gpinyin - like writing within groff
gpinyin [-] [--] [ filespec ....] gpinyin -h|--help gpinyin -v|--version
GPINYIN(1) General Commands Manual GPINYIN(1) NAME gpinyin - Chinese European-like writing within groff SYNOPSIS gpinyin [-] [--] [ filespec ....] gpinyin -h|--help gpinyin -v|--version DESCRIPTION This is a preprocesor for groff(1). It allows to add the Chinese Euro- pean-like language Pinyin into groff(7) files. OPTIONS Breaking Options An option is breaking, when the program just writes the information that was asked for and then stops. All other arguments will be ignored by that. The breaking options are here -h | --help Print help information with a short explanation of options to standard output. -v | --version Print version information to standard output. Filespec Options So far, there are only filespec and breaking options. filespec arguments are file names or the minus sign - for standard input. As usual, the argument -- can be used in order to let all fol- lowing arguments mean file names, even if the names begin with a minus character -. PINYIN PARTS Pinyin parts in groff files are enclosed by two .pinyin requests with different arguments. The starting request is \.pinyin start or \.pinyin begin and the ending request is \.pinyin stop or \.pinyin end PINYIN DETAILS Pinyin is used for writing the Chinese language in a European-like (romanization) way. The Chinese language consists of more than 400 syllables, each with one of 5 different tones. In Pinyin, such toned syllables can be appended to word-like connections. Syllables The Chinese language is based on about 411 defined syllables, see <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinyin_table>. In Pinyin, each syllable consists of 1 to 6 European-like letters, the normal ASCII characters in upper and lower case, the only unusual char- acters are the U dieresis (umlaut) in both cases, i.e. [a-zA-Z]. In the groff gpinyin input, all ASCII letters are written as usual. But the u/U dieresis can be written as either as \['u] or ue in lower case or \['U], Ue, UE in upper case. Tones Each syllable has exactly one of 5 defined tones. The 5th tone is not written at all, but each tone 1 to 4 is written as an accent above a defined vowel within the syllable. In the source file, these tones are written by adding a number 0 to 5 after the syllable name. In each writing, the tone numbers 1 to 4 are transformed into accents above vowels. The 1st tone is the horizontal macron \[a-] , similar to a minus or sub character, but on top of the vowel. In each source file, write the 1st tone as syllable1. The 2nd tone is the accute accent \[aa] '. In each source file, write the 2nd tone as syllable2. The 3rd tone is the caron sign, \[ah] , which looks a bit like a small v above the vowel. In each source file, write the 3rd tone as sylla- ble3. The 4th tone is the grave accent \[ga] `. In each source file, write the 4th tone as syllable4. The 5th tone is the no-tone. The numbers 0 and 5 can be used for the (no-tone). The no-tone number can be omitted, when the syllable is the end of some word. But within a word of syllables, one of the no-tone numbers 0 or 5 must be written. ATTRIBUTES See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes: +---------------+------------------+ |ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +---------------+------------------+ |Availability | text/groff | +---------------+------------------+ |Stability | Uncommitted | +---------------+------------------+ SEE ALSO groff(1) grog(1) groffer(1) Man-pages with section 1 related to groff. They can be called with either man name groffername groff(7) groff_char(7) Man-pages with section 7 related to groff. They can be called with either man 7 name groffer 7 name Internet documents related to pinyin are Wikipedia pinyin <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinyin>, Pinyin Table <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinyin_table>, Unicode vowels for Pinyin <http://;www.sino.uni-heidelberg.de/ course_resources/s02/py-vowels.htm>, pinyintoUnicode <http://www.foolsworkshop.com/ptou/index.html>, Online Chinese Tools <http://www.mandarintools.com/>, Main pinyin website <http://www.pinyin.info/index.html>, Where do the tone marks go? <http://www.pinyin.info/rules/ where.html>, Pinyin for TeX 1 <http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/ ?p=cjk.git;a=blob_plain;f=doc/pinyin.txt;hb=HEAD>, Pinyin for TeX 2 <http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/ ?p=cjk.git;a=blob_plain;f=texinput/pinyin.sty;hb=HEAD>. COPYING Copyright (C) 2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of gpinyin, which is part of groff, a free software project. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation. The license text is available in the internet at <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html>. AUTHORS This file was written by Bernd Warken <groff-bernd.warken-72@web.de>. NOTES This software was built from source available at https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland. The original community source was downloaded from https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/groff/groff-1.22.3.tar.gz Further information about this software can be found on the open source community website at https://www.gnu.org/software/groff. Groff Version 1.22.3 4 November 2014 GPINYIN(1)