man1/*: ffix: change '-' to '\-' for options

Change '-' to '\-' for the prefix of names to indicate an option.

Signed-off-by: Bjarni Ingi Gislason <bjarniig@rhi.hi.is>
Signed-off-by: Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Bjarni Ingi Gislason 2020-07-01 22:05:53 +00:00 committed by Michael Kerrisk
parent 99192e5fbf
commit 8ef1d3d11d
3 changed files with 7 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ the behavior is as follows:
.BR \-a ", " \-\-all\-locales
Display a list of all available locales.
The
.B -v
.B \-v
option causes the
.B LC_IDENTIFICATION
metadata about each locale to be included in the output.
@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ metadata about each locale to be included in the output.
.BR \-m ", " \-\-charmaps
Display the available charmaps (character set description files).
To display the current character set for the locale, use
\fBlocale -c charmap\fR.
\fBlocale \-c charmap\fR.
.PP
The
.B locale
@ -195,8 +195,8 @@ in the shell profile file so that the custom locale will be used in the
subsequent user sessions:
.PP
.EX
$ \fBmkdir -p $HOME/.locale\fP
$ \fBI18NPATH=./wrk/ localedef -f UTF-8 -i fi_SE $HOME/.locale/fi_SE.UTF-8\fP
$ \fBmkdir \-p $HOME/.locale\fP
$ \fBI18NPATH=./wrk/ localedef \-f UTF-8 \-i fi_SE $HOME/.locale/fi_SE.UTF-8\fP
$ \fBLOCPATH=$HOME/.locale LC_ALL=fi_SE.UTF-8 date\fP
$ \fBecho "export LOCPATH=\e$HOME/.locale" >> $HOME/.bashrc\fP
$ \fBecho "export LANG=fi_SE.UTF-8" >> $HOME/.bashrc\fP

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@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ can also be intercepted.
can output the collected data in textual form, or it can use
.BR memusagestat (1)
(see the
.B -p
.B \-p
option, below)
to create a PNG file containing graphical representation
of the collected data.

View File

@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ creates a PNG file containing a graphical representation of the
memory profiling data in the file
.IR datafile ;
that file is generated via the
.I -d
.I \-d
(or
.IR --data )
option of
@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ The red line in the graph shows the heap usage (allocated memory)
and the green line shows the stack usage.
The x-scale is either the number of memory-handling function calls or
(if the
.I -t
.I \-t
option is specified)
time.
.SH OPTIONS