Provided by: grap_1.46-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       grap — Kernighan and Bentley's language for typesetting graphs

SYNOPSIS

       grap [-d defines_file] [-D] [-l] [-M include path] [-R] [-r] [-v] [-u] [-C] [-c] [-h] [filename ...]

DESCRIPTION

       grap  is  an  implementation  of Kernighan and Bentley's language for typesetting graphs, as described in
       ``Grap-A Language for Typesetting Graphs, Tutorial and User Manual,'' by Jon  L.  Bentley  and  Brian  W.
       Kernighan,  revised May 1991, which is the primary source for information on how to use grap.  As of this
       writing, it is  available  electronically  at  http://www.kohala.com/start/troff/cstr114.ps.   Additional
       documentation  and  examples, packaged with grap, may have been installed locally as well.  If available,
       paths to them can be displayed using grap -h or grap -v (or grap --help / grap --version)

       This version is a black box implementation of grap, and some inconsistencies are  to  be  expected.   The
       remainder of this manual page will briefly outline the grap language as implemented here.

       grap  is  a  pic(1)  pre-processor.   It  takes  commands  embedded  in  a troff(1) source file which are
       surrounded by .G1 and .G2 macros, and rewrites them into pic commands to display the graph.  Other  lines
       are  copied.   Output  is  always to the standard output, which is usually redirected.  Input is from the
       given filenames, which are read in order.  A filename of - is the standard input.  If  no  filenames  are
       given, input is read from the standard input.

       Because grap is a pic preprocessor, and GNU pic will output TeX, it is possible to use grap with TeX.

       The  -d  option  specifies  a  file  of  macro  definitions  to  be  read  at  startup,  and  defaults to
       /usr/share/grap/grap.defines .  The -D option inhibits the reading of any initial  macros  file  (the  -l
       flag  is  a  synonym for -D, though I do not remember why).  The defines file can also be given using the
       GRAP_DEFINES environment variable. (See below).

       -v prints the version information on the standard output and exits.  --version is a synonym for -v.

       -u makes labels unaligned by default.  This version of grap uses new features of GNU  pic  to  align  the
       left  and  right  labels with the axes, that is that the left and right labels run at right angles to the
       text of the paper.  This may be useful in porting old grap programs.  -c makes plot strings unclipped  by
       default.   Some  versions  of grap allow users to place a string anywhere in the coordinate space, rather
       than only in the frame.  By default this version of grap does not plot any string  centered  outside  the
       frame.   -c  allows  strings  to be placed anywhere.  See also the clipped and unclipped string modifiers
       described in the plot statement.

       -M is followed by a colon-separated list of directories used to search for  relative  pathnames  included
       via  copy.   The path is also used to locate the defines file, so if the -d changes the defines file name
       to a relative name, it will be searched for in the path given by -M.  The search path always includes the
       current directory, and by default that directory is searched last.

       All numbers used internally by grap are double precision floating point values.  Sometimes using floating
       point numbers has unintended consequences.  To help avoid these problems, grap can use two thresholds for
       comparison of floating point numbers, set by -R or -r.  The -R flag sets coarse comparison mode, which is
       suitable for most applications.  If you are plotting small values – less than 1e-6 or so – consider using
       -r which uses very fine comparisons between numbers.  You may also want to rescale your plotted values to
       be larger in magnitude. The coarse comarisons are used by default.

       To be precise, the value by which two numbers must differ for grap to consider them not equal  is  called
       the  comparison  limit  and the smallest non-zero number is called the minimum value.  The values a given
       version of grap uses for these are included in the output of -v or -h.

       All grap commands are included between .G1 and .G2 macros,  which  are  consumed  by  grap.   The  output
       contains  pic  between  .PS and .PE macros.  Any arguments to the .G1 macro in the input are arguments to
       the .PS macro in the output, so graphs can be scaled just like pic diagrams.  If -C is given,  any  macro
       beginning with .G1 or .G2 is treated as a .G1 or .G2 macro, for compatibility with old versions of troff.
       Using  -C  also  forces  pure  troff  syntax  on embedded font change commands when strings have the size
       attribute, and all strings to be unclipped.

       The -h flag prints a brief help message and exits.  --help is a synonym for -h.

       It is possible for someone to cause grap to fail by passing a bad format string and data to  the  sprintf
       command.  If grap is integrated as part of the printing system, this could conceivably provided a path to
       breaching  security  on  the  machine.  If you choose to use grap as part of a printing system run by the
       super-user, you should disable sprintf commands.  This can be done by calling  grap  with  the  -S  flag,
       setting  the  GRAP_SAFER  environment  variable,  or  compiling  with  the GRAP_SAFER preprocessor symbol
       defined.  (The GNU configure script included with grap  will  define  that  preprocessor  symbol  if  the
       --with-grap-safe option is given.)

       The grap commands are sketched below.  Refer to Kernighan and Bentley's paper for the details.

       New versions of groff(1) will invoke grap if -G is given.

   Commands
       Commands are separated from one another by newlines or semicolons (;).

       frame [line_description] [ht height | wid width] [[(top|bottom|left| right) line_description] ...]

       frame [ht height | wid width] [line_description] [[(top|bottom|left| right) line_description] ...]

             This  describes how the axes for the graph are drawn. A line_description is a pic line description,
             e.g., dashed 0.5, or the literal solid.  It may also include a color keyword followed by the  color
             to  draw  the  string in double quotes.  Any color understood by the underlying groff system can be
             used.  Color can only be  used  under  GNU  pic,  and  is  not  available  in  compatibility  mode.
             Similarly,  for  pic  implementations  that understand thickness, that attribute may be used with a
             real valued parameter.  Thickness is not available in compatibility mode.

             If the first line_description is given, the frame is drawn with that style.  The default is  solid.
             The  height  and width of the frame can also be specified in inches.  The default line style can be
             over-ridden for sides of the frame by specifying additional parameters to frame.

             If no plotting commands have been given before the frame command  is  issued,  the  frame  will  be
             output  at that point in the plotting stream relative to embedded troff or pic commands.  Otherwise
             the frame is output before the first plotted object (even invisible ones).

             ht and wid are in inches by default, but can be any groff unit.  If omitted, the dimensions  are  2
             inches high by 3 inches wide.

       coord [name] [x expr, expr] [y expr, expr] [log x | log y | log log]

             The  coord  command  specifies  a  new  coordinate system or sets limits on the default system.  It
             defines the largest and smallest values that can be plotted, and therefore the scale of the data in
             the frame.  The limits for the x and y coordinate systems can be given separately.  If  a  name  is
             given, that coordinate system is defined, if not the default system is modified.

             A  coordinate  system created by one coord command may be modified by subsequent coord commands.  A
             grap program may declare a coordinate space using coord, copy a file of data through a  macro  that
             plots  the  data and finds its maxima and minima, and then define the size of the coordinate system
             with a second coord statement.

             This command also determines if a scale is plotted logarithmically.  log log means the  same  thing
             as log x log y.

       draw [line_name] [line_description] [plot_string]

             The draw command defines the style with which a given line will be plotted.  If line_name is given,
             the  style is associated with that name, otherwise the default style is set.  line_description is a
             pic line description, and the optional plot_string is a string to be centered at each  point.   The
             default  line  description  is  invis,  and the default plotting string is a centered bullet, so by
             default each point is a filled circle, and they are unconnected.  If points  are  being  connected,
             each draw command ends any current line and begins a new one.

             When  defining  a  line  style, that is the first draw command for a given line name, specifying no
             plot string means that there are to be no plot strings.  Omitting the  plot  string  on  subsequent
             draw  commands  addressing  the same named line means not to change the plot string.  If a line has
             been defined with a plot string, and the format is changed by a subsequent draw statement, the plot
             string can be removed by specifying "" in the draw statement.

             The plot string can have its format changed through several string_modifiers.  String_modifiers are
             described in the description of the plot command.

             The standard defines file includes several macros useful as plot strings, including bullet, square,
             and delta.

             new is a synonym for draw.

       next [line_name] at [coordinates_name] expr, expr [line_description]

             The next command plots the given point using the line style given by line_name, or the  default  if
             none  is  given.  If line_name is given, it should have been defined by an earlier draw command, if
             not a new line style with that name is created, initialized the same way as the default style.  The
             two expressions give the point's x and y values, relative to the optional coordinate system.   That
             system  should  have  been  defined  by  an  earlier coord command, if not, grap will exit.  If the
             optional line_description is given, it overrides the style's default line description.  You  cannot
             over-ride the plotting string.  To use a different plotting string use the plot command.

             The coordinates may optionally be enclosed in parentheses: (expr, expr)

       quoted_string  [string_modifiers]  [,  quoted_string [string_modifiers]] ...  at [coordinates_name] expr,
       expr

       plot expr [format_string] at [coordinates_name] expr, expr

             These commands both plot a string at the given point.  In the first case the  literal  strings  are
             stacked  above  each  other.   The string_modifiers include the pic justification modifiers (ljust,
             rjust, above, and below), and absolute and relative size modifiers.  See the pic documentation  for
             the  description  of  the  justification  modifiers.   grap also supports the aligned and unaligned
             modifiers which are briefly noted in the description of the label command.

             The standard defines file includes several macros useful as plot strings, including bullet, square,
             and delta.

             Strings placed by either format of the plot command are restricted to being within the frame.  This
             can be overridden by using the unclipped attribute, which allows a string to be plotted in  or  out
             of the frame.  The -c and -C flags set unclipped on all strings, and to prevent a string from being
             plotted  outside the frame when those flags are active, the clipped attribute can be used to retore
             clipping behavior.  Though clipped or unclipped can be applied to any string, it only  has  meaning
             for plot statements.

             size  expr  sets  the  string  size  to  expr points.  If expr is preceded by a + or -, the size is
             increased or decreased by that many points.

             If color and a color name in double quotes appears, the string will be rendered in that color under
             a version of GNU troff that supports color.  Color is not available in compatibility mode.

             In the second version, the expr is converted to a string and placed on the graph.  format_string is
             a printf(3) format string.  Only formatting escapes for printing floating point numbers make sense.
             The format string is only respected if the sprintf command is also active.  See the description  of
             sprintf  for  the  various  ways  to disable it.  Plot and sprintf respond differently when grap is
             running safely.   Sprintf  ignores  any  arguments,  passing  the  format  string  through  without
             substitution.  plot ignores the format string completely, plotting expr using the "%g" format.

             Points  are  specified  the same way as for next commands, with the same consequences for undefined
             coordinate systems.

             The second form of this command is because  the  first  form  can  be  used  with  a  grap  sprintf
             expression (See “Expressions”).

       ticks (left|right|top|bottom)[ (in|out) [expr]] [on|auto coord_name]

       ticks  (left|right|top|bottom)  (in|out)  [expr]  [up  expr  |  down  expr  |  left expr | right expr] at
       [coord_name] expr [format_string] [[, expr [format_string]] ...]

       ticks (left|right|top|bottom) (in|out) [expr] [up expr | down  expr  |  left  expr  |  right  expr]  from
       [coord_name] start_expr to end_expr [by [+|-|*|/] by_expr] [format_string]

       ticks [left|right|top|bottom] off

             This  command  controls  the  placement of ticks on the frame.  By default, ticks are automatically
             generated on the left and bottom sides of the frame.

             The first version of this command turns on the automatic tick generation for a given side.  The  in
             or out parameter controls the direction and length of the ticks.  If a coord_name is specified, the
             ticks  are  automatically  generated  using that coordinate system.  If no system is specified, the
             default coordinate system is used.  As with next and plot, the coordinate system must  be  declared
             before  the ticks statement that references it.  This syntax for requesting automatically generated
             ticks is an extension, and will not port to older grap implementations.

             The second version of the  ticks  command  overrides  the  automatic  placement  of  the  ticks  by
             specifying  a  list  of coordinates at which to place the ticks.  If the ticks are not defined with
             respect to the default coordinate system, the coord_name parameter must be given.  For each tick  a
             printf(3) style format string can be given.  The format_string defaults to "%g".  The format string
             can  also  take  string modifiers as described in the plot command.  To place ticks with no labels,
             specify format_string as "".

             If sprintf is disabled, ticks behaves as plot with respect to the format string.

             The labels on the ticks may be shifted by specifying a direction and  the  distance  in  inches  to
             offset the label.  That is the optional direction and expression immediately preceding the at.

             The third format of the ticks command over-rides the default tick generation with a set of ticks ar
             regular  intervals.  The syntax is reminiscent of programming language for loops.  Ticks are placed
             starting at start_expr ending at end_expr one unit apart.  If the by clause is specified, ticks are
             by_expr units apart.  If an operator appears before by_expr  each  tick  is  operated  on  by  that
             operator instead of +.  For example

                         ticks left out from 2 to 32 by *2

             will  put  ticks  at  2,  4, 8, 16, and 32.  If format_string is specified, all ticks are formatted
             using it.

             The parameters preceding the from act as described above.

             The at and for forms of tick command may both be issued on the same side of a frame.  For example:

                         ticks left out from 2 to 32 by *2
                         ticks left in 3, 5, 7

             will put ticks on the left side of the frame pointing out at 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 and in  at  3,  5,
             and 7.

             The  final  form  of  ticks turns off ticks on a given side.  If no side is given the ticks for all
             sides are cancelled.

             tick is a synonym for ticks.

       grid (left|right|top|bottom) [ticks off] [line_description] [up expr | down expr  |  left  expr  |  right
       expr] [on|auto [coord_name]]

       grid  (left|right|top|bottom)  [ticks  off]  [line_description]  [up expr | down expr | left expr | right
       expr] at [coord_name] expr [format_string] [[, expr [format_string]] ...]

       grid (left|right|top|bottom) [ticks off] [line_description] [up expr | down expr  |  left  expr  |  right
       expr] from [coord_name] start_expr to end_expr [by [+|-|*|/] by_expr] [format_string]

             The  grid command is similar to the ticks command except that grid specifies the placement of lines
             in the frame.  The syntax is similar to ticks as well.

             By specifying ticks off in the command, no ticks are drawn on that side of  the  frame.   If  ticks
             appear  on  a  side  by  default,  or have been declared by an earlier ticks command, grid does not
             cancel them unless ticks off is specified.

             Instead of a direction for ticks, grid allows the user to pick a  line  description  for  the  grid
             lines.  The usual pic line descriptions are allowed.

             Grids are labelled by default.  To omit labels, specify the format string as "".

             If sprintf is disabled, grid behaves as plot with respect to the format string.

       label  (left|right|top|bottom)  quoted_string [string_modifiers] [, quoted_string [string_modifiers]] ...
       [up expr | down expr | left expr | right expr]

             The label command places a label on the given axis.  It is  possible  to  specify  several  labels,
             which  will  be  stacked  over each other as in pic.  The final argument, if present, specifies how
             many inches the label is shifted from the axis.

             By default the labels on the left and right labels run parallel to the frame.  You can cancel  this
             by specifying unaligned as a string_modifier.

       circle at [coordinate_name] expr, expr [radius expr] [linedesc]

             This  draws an circle at the point indicated.  By default, the circle is small, 0.025 inches.  This
             can be over-ridden by specifying a radius.  The coordinates of the point are relative to the  named
             coordinate system, or the default system if none is specified.

             This  command  has  been  extended  to  take a line description, e.g., dotted.  It also accepts the
             filling extensions described below in the bar command.  It will also accept a  color  keyword  that
             gives the color of the outline of the circle in double quotes and a fillcolor command that sets the
             color to fill the circle with similarly.  Colors are only available when compatibility mode is off,
             and using a version of GNU pic that supports color.

       line   [line_description]   from   [coordinate_name]   expr,   expr   to   [coordinate_name]  expr,  expr
       [line_description]

       arrow  [line_description]  from  [coordinate_name]   expr,   expr   to   [coordinate_name]   expr,   expr
       [line_description]

             This  draws  a line or arrow from the first point to the second using the given style.  The default
             line style is solid.  The line_description can be given either before the  from  or  after  the  to
             clause.   If  both  are  given  the  second  is  used.   It is possible to specify one point in one
             coordinate system and one in another, note that if both points are in  a  named  coordinate  system
             (even  if  they  are  in  the  same named coordinate system), both points must have coordinate_name
             given.

       copy ["filename"] [until "string"] [thru macro]

             The copy command imports data from another file into the current  graph.   The  form  with  only  a
             filename  given  is a simple file inclusion; the included file is simply read into the input stream
             and can contain arbitrary grap commands.  The more common case is that it is  a  number  list;  see
             “Number Lists” below.

             The  second form takes lines from the file, splits them into words delimited by one or more spaces,
             and calls the given macro with those words as parameters.  The macro may either be defined here, or
             be a macro defined earlier.  See “Macros” for more information on macros.

             The filename may be omitted if the until clause is present.  If so the current file is  treated  as
             the input file until string is encountered at the beginning of the line.

             copy  is  one  of the workhorses of grap.  Check out the paper and /usr/share/doc/grap/examples for
             more details.  Confirm the location of the examples directory using the -v flag.
       print (expr|string)

             Prints its argument to the standard error.

       sh block

             This passes block to sh(1).  Unlike K&B grap no macro or variable expansion  is  done.   I  believe
             that  this  is  also  true  for  GNU pic version 1.10.  See the “Macros” section for information on
             defining blocks.

       pic pic_statement

             This issues the given pic statements  in the enclosing .PS and .PE at the point where  the  command
             is issued.

             Statements  that  begin  with a period are considered to be troff(statements) and are output in the
             enclosing .PS and .PE at the point where the command appears.

             For the purposes of relative placement of pic or troff commands, the frame  is  output  immediately
             before  the  first  plotted  object,  or the frame statement, if any.  If the user specifies pic or
             troff commands and neither any plotable object nor a  frame  command,  the  commands  will  not  be
             output.

       graph Name pic_commands

             This command is used to position graphs with respect to each other.  The current graph is given the
             pic name Name (names used by pic begin with capital letters).  Any pic commands following the graph
             are  used  to  position  the next graph.  The frame of the graph is available for use with pic name
             Frame. The following places a second graph below the first:

                         graph Linear
                         [ graph description ]
                         graph Exponential with .Frame.n at \
                                 Linear.Frame.s - (0, .05)
                         [ graph description ]

       name = expr

             This assigns expr to the variable name.  grap has only numeric (double) variables.

             Assignment creates a variable if it does not exist.  Variables persist across graphs.   Assignments
             can cascade; a = b = 35 assigns 35 to a and b.

       bar (up|right) [coordinates_name] offset ht height [wid width] [base base_offset] [line_description]

       bar [coordinates_name] expr, expr, [coordinates_name] expr, expr, [line_description]

             The  bar  command  facilitates drawing bar graphs.  The first form of the command describes the bar
             somewhat generally and has grap place it.  The bar may extend up or to the right,  is  centered  on
             offset and extends up or right height units (in the given coordinate system).  For example

                         bar up 3 ht 2

             draws  a  2 unit high bar sitting on the x axis, centered on x=3.  By default bars are 1 unit wide,
             but this can be changed with the wid keyword.  By default bars sit on the  base  axis,  i.e.,  bars
             directed  up will extend from y=0.  That may be overridden by the base keyword.  (The bar described
             above has corners (2.5, 0) and (3.5, 2).)

             The line description has been extended to include a fill expr keyword that  specifies  the  shading
             inside  the  bar.   Bars  may  be  drawn  in  any line style.  They support the color and fillcolor
             keywords described under circle.

             The second form of the command draws a box with the two points as corners.  This  can  be  used  to
             draw  boxes highlighting certain data as well as bar graphs.  Note that filled bars will cover data
             drawn under them.

   Control Flow
       if expr then block [else block]

             The if statement provides simple conditional execution.  If expr is non-zero, the block  after  the
             then statement is executed.  If not the block after the else is executed, if present.  See “Macros”
             for  the definition of blocks.  Early versions of this implementation of grap treated the blocks as
             macros that were defined and expanded in place.  This led to unnecessary confusion because explicit
             separators were sometimes called for.  Now, grap inserts a separator (;) after the  last  character
             in block, so constructs like

             if (x == 3) { y = y + 1 }
             x = x + 1

             behave as expected.  A separator is also appended to the end of a for block.

       for name from from_expr to to_expr [by [+|-|*|/] by_expr] do block

             This  command executes block iteratively.  The variable name is set to from_expr and incremented by
             by_expr until it exceeds to_expr.  The iteration has the semantics defined in  the  ticks  command.
             The  definition  of block is discussed in “Macros”.  See also the note about implicit separators in
             the description of the if command.

             An = can be used in place of from.

   Expressions
       grap supports most standard arithmetic operators: + - / * ^.  The carat (^) is exponentiation.  In an  if
       statement  grap  also supports the C logical operators ==, !=, &&, || and unary !.  Also in an if, == and
       != are overloaded for the comparison of quoted strings.  Parentheses are used for grouping.

       Assignment is not allowed in an expression in any context, except for simple cascading of assignments.  a
       = b = 35 works as expected; a = 3.5 * (b = 10) does not execute.

       grap supports the following functions that take one argument: log, exp, int, sin, cos, sqrt, rand, floor,
       ceil.  The logarithms are base 10 and the trigonometric functions are in radians.  eexp  returns  Euler's
       number  to  the  given  power  and  ln  returns  the  natural logarithm.  The natural log, exponentiation
       functions and floor and ceil are extensions and are probably not available in other grap implementations.

       rand returns a random number uniformly distributed on [0,1).  The following  two-argument  functions  are
       supported:  atan2,  min, max.  atan2 works just like atan2(3).  The random number generator can be seeded
       by calling srand with a single parameter (converted internally to an integer).  Because its return  value
       is of no use, you must use srand as a separate statement, it is not part of a valid expression.  srand is
       not portable.

       The  getpid  function takes no arguments and returns the process id.  This may be used to seed the random
       number generator, but do not expect cryptographically random values to result.

       Other than string comparison, no expressions can use strings.  One string valued function exists: sprintf
       (format, [expr [, expr]] ).  It operates like sprintf(3), except returning the value.   It  can  be  used
       anywhere  a  quoted  string  is  used.   If  grap  is run with -S, the environment variable GRAP_SAFER is
       defined, or grap has been compiled for safer operation,  the  sprintf  command  will  return  the  format
       string.   This  mode  of  operation  is  only intended to be used only if grap is being used as part of a
       super-user enabled print system.

       grap version 1.44 and beyond support two functions for date and time manipulation, strptime and strptime.
       strptime parses a time using the strptime(3) function.  It takes two parameters, both strings, the format
       and a string to parse using that format and returns a number that can be sorted directly - the number  of
       seconds since the UNIX epoch.  strftime does the reverse.  It takes a string and a number and formats the
       number  into  a  date.  In both functions, the format is the first parameter.  The formats are defined in
       the documentation for strftime(3).

   Macros
       grap has a simple but powerful macro facility.  Macros are defined using the define command :

       define name block
       undefine name

             Every occurrence of name in the program text is replaced  by  the  contents  of  block.   block  is
             defined by a series of statements in nested { }'s, or a series of statements surrounded by the same
             letter.  An example of the latter is

                         define foo  X coord x 1,3 X
             Each time foo appears in the text, it will be replaced by coord x 1,3.  Macros are literal, and can
             contain  newlines.   If a macro does not span multiple lines, it should end in a semicolon to avoid
             parsing errors.

             Macros can take parameters, too.  If a macro call is followed by a  parenthesized,  comma-separated
             list  the values starting with $1 will be replaced in the macro with the elements of the list.  A $
             not followed by a digit is left unchanged.   This  parsing  is  very  rudimentary;  no  nesting  or
             parentheses  or escaping of commas is allowed.  Also, there is no way to say argument 1 followed by
             a digit (${1}0 in sh(1)).

             The following will draw a line with slope 1.

                         define foo { next at $1, $2 }
                         for i from 1 to 5 { foo(i,i) }
             Macros persist across graphs.  The file /usr/share/grap/grap.defines  contains  simple  macros  for
             plotting common characters.  The undefine command deletes a macro.

             See  the  directory /usr/share/doc/grap/examples for more examples of macros.  Confirm the location
             of the examples directory using the -v flag.

   Number Lists
       A whitespace-separated list of numbers is treated specially.  The list  is  taken  to  be  points  to  be
       plotted  using  the  default  line  style on the default coordinate system.  If more than two numbers are
       given, the extra numbers are taken to be additional y values to plot at the first x value.  Number  lists
       in  DWB  grap  can  be  comma-separated, and this grap supports that as well.  More precisely, numbers in
       number lists can be separated by either whitespace, commas, or both.

             1 2 3
             4 5 6

       Will plot points using the default line style at (1,2), (1,3),(4,5) and (4,6).  A simple way  to  plot  a
       set of numbers in a file named ./data is:

             .G1
             copy "./data"
             .G2

   Pic Macros
       grap defines pic macros that can be used in embedded pic code to place elements in the graph.  The macros
       are  x_gg,  y_gg,  and  xy_gg.   These macros define pic distances that correspond to the given argument.
       They can be used to size boxes or to plot pic constructs on the graph.  To place a given construct on the
       graph, you should add Frame.Origin to it.  Other coordinate spaces can be used by replacing gg  with  the
       name of the coordinate space.  A coordinate space named gg cannot be reliably accessed by these macros.

       The macros are emitted immediately before the frame is drawn.

       DWB  grap  may  use these as part of its implementation.  This grap provides them only for compatibility.
       Note that these are very simple macros, and may not do what you expect under complex conditions.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       If the environment variable GRAP_DEFINES is defined, grap will look for its defines file there.  If  that
       value  is a relative path name the path specified in the -M option will be searched for it.  GRAP_DEFINES
       overrides the compiled in location of the defines file, but may be overridden by the -d or -D flags.

       If GRAP_SAFER is set, sprintf is disabled to prevent forcing grap to core dump or smash the stack.

FILES

       /usr/share/grap/grap.defines

SEE ALSO

       atan2(3), groff(1), pic(1), printf(3), sh(1), sprintf(3), troff(1)

       If documentation and examples have been installed,  grap  --version  or  grap  --help  will  display  the
       locations.

BUGS

       There  are  several  small  incompatibilities  with  K&R grap.  They include the sh command not expanding
       variables and macros, and a more strict adherence to parameter order in the internal commands.

       Although much improved, the error reporting code can still be confused.  Notably, an error in a macro  is
       not detected until the macro is used, and it produces unusual output in the error message.

       Iterating many times over a macro with no newlines can run grap out of memory.

AUTHOR

       This  implementation  was  done  by  Ted Faber <faber@lunabase.org>.  Bruce Lilly <bruce.lilly@gmail.com>
       contributed many bug fixes, including a considerable revamp of the error  reporting  code.   If  you  can
       actually find an error in your grap code, you can probably thank him.  grap was designed and specified by
       Brian Kernighan and Jon Bentley.

Debian                                           March 11, 2006                                          GRAP(1)