-.TH ATALK_ATON 3 "12 Jan 1994" "netatalk 1.3"
+.TH atalk_aton 3 "12 Jan 1994" 2.0.0 Netatalk
.SH NAME
atalk_aton \- AppleTalk address parsing
.SH SYNOPSIS
.nf
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netatalk/at.h>
-.LP
-atalk_aton( cp, ata )
-char *cp;
-struct at_addr *ata;
.fi
+.sp 1
+.PP
+\fIatalk_aton\fR(char * \fIcp\fR, struct at_addr * \fIata\fR);
.SH DESCRIPTION
-The
-.B atalk_aton()
-routine converts an ascii representation of an AppleTalk address to a
-format appropriate for system calls. Acceptable ascii representations
-include both hex and base 10, in triples or doubles. For instance, the
-address `0x1f6b.77' has a network part of `8043' and a node part of
-`119'. This same address could be written `8043.119', `31.107.119', or
-`0x1f.6b.77'. If the address is in hex and the first digit is one of
-`A-F', a leading `0x' is redundant.
-.SH SEE ALSO
-.BR atalk (4).
+The atalk_aton() routine converts an ASCII
+representation of an AppleTalk address to a format appropriate for system
+calls. Acceptable ASCII representations include both hex and base 10, in
+triples or doubles. For instance, the address `0x1f6b.77' has a
+network part of `8043' and a node part of `119'. This same address
+could be written `8043.119', `31.107.119', or `0x1f.6b.77'. If
+the address is in hex and the first digit is one of `A\-F', a leading
+`0x' is redundant.
+.SH "SEE ALSO"
+\fBatalk\fR(4).
+