In this meta question: Quoted text inline with the rest using code tags is bad. Why? the consensus seems to be that using code tags for things other than code is fine.
Under my answer to this question: strerror(errno) return "Invalid argument" when call read() & write() EJP made the comment:
Please use quote formatting for quotes, and code formatting for code.
(and edited my cut and paste).
In this instance, he's quite right. However, in >90% of the cases where I want to paste from a man-page as a quotation, the quotation tag is a complete pain.
Here are the problems I observe:
nroff
output is often structured, with indented paragraphs, numbers and so forth.If the manpage contains things like asterisks, markdown attempts to treat them as if they were code.
Many of the things in manpages are code, for instance variable names. It takes a while to go an put backticks around each of these. Having everything in monospace in practice looks fine, because it looks like, well, a man-page.
Copying to a quote tag is a pain, because you need to undo all the hyphenation, whereas copying to a code tag is nice and easy.
However, against using a code tag, markdown attempts to apply code formatting to the code tag.
What would be really nice is some form of markdown syntax that did monospace blocks, like code, but doesn't highlight them. Is there a way to do that?
Or should I continue using code formatting?
Or should I just suck it up and convert everything manually?
Or should I write a nroff engine to output markdown? (cough)
My answer here illustrates the problem. The originally issue was caused by an HTML formatted manpage being confused. Yet my rendering looks horrible.
Here's an extract from qemu
's manpage which I think is hard to represent in markdown (other than by using the code tag):
...
-numa opts
Simulate a multi node NUMA system. If mem and cpus are omitted,
resources are split equally.
-add-fd fd=fd,set=set[,opaque=opaque]
Add a file descriptor to an fd set. Valid options are:
fd=fd
This option defines the file descriptor of which a duplicate is
added to fd set. The file descriptor cannot be stdin, stdout, or
stderr.
set=set
This option defines the ID of the fd set to add the file descriptor
to.
opaque=opaque
This option defines a free-form string that can be used to describe
fd.
You can open an image using pre-opened file descriptors from an fd set:
qemu-system-i386
-add-fd fd=3,set=2,opaque="rdwr:/path/to/file"
-add-fd fd=4,set=2,opaque="rdonly:/path/to/file"
-drive file=/dev/fdset/2,index=0,media=disk
-set group.id.arg=value
Set parameter arg for item id of type group "
...
man
page friendly has a top priority. There are tons of reliable sites with entire formattedman
pages, and usually one would copy 1 or 2 paragraphs only, right?