On May 11, 2018, at 6:40 PM, Nemo
<cym224(a)gmail.com> wrote:
It would also be interesting to learn how
the writers were taught *roff, what editors were used, and what they
thought. (I recall that the secretaries, as they were then called, in
the math dep't used vi to compose plain TeX documents and xdvi to
proofread them.)
The original AT&T patents work would have pre-dated vi and TeX, so they would have
been using ed and [nt]roff I would guess. The BSTJ is probably a good starting point for
the early history.
In the mid-late 1980s I helped deploy UNIX into a court reporting company that had been
using Convergent Ngen workstations to edit and proof court transcripts. Within a couple
of months we had the court reporters trained up on vi, spell, troff, etc. They would
upload their tapes from the steno machine to the UNIX server, edit and proof the
documents, then typeset the results to a Postscript printer. Those masters would then be
duplicated and sent out to the customers.
Of the dozen or so reporters working there, at least three or four wrote their own troff
macro packages, along with an assortment of awk scripts to help catch errors in the
transcript source documents.
Today, when I hear people bitch about not having Word on their desktop, I just laugh ;-)
--lyndon