Newsgroups: comp.speech
Path: cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news.harvard.edu!news2.near.net!MathWorks.Com!news.duke.edu!news-feed-1.peachnet.edu!gatech!howland.reston.ans.net!newsserver.jvnc.net!newsserver.egr.uri.edu!ozone!secret!hidden!netcom.com!John Durmack
From: John Durmack
Subject: - man (0/1) [sh]
Sender: John Durmack@netcom.com (jdur)
Nntp-Posting-Host: pi.netcom.com
Organization: University of Rhode Island / College of Engineering
Message-ID: <1994Sep2.111523.0@netcom.com>
Originator: swamik@orca
X-Posting-Software: xmitBin v1.9 by D. Jim Howard (deej@cadence.com)
Date: Fri, 2 Sep 1994 15:15:31 GMT
Lines: 36

	man is a uuencoded 

	This description and the associated part contains the uuencoded form
    of man.

    Instructions for extraction:
    ----------------------------
    A) Using rn/nn news reader facilities (easiest - let the news reader do
          the work! - includes automatic extraction and filesum checking):
       1) Ignore the script below - just use the 'extract' feature of your
          news reader to decode part 1 (NICE feature - unfortunately not
          available in all versions).
       2) Enjoy the resulting man file!
    B) UNIX script method (next easiest - recommended for beginners and
          those interested in automatic extraction and filesum checking):
       1) Extract the shell script in part 1, removing everything before and
          including the "shell begin here" line, and everything after and
          including the "shell end here" line (save as man1).
       2) Execute 'sh man1'.  This script will do all of the
          extraction, filesum checking, and decoding steps for you, detecting
          any errors along the way.
       3) Enjoy the resulting man file!
    C) To manually edit/patch (for those familiar with these type of files
          - and/or those without UNIX!):
       1) Save everything between line pairs of the text
          "BEGIN --- CUT HERE --- Cut Here --- cut here ---"
                          ...and...
          "END --- CUT HERE --- Cut Here --- cut here ---".
       2) Concatenate the resulting file part(s) together (in order!) and
          pipe the result into uudecode.
       3) Enjoy the resulting man file!

	If you have any trouble with the above, I'm sure I'll get e-mail from
    you... (but if you DON'T have trouble, I wouldn't mind hearing that,
    either!!)

