# curldown A markdown-like syntax for libcurl man pages. ## Purpose A text format for writing libcurl documentation in the shape of man pages. Make it easier for users to contribute and write documentation. A format that is easier on the eye in its source format. Make it harder to do syntactical mistakes. Use a format that allows creating man pages that end up looking exactly like the man pages did when we wrote them in nroff format. Take advantage of the fact that people these days are accustomed to markdown by using a markdown-like syntax. This allows us to fix issues in the nroff format easier since now we generate them. For example: escaping minus to prevent them from being turned into Unicode by man. Generate nroff output that looks (next to) *identical* to the previous files, so that the look, existing test cases, HTML conversions, existing infrastructure etc remain mostly intact. Contains meta-data in a structured way to allow better output (for example the see also information) and general awareness of what the file is about. ## File extension Since curldown looks similar to markdown, we use `.md` extensions on the files. ## Conversion Convert **from curldown to nroff** with `cd2nroff`. Generates nroff man pages. Convert **from nroff to curldown** with `nroff2cd`. This is only meant to be used for the initial conversion to curldown and should ideally never be needed again. Convert, check or clean up an existing curldown to nicer, better, cleaner curldown with **cd2cd**. Mass-convert all curldown files to nroff in specified directories with `cdall`: cdall [dir1] [dir2] [dir3] .. ## Known issues The `cd2nroff` tool does not yet handle *italics* or **bold** where the start and the end markers are used on separate lines. The `nroff2cd` tool generates code style quotes for all `.fi` sections since the nroff format does not carry a distinction. # Format Each curldown starts with a header with meta-data: --- c: Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, , et al. SPDX-License-Identifier: curl Title: CURLOPT_AWS_SIGV4 Section: 3 Source: libcurl See-also: - CURLOPT_HEADEROPT (3) - CURLOPT_HTTPAUTH (3) --- All curldown files *must* have all the headers present and at least one `See-also:` entry specified. Following the header in the file, is the manual page using markdown-like syntax: ~~~ # NAME a page - this is a page descriving something # SYNOPSIS ~~~c #include CURLcode curl_easy_setopt(CURL *handle, CURLOPT_AWS_SIGV4, char *param); ~~~ ~~~ Quoted source code should start with `~~~c` and end with `~~~` while regular quotes can start with `~~~` or just be indented with 4 spaces. Headers at top-level `#` get converted to `.SH`. `nroff2cd` supports the `##` next level header which gets converted to `.IP`. Write bold words or phrases within `**` like: This is a **bold** word. Write italics like: This is *italics*. Due to how man pages do not support backticks especially formatted, such occurrences in the source will instead just use italics in the generated output: This `word` appears in italics. When generating the nroff output, the tooling will remove superfluous newlines, meaning they can be used freely in the source file to make the text more readable. All mentioned curl symbols that have their own man pages, like `curl_easy_perform(3)` will automatically be rendered using italics in the output without having to enclose it with asterisks. This helps ensuring that they get converted to links properly later in the HTML version on the website, as converted with `roffit`. This makes the curldown text easier to read even when mentioning many curl symbols. This auto-linking works for patterns matching `(lib|)curl[^ ]*(3)`.