groff: Page Location Traps
5.24.1 Page Location Traps
--------------------------
"Page location traps" perform an action when 'gtroff' reaches or passes
a certain vertical location on the page. Page location traps have a
variety of purposes, including:
* setting headers and footers
* setting body text in multiple columns
* setting footnotes
-- Request: .vpt flag
-- Register: \n[.vpt]
Enable vertical position traps if FLAG is non-zero, or disables
them otherwise. Vertical position traps are traps set by the 'wh'
or 'dt' requests. Traps set by the 'it' request are not vertical
position traps. The parameter that controls whether vertical
position traps are enabled is global. Initially vertical position
traps are enabled. The current setting of this is available in the
'.vpt' read-only number register.
Note that a page can't be ejected if 'vpt' is set to zero.
-- Request: .wh dist [macro]
Set a page location trap. Non-negative values for DIST set the
trap relative to the top of the page; negative values set the trap
relative to the bottom of the page. Default scaling indicator is
'v'; values of DIST are always rounded to be multiples of the
vertical resolution (as given in register '.V').
MACRO is the name of the macro to execute when the trap is sprung.
If MACRO is missing, remove the first trap (if any) at DIST.
The following is a simple example of how many macro packages set
headers and footers.
.de hd \" Page header
' sp .5i
. tl 'Title''date'
' sp .3i
..
.
.de fo \" Page footer
' sp 1v
. tl ''%''
' bp
..
.
.wh 0 hd \" trap at top of the page
.wh -1i fo \" trap one inch from bottom
A trap at or below the bottom of the page is ignored; it can be
made active by either moving it up or increasing the page length so
that the trap is on the page.
Negative trap values always use the _current_ page length; they are
not converted to an absolute vertical position:
.pl 5i
.wh -1i xx
.ptr
=> xx -240
.pl 100i
.ptr
=> xx -240
It is possible to have more than one trap at the same location; to
do so, the traps must be defined at different locations, then moved
together with the 'ch' request; otherwise the second trap would
replace the first one. Earlier defined traps hide later defined
traps if moved to the same position (the many empty lines caused by
the 'bp' request are omitted in the following example):
.de a
. nop a
..
.de b
. nop b
..
.de c
. nop c
..
.
.wh 1i a
.wh 2i b
.wh 3i c
.bp
=> a b c
.ch b 1i
.ch c 1i
.bp
=> a
.ch a 0.5i
.bp
=> a b
-- Register: \n[.t]
A read-only number register holding the distance to the next trap.
If there are no traps between the current position and the bottom
of the page, it contains the distance to the page bottom. In a
diversion, the distance to the page bottom is infinite (the
returned value is the biggest integer that can be represented in
'groff') if there are no diversion traps.
-- Request: .ch macro [dist]
Change the location of a trap. The first argument is the name of
the macro to be invoked at the trap, and the second argument is the
new location for the trap (note that the parameters are specified
in opposite order as in the 'wh' request). This is useful for
building up footnotes in a diversion to allow more space at the
bottom of the page for them.
Default scaling indicator for DIST is 'v'. If DIST is missing, the
trap is removed.
-- Register: \n[.ne]
The read-only number register '.ne' contains the amount of space
that was needed in the last 'ne' request that caused a trap to be
sprung. Useful in conjunction with the '.trunc' register. ⇒
Page Control, for more information.
Since the '.ne' register is only set by traps it doesn't make much
sense to use it outside of trap macros.
-- Register: \n[.trunc]
A read-only register containing the amount of vertical space
truncated from an 'sp' request by the most recently sprung vertical
position trap, or, if the trap was sprung by an 'ne' request, minus
the amount of vertical motion produced by the 'ne' request. In
other words, at the point a trap is sprung, it represents the
difference of what the vertical position would have been but for
the trap, and what the vertical position actually is.
Since the '.trunc' register is only set by traps it doesn't make
much sense to use it outside of trap macros.
-- Register: \n[.pe]
A read-only register that is set to 1 while a page is ejected with
the 'bp' request (or by the end of input).
Outside of traps this register is always zero. In the following
example, only the second call to 'x' is caused by 'bp'.
.de x
\&.pe=\\n[.pe]
.br
..
.wh 1v x
.wh 4v x
A line.
.br
Another line.
.br
=> A line.
.pe=0
Another line.
.pe=1
An important fact to consider while designing macros is that
diversions and traps do not interact normally. For example, if a trap
invokes a header macro (while outputting a diversion) that tries to
change the font on the current page, the effect is not visible before
the diversion has completely been printed (except for input protected
with '\!' or '\?') since the data in the diversion is already formatted.
In most cases, this is not the expected behaviour.