), groff_font(5)

2 July 2023 groff 1.23.0