Description: Move manpage to section 6 (games)
Forwarded: not-needed
Origin: vendor
Author: Gurkan Sengun <gurkan@phys.ethz.ch>

--- a/cowsay.1
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,168 +0,0 @@
-.\" 
-.\" cowsay.1
-.\"
-.\" $Id: cowsay.1,v 1.4 1999/11/04 19:50:40 tony Exp $
-.\"
-.\" This file is part of cowsay.  (c) 1999 Tony Monroe.
-.\"
-.ds Nm Cowsay
-.ds nm cowsay
-.ds Vn 3.02
-.TH \*(nm 1 "$Date: 1999/11/04 19:50:40 $"
-.SH NAME
-\*(nm/cowthink \- configurable speaking/thinking cow (and a bit more)
-.SH SYNOPSIS
-cowsay
-.RB [ \-e 
-.IR eye_string ]
-.RB [ \-f 
-.IR cowfile ]
-.RB [ \-h ]
-.RB [ \-l ]
-.RB [ \-n ]
-.RB [ \-T 
-.IR tongue_string ] 
-.RB [ \-W 
-.IR column ]
-.RB [ \-bdgpstwy ]
-.SH DESCRIPTION
-.I Cowsay
-generates an ASCII picture of a cow saying something provided by the
-user.  If run with no arguments, it accepts standard input, word-wraps
-the message given at about 40 columns, and prints the cow saying the
-given message on standard output.
-.PP
-To aid in the use of arbitrary messages with arbitrary whitespace,
-use the
-.B \-n
-option.  If it is specified, the given message will not be
-word-wrapped.  This is possibly useful if you want to make the cow
-think or speak in figlet(6).  If
-.B \-n
-is specified, there must not be any command-line arguments left
-after all the switches have been processed.
-.PP
-The
-.B \-W
-specifies roughly (where the message should be wrapped.  The default
-is equivalent to
-.B \-W 40
-i.e. wrap words at or before the 40th column.
-.PP
-If any command-line arguments are left over after all switches have
-been processed, they become the cow's message.  The program will not
-accept standard input for a message in this case.
-.PP
-There are several provided modes which change the appearance of the
-cow depending on its particular emotional/physical state.  The 
-.B \-b
-option initiates Borg mode; 
-.B \-d
-causes the cow to appear dead; 
-.B \-g
-invokes greedy mode;
-.B \-p
-causes a state of paranoia to come over the cow;
-.B \-s
-makes the cow appear thoroughly stoned;
-.B \-t
-yields a tired cow;
-.B \-w
-is somewhat the opposite of 
-.BR \-t , 
-and initiates wired mode;
-.B \-y
-brings on the cow's youthful appearance.
-.PP
-The user may specify the
-.B \-e
-option to select the appearance of the cow's eyes, in which case
-the first two characters of the argument string
-.I eye_string
-will be used.  The default eyes are 'oo'.  The tongue is similarly
-configurable through
-.B \-T
-and
-.IR tongue_string ;
-it must be two characters and does not appear by default.  However,
-it does appear in the 'dead' and 'stoned' modes.  Any configuration
-done by
-.B \-e
-and
-.B \-T
-will be lost if one of the provided modes is used.
-.PP
-The
-.B \-f
-option specifies a particular cow picture file (``cowfile'') to
-use.  If the cowfile spec contains '/' then it will be interpreted
-as a path relative to the current directory.  Otherwise, cowsay
-will search the path specified in the 
-.B COWPATH 
-environment variable.
-To list all cowfiles on the current 
-.BR COWPATH , 
-invoke
-.B \*(nm
-with the
-.B \-l
-switch.
-.PP
-If the program is invoked as 
-.B cowthink 
-then the cow will think its message instead of saying it.
-.PP
-.SH COWFILE FORMAT
-A cowfile is made up of a simple block of
-.BR perl (1)
-code, which assigns a picture of a cow to the variable
-.BR $the_cow .
-Should you wish to customize the eyes or the tongue of the cow,
-then the variables
-.B $eyes 
-and 
-.B $tongue
-may be used.  The trail leading up to the cow's message balloon is
-composed of the character(s) in the
-.B $thoughts
-variable.  Any backslashes must be reduplicated to prevent
-interpolation.  The name of a cowfile should end with
-.BR .cow ,
-otherwise it is assumed not to be a cowfile.  Also, at-signs (``@'')
-must be backslashed because that is what Perl 5 expects.
-.PP
-.SH COMPATIBILITY WITH OLDER VERSIONS
-.PP
-What older versions? :-)
-.PP
-Version 3.x is fully backward-compatible with 2.x versions.  If
-you're still using a 1.x version, consider upgrading.  And tell me
-where you got the older versions, since I didn't exactly put them
-up for world-wide access.
-.PP
-Oh, just so you know, this manual page documents version \*(Vn of
-cowsay.
-.SH ENVIRONMENT
-The COWPATH environment variable, if present, will be used to search
-for cowfiles.  It contains a colon-separated list of directories,
-much like
-.B PATH or
-.BR MANPATH .
-It should always contain the
-.B /usr/local/share/cows
-directory, or at least a directory with a file called 
-.B default.cow
-in it.
-.SH FILES
-.B %PREFIX%/share/cows
-holds a sample set of cowfiles.  If your
-.B COWPATH
-is not explicitly set, it automatically contains this directory.
-.SH BUGS
-If there are any, please notify the author at the address below.
-.SH AUTHOR
-Tony Monroe (tony@nog.net), with suggestions from Shannon
-Appel (appel@CSUA.Berkeley.EDU) and contributions from Anthony Polito
-(aspolito@CSUA.Berkeley.EDU).
-.SH SEE ALSO
-perl(1), wall(1), nwrite(1), figlet(6)
diff --git a/cowsay.6 b/cowsay.6
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e76ad0a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/cowsay.6
@@ -0,0 +1,168 @@
+.\" 
+.\" cowsay.6
+.\"
+.\" $Id: cowsay.6,v 1.4 1999/11/04 19:50:40 tony Exp $
+.\"
+.\" This file is part of cowsay.  (c) 1999 Tony Monroe.
+.\"
+.ds Nm Cowsay
+.ds nm cowsay
+.ds Vn 3.03
+.TH \*(nm 6 "$Date: 1999/11/04 19:50:40 $"
+.SH NAME
+\*(nm/cowthink \- configurable speaking/thinking cow (and a bit more)
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+cowsay
+.RB [ \-e 
+.IR eye_string ]
+.RB [ \-f 
+.IR cowfile ]
+.RB [ \-h ]
+.RB [ \-l ]
+.RB [ \-n ]
+.RB [ \-T 
+.IR tongue_string ] 
+.RB [ \-W 
+.IR column ]
+.RB [ \-bdgpstwy ]
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+.I Cowsay
+generates an ASCII picture of a cow saying something provided by the
+user.  If run with no arguments, it accepts standard input, word-wraps
+the message given at about 40 columns, and prints the cow saying the
+given message on standard output.
+.PP
+To aid in the use of arbitrary messages with arbitrary whitespace,
+use the
+.B \-n
+option.  If it is specified, the given message will not be
+word-wrapped.  This is possibly useful if you want to make the cow
+think or speak in figlet(6).  If
+.B \-n
+is specified, there must not be any command-line arguments left
+after all the switches have been processed.
+.PP
+The
+.B \-W
+specifies roughly where the message should be wrapped.  The default
+is equivalent to
+.B \-W 40
+i.e. wrap words at or before the 40th column.
+.PP
+If any command-line arguments are left over after all switches have
+been processed, they become the cow's message.  The program will not
+accept standard input for a message in this case.
+.PP
+There are several provided modes which change the appearance of the
+cow depending on its particular emotional/physical state.  The 
+.B \-b
+option initiates Borg mode; 
+.B \-d
+causes the cow to appear dead; 
+.B \-g
+invokes greedy mode;
+.B \-p
+causes a state of paranoia to come over the cow;
+.B \-s
+makes the cow appear thoroughly stoned;
+.B \-t
+yields a tired cow;
+.B \-w
+is somewhat the opposite of 
+.BR \-t , 
+and initiates wired mode;
+.B \-y
+brings on the cow's youthful appearance.
+.PP
+The user may specify the
+.B \-e
+option to select the appearance of the cow's eyes, in which case
+the first two characters of the argument string
+.I eye_string
+will be used.  The default eyes are 'oo'.  The tongue is similarly
+configurable through
+.B \-T
+and
+.IR tongue_string ;
+it must be two characters and does not appear by default.  However,
+it does appear in the 'dead' and 'stoned' modes.  Any configuration
+done by
+.B \-e
+and
+.B \-T
+will be lost if one of the provided modes is used.
+.PP
+The
+.B \-f
+option specifies a particular cow picture file (``cowfile'') to
+use.  If the cowfile spec contains '/' then it will be interpreted
+as a path relative to the current directory.  Otherwise, cowsay
+will search the path specified in the 
+.B COWPATH 
+environment variable.
+To list all cowfiles on the current 
+.BR COWPATH , 
+invoke
+.B \*(nm
+with the
+.B \-l
+switch.
+.PP
+If the program is invoked as 
+.B cowthink 
+then the cow will think its message instead of saying it.
+.PP
+.SH COWFILE FORMAT
+A cowfile is made up of a simple block of
+.BR perl (1)
+code, which assigns a picture of a cow to the variable
+.BR $the_cow .
+Should you wish to customize the eyes or the tongue of the cow,
+then the variables
+.B $eyes 
+and 
+.B $tongue
+may be used.  The trail leading up to the cow's message balloon is
+composed of the character(s) in the
+.B $thoughts
+variable.  Any backslashes must be reduplicated to prevent
+interpolation.  The name of a cowfile should end with
+.BR .cow ,
+otherwise it is assumed not to be a cowfile.  Also, at-signs (``@'')
+must be backslashed because that is what Perl 5 expects.
+.PP
+.SH COMPATIBILITY WITH OLDER VERSIONS
+.PP
+What older versions? :-)
+.PP
+Version 3.x is fully backward-compatible with 2.x versions.  If
+you're still using a 1.x version, consider upgrading.  And tell me
+where you got the older versions, since I didn't exactly put them
+up for world-wide access.
+.PP
+Oh, just so you know, this manual page documents version \*(Vn of
+cowsay.
+.SH ENVIRONMENT
+The COWPATH environment variable, if present, will be used to search
+for cowfiles.  It contains a colon-separated list of directories,
+much like
+.B PATH or
+.BR MANPATH .
+It should always contain the
+.B /usr/share/cowsay/cows
+directory, or at least a directory with a file called 
+.B default.cow
+in it.
+.SH FILES
+.B /usr/share/cowsay/cows
+holds a sample set of cowfiles.  If your
+.B COWPATH
+is not explicitly set, it automatically contains this directory.
+.SH BUGS
+If there are any, please notify the author at the address below.
+.SH AUTHOR
+Tony Monroe (tony@nog.net), with suggestions from Shannon
+Appel (appel@CSUA.Berkeley.EDU) and contributions from Anthony Polito
+(aspolito@CSUA.Berkeley.EDU).
+.SH SEE ALSO
+perl(1), wall(1), nwrite(1), figlet(6)
