Following-up with a correction and some details about user-facing
changes in Documenter's Workbench.
1984 SVR2 containing DWB 2.0 incorporating ditroff (no postscript
output yet though)
My mistake. I was glancing at a late copy of the 3B2 SVR2 source with
DWB 2.0 and should have written 1.0 here.
DWB 1.0 was released in 1984 at the same time as SVR2. Changes from v7
troff are the inclusion of ditroff as troff, C/A/T troff as otroff, the
mm macros, pic, and sroff. The sroff command provided a faster
simplified interpreter for line printer output.
1987 SVR3 unbundled all troff versions and offered DWB
2+ as
an add-on package
DWB 2.0 was released in 1986. This verison added grap and the mptx
indexing macros while removing otroff and sroff. Elan eroff for DOS and
sqtroff were based on DWB 2.
DWB 2+ was generally available after 1987 as an optional binary add-on
package at added cost.
SVR4 troff included the postscript output formatter added to the
codebase in mid-1988 (tracked in Research UNIX v9), but not grap.
198907 DWB 3.0 changed font tables to ascii from old
binary format
199004 DWB 3.1 retired nroff for monolithic troff binary with -a flag
for simplified ascii output (for example, tables are not formatted
for true hardcopy output in ascii format)
199202 DWB 3.2 was released with mpm macros for automatic vertical page
justification, 8-bit clean i/o, and picasso visual line drawing
interface using the OPEN LOOK toolkit
199207 DWB 3.3 contained a new version of tbl and the mpm macro package
to customize postscript color and page formats
199311 DWB 3.4 with new spell check, dwb command to guess processor
pipeline, postscript file layout tools, and X11 viewers (xhbt for
eqn/pic/tbl figures and dwbman for hypertext navigation of manpages)
I hope this is a helpful summary. I've been working on a more detailed
timeline tracking the versions shipped by different UNIX vendors.
Also testing C/A/T troff to postscript converters (Adobe transcript,
Chris Lewis' psroff, and jetroff) to approximate older output in
comparison to the excellent heirloom doctools.
Thanks,
Dan Plassche