An ignorable white space change. Some of the added markup in the previous

commit extended some line lengths too far.
This commit is contained in:
Nik Clayton 1999-04-08 21:51:14 +00:00
parent 6fd5153fca
commit dc1aa9d151
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=4649
3 changed files with 15 additions and 15 deletions

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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!-- <!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.13 1999-04-08 21:37:00 nik Exp $ $Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.14 1999-04-08 21:51:14 nik Exp $
--> -->
<chapter id="printing"> <chapter id="printing">
@ -1653,10 +1653,10 @@ active kelly 9 /etc/host.conf, /etc/hosts.equiv 88 bytes
is the currently active job (note the word <literal>active</literal> is the currently active job (note the word <literal>active</literal>
under the &ldquo;Rank&rdquo; column), which means the printer should under the &ldquo;Rank&rdquo; column), which means the printer should
be currently printing that job. The second job consists of data be currently printing that job. The second job consists of data
passed as the standard input to the &man.lpr.1; command. The third job came from user <username>mary</username>; it is a passed as the standard input to the &man.lpr.1; command. The third
much larger job. The pathname of the files she's trying to print is job came from user <username>mary</username>; it is a much larger
too long to fit, so the &man.lpq.1; command just shows three job. The pathname of the files she's trying to print is too long to
dots.</para> fit, so the &man.lpq.1; command just shows three dots.</para>
<para>The very first line of the output from &man.lpq.1; is also useful: <para>The very first line of the output from &man.lpq.1; is also useful:
it tells what the printer is currently doing (or at least what LPD it tells what the printer is currently doing (or at least what LPD

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!-- <!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.13 1999-04-08 21:37:00 nik Exp $ $Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.14 1999-04-08 21:51:14 nik Exp $
--> -->
<chapter id="printing"> <chapter id="printing">
@ -1653,10 +1653,10 @@ active kelly 9 /etc/host.conf, /etc/hosts.equiv 88 bytes
is the currently active job (note the word <literal>active</literal> is the currently active job (note the word <literal>active</literal>
under the &ldquo;Rank&rdquo; column), which means the printer should under the &ldquo;Rank&rdquo; column), which means the printer should
be currently printing that job. The second job consists of data be currently printing that job. The second job consists of data
passed as the standard input to the &man.lpr.1; command. The third job came from user <username>mary</username>; it is a passed as the standard input to the &man.lpr.1; command. The third
much larger job. The pathname of the files she's trying to print is job came from user <username>mary</username>; it is a much larger
too long to fit, so the &man.lpq.1; command just shows three job. The pathname of the files she's trying to print is too long to
dots.</para> fit, so the &man.lpq.1; command just shows three dots.</para>
<para>The very first line of the output from &man.lpq.1; is also useful: <para>The very first line of the output from &man.lpq.1; is also useful:
it tells what the printer is currently doing (or at least what LPD it tells what the printer is currently doing (or at least what LPD

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!-- <!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.13 1999-04-08 21:37:00 nik Exp $ $Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.14 1999-04-08 21:51:14 nik Exp $
--> -->
<chapter id="printing"> <chapter id="printing">
@ -1653,10 +1653,10 @@ active kelly 9 /etc/host.conf, /etc/hosts.equiv 88 bytes
is the currently active job (note the word <literal>active</literal> is the currently active job (note the word <literal>active</literal>
under the &ldquo;Rank&rdquo; column), which means the printer should under the &ldquo;Rank&rdquo; column), which means the printer should
be currently printing that job. The second job consists of data be currently printing that job. The second job consists of data
passed as the standard input to the &man.lpr.1; command. The third job came from user <username>mary</username>; it is a passed as the standard input to the &man.lpr.1; command. The third
much larger job. The pathname of the files she's trying to print is job came from user <username>mary</username>; it is a much larger
too long to fit, so the &man.lpq.1; command just shows three job. The pathname of the files she's trying to print is too long to
dots.</para> fit, so the &man.lpq.1; command just shows three dots.</para>
<para>The very first line of the output from &man.lpq.1; is also useful: <para>The very first line of the output from &man.lpq.1; is also useful:
it tells what the printer is currently doing (or at least what LPD it tells what the printer is currently doing (or at least what LPD