At 2018-11-27T16:57:43-0800, Eric Allman wrote: > > It is not known for certain what the \(lqe\(rq in \(lqme\(rq stands for, > > but one can infer a derivation from the first initial of Eric P.\& > > Allman (then of the University of California), who wrote the original > > technical papers documenting the package. [...] > That's basically correct, but there is a back story. When I started > writing the -me macros it began as something in my private tree (I don't > remember what I called it). Then some other folks on the INGRES project > wanted to use it, but our system admin at the time didn't want to dicker > with the system namespace at the behest of a mere undergraduate, so he > didn't like anything that was actually descriptive lest people think it > was "official". He finally consented to "-meric" (which I always > hated), since it was obviously non-official. By the time my macros > became popular around Berkeley it got shortened to "-me", much to my relief. The shortening also prevented associations with an ignominious character in an episode of the original _Star Trek_[1], which would surely have been especially bad marketing in the geek culture of the time. > Of course, if AT&T had been willing to let Berkeley have -ms then most > likely -me would never have happened at all. Without a macro package, > nroff/troff is basically unusable; -me stepped into the vacuum. I'm thinking it was an even larger example of silly cussedness because by then, weren't the mm macros considered the new hotness at AT&T? > Amusingly enough, one of the most popular features of -me was ".th" > mode, which set all the parameters to match the official constraints for > a U.C. Berkeley Ph.D. thesis. It was guaranteed to get past the "dragon > lady" who would reject the thesis if the margins were wrong. It takes a computer to beat a computer. :) Thank you! I'll update the man page. We seem to be finally be on the precipice of a groff 1.22.4 release (knock touchpad). Regards, Branden [1] "Bread and Circuses"