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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Non-ASCII char prevents conversion of manpage to plain text Post 302452916 by cjcox on Monday 13th of September 2010 11:33:56 AM
Old 09-13-2010
Well.. I wasn't kidding. It really does depend on what system we're looking at though. Not everything is well written everywhere and Linux's man (again, there ARE multiple implementations though) in general has some integration to the locale and terminal (which could be arguably the wrong thing, but man is a weird thing without doing some kind of terminal consideration given it's end user is typically human or at least something terminal like).

So... what OS and version in particular could really help in diagnosing this.

---------- Post updated at 10:33 AM ---------- Previous update was at 10:33 AM ----------

Well.. I wasn't kidding. It really does depend on what system we're looking at though. Not everything is well written everywhere and Linux's man (again, there ARE multiple implementations though) in general has some integration to the locale and terminal (which could be arguably the wrong thing, but man is a weird thing without doing some kind of terminal consideration given it's end user is typically human or at least something terminal like).

So... what OS and version in particular could really help in diagnosing this.
 

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MAN(1)							      General Commands Manual							    MAN(1)

NAME
man - print sections of this manual SYNOPSIS
man [ option ... ] [ chapter ] title ... DESCRIPTION
Man locates and prints the section of this manual named title in the specified chapter. (In this context, the word `page' is often used as a synonym for `section'.) The title is entered in lower case. The chapter number does not need a letter suffix. If no chapter is speci- fied, the whole manual is searched for title and all occurrences of it are printed. Options and their meanings are: -t Phototypeset the section using troff(1). -n Print the section on the standard output using nroff(1). -k Display the output on a Tektronix 4014 terminal using troff(1) and tc(1). -e Appended or prefixed to any of the above causes the manual section to be preprocessed by neqn or eqn(1); -e alone means -te. -w Print the path names of the manual sections, but do not print the sections themselves. (default) Copy an already formatted manual section to the terminal, or, if none is available, act as -n. It may be necessary to use a filter to adapt the output to the particular terminal's characteristics. Further options, e.g. to specify the kind of terminal you have, are passed on to troff(1) or nroff. Options and chapter may be changed before each title. For example: man man would reproduce this section, as well as any other sections named man that may exist in other chapters of the manual, e.g. man(7). FILES
/usr/man/man?/* /usr/man/cat?/* SEE ALSO
nroff(1), eqn(1), tc(1), man(7) BUGS
The manual is supposed to be reproducible either on a phototypesetter or on a terminal. However, on a terminal some information is neces- sarily lost. MAN(1)
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