.PP RCS markers like "$Revision: 2.3 $" etc., can be pretty-printed (i.e., without the leading keyword and the $-signs) as follows. In n/troff, define the following macro: .nf .de VL \\$2 .. The call .VL $Revision: 1.2 $ .fi picks out the number (actually, the value field of any RCS marker). In all manual pages, I recommend the use an identification section instead of an author section, which looks something like this: .nf .SH IDENTIFICATION Author: Walter F. Tichy, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907. .sp 0 Revision Number: .VL $Revision: 3.0 $ ; Release Date: .VL $Date: 82/11/27 11:43:39 $ \&. .sp 0 Copyright \(co 1982 by Walter F. Tichy. .fi One could use the same trick with C-macros, but, unfortunately, these macros want commas separating the arguments. I can only offer sscanf instead: .nf char * getkeyval(s) char * s; { static char keyval[100]; sscanf(s,"%*s%s",keyval); return keyval; } An example use of getkeyval() is the following greeting message: printf("Program version %s\n",getkeyval("$Revision 1.2 $")); .fi There is no option in RCS that strips off the keywords, for a good reason: If the keyword is stripped off, it becomes impossible to update the keyword value automatically. There is no way to suppress the keyword expansion, either. If you absolutely need a keyword in RCS format unexpanded, piece it together from two strings in C, or imbed the null-character \& in n/troff.