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AT&T
troff
primarily emitted glyphs by writing two digits
(a motion)
followed by a single character corresponding to a glyph.
This syntax is less a command itself than a compressed encoding of the
c
and
h
commands.
Move right dd (exactly two decimal digits) basic units ‘u’, then print glyph g (represented as a single character).
In GNU troff, arbitrary syntactical space around and within this
command is allowed. Only when a preceding command on the same line ends
with an argument of variable length is a separating space obligatory.
In AT&T troff, large clusters of these and other
commands are used, mostly without spaces; this made such output almost
unreadable.
For modern high-resolution devices,
this command is impractical
because the widths of the glyphs have a greater magnitude
in basic units
than two decimal digits can represent.
In
GNU
troff, this optimization is used only for the devices
X75,
X75-12,
X100,
and X100-12.
For other devices,
the commands
‘t’
and
‘u’
produce more readable output.