tman pages: use consistent formatting in examples - numtools - perform numerical operations on vectors and matrices in unix pipes
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       ---
 (DIR) commit 29ec796e11dfd5f8810c601efa2f71b694c5b5d3
 (DIR) parent 2ee4ea97b087bf7bdb4ee4da1ea668a48deafdbb
 (HTM) Author: Anders Damsgaard <anders@adamsgaard.dk>
       Date:   Mon,  9 May 2022 16:05:30 +0200
       
       man pages: use consistent formatting in examples
       
       Diffstat:
         M randcounts.1                        |       3 ---
         M range.1                             |       7 -------
         M rangetest.1                         |       3 ---
         M stddev.1                            |       1 -
         M stdvar.1                            |       1 -
       
       5 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)
       ---
 (DIR) diff --git a/randcounts.1 b/randcounts.1
       t@@ -44,17 +44,14 @@ to generate reproducable binning.
        .Sh EXAMPLES
        Put one point in four bins with equal probability (25%).
        Due to the randomness, your output may differ:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ randcounts 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25
        .Dl 0        1        0        0
        .Pp
        Put 100 points in two bins with 75% and 25% probability, respectively:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ randcounts -n 100 0.75 0.25
        .Pp
        Put 100 points in three equal bins 1000 times, and calculate the average bin sizes with
        .Xr mean 1 :
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ randcounts -n 100 -r 1000 0.333 0.333 0.334 | mean
        .Dl 33.067        32.82        34.113
        .Sh SEE ALSO
 (DIR) diff --git a/range.1 b/range.1
       t@@ -74,7 +74,6 @@ Print the spacing between numbers and exit.
        .El
        .Sh EXAMPLES
        Generate four equally-spaced numbers in the closed default range [0;1]:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ range -n 4
        .Dl 0
        .Dl 0.33333
       t@@ -84,7 +83,6 @@ Generate four equally-spaced numbers in the closed default range [0;1]:
        Same as the previous example, but with full
        .Vt double
        precision on a 64-bit system:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ range -n 4 -f '%.17g\en' 0 1
        .Dl 0
        .Dl 0.33333333333333331
       t@@ -92,7 +90,6 @@ precision on a 64-bit system:
        .Dl 1
        .Pp
        Generate four numbers in the range ]0;1[:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ range -b -e -n 4 0 1
        .Dl 0.2
        .Dl 0.4
       t@@ -100,26 +97,22 @@ Generate four numbers in the range ]0;1[:
        .Dl 0.8
        .Pp
        Print ten numbers in the interval [1;10] with spaces between values:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ range -f '%g ' 1 10
        .Dl 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
        .Pp
        Repeat and modify a string three times:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ range -n 3 -f 'The best number is %.0g\en' 1 3
        .Dl The best number is 1
        .Dl The best number is 2
        .Dl The best number is 3
        .Pp
        Generate three numbers evenly distributed in logspace from 10^0 to 10^2:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ range -l -n 3 0 2
        .Dl 1
        .Dl 10
        .Dl 100
        .Pp
        Generate three numbers in the range [-2;-1]:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ range -n 3 -- -2 -1
        .Dl -2
        .Dl -1.5
 (DIR) diff --git a/rangetest.1 b/rangetest.1
       t@@ -50,7 +50,6 @@ Given an example program "condfail", which always fails when its first
        argument is equal or greater than 1.5,
        .Nm
        shows all parameter values which result in a successful invocation:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ rangetest './condfail @VAL@' 0.0 10.0 2>/dev/null
        .Dl 0
        .Dl 1.25
       t@@ -59,7 +58,6 @@ shows all parameter values which result in a successful invocation:
        .Dl 1.49414
        .Pp
        The values associated with failed invocations are printed in standard error:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ rangetest './condfail @VAL@' 0.0 10.0 >/dev/null
        .Dl 10
        .Dl 5
       t@@ -79,7 +77,6 @@ Find the minimum acceptable length
        for the program
        .Xr cngf-pf 1 ,
        while surpressing its output:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ ./rangetest 'cngf-pf -L @VAL@ -d 0.1 >/dev/null 2>&1' -2e-1 2e-1 2>/dev/null
        .Dl 0.2
        .Dl 0.15
 (DIR) diff --git a/stddev.1 b/stddev.1
       t@@ -22,7 +22,6 @@ Return the uncorrected sample standard deviation instead.
        .El
        .Sh EXAMPLES
        Compute the corrected standard deviation for some input numbers:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ printf '10\en8\en10\en8\en8\en4\en' | stddev
        .Dl 2.1908902300206643
        .Pp
 (DIR) diff --git a/stdvar.1 b/stdvar.1
       t@@ -22,7 +22,6 @@ Return the uncorrected sample standard variance instead.
        .El
        .Sh EXAMPLES
        Compute the corrected standard variance for some input numbers:
       -.Pp
        .Dl $ printf '10\en8\en10\en8\en8\en4\en' | stdvar
        .Dl 4.7999999999999998
        .Pp