> This discussion would still have made sense for groff 36 months ago,
> but at the present rate of progress, there will be no legacy
> encodings left by the time groff finally has learned to switch
> between them ...
:-) It's a matter of time, interest, and -- volunteers.
> > In the last few years groff has become more compatible with
> > AT&T troff than it ever was.
>
> Does that include compatibility with the newer Plan 9 versions
> (which have been running entirely on UTF-8 for about 12 years)?
Regarding the functionality, yes. Regarding UTF-8, no.
Werner
--
Linux-UTF8: i18n of Linux on all levels
Archive: http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-utf8/