Index: cwiid-0.6.00+svn184.orig/man/man1/wminput.1
===================================================================
--- cwiid-0.6.00+svn184.orig.orig/man/man1/wminput.1	2009-03-27 13:08:36.000000000 +0100
+++ cwiid-0.6.00+svn184.orig/man/man1/wminput.1	2009-03-27 13:08:36.000000000 +0100
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@
 .\" respectively.
 \fBwminput\fP is a program that provides an event driver for the wiimote, supporting all buttons (except Power) and pointer tracking, and featuring a tracking algorithm plugin architecture.
 .PP
-Your kernel must be configured with uinput support (INPUT_UINPUT, or Device Drivers/Input Device Support/Miscellaneous Drivers/User Level Driver Support under menuconfig).  Compile into the kernel or as a module.  See http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Compile_a_Kernel_Manually for information on kernel compilation.
+Your kernel must be configured with uinput support (INPUT_UINPUT, or Device Drivers/Input Device Support/Miscellaneous Drivers/User Level Driver Support under menuconfig).  Compile into the kernel or as a module.  See http://gentoo\-wiki.com/HOWTO_Compile_a_Kernel_Manually for information on kernel compilation.
 By default, some (most? all?) udev configurations set up a uinput device file readable only by root.  Using wminput as a user other than root requires configuration udev to change the permissions on uinput.  Place the following line in a file in /etc/udev/rules.d (see the documentation for your distro for the recommended file for local rules) to allow anyone on the system to use uinput:
 .PP
 KERNEL=="uinput", MODE="0666"
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@
 .PP
 A uinput group can be created specifically for this purpose, or another existing group such as wheel can be used.
 .PP
-Getting X to recognize non-standard key symbols, and mapping actions to those symbols, is not automatic.  An excellent tutorial at http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Use_Multimedia_Keys can help you set this up.  An overview of the process (see the HOWTO for more information):
+Getting X to recognize non\-standard key symbols, and mapping actions to those symbols, is not automatic.  An excellent tutorial at http://gentoo\-wiki.com/HOWTO_Use_Multimedia_Keys can help you set this up.  An overview of the process (see the HOWTO for more information):
 .br
 1.Edit ~/.CWiid/wminput.conf
 .br
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@
 .br
 3.If the codes are not mapped to the appropriate symbols, edit ~/.Xmodmap, and use xmodmap to map them.  (A copy of my ~/.Xmodmap is included in CWiid/doc)
 .br
-4.Use xbindkeys or a window manager-specific utility to map the key symbols to specific actions.
+4.Use xbindkeys or a window manager\-specific utility to map the key symbols to specific actions.
 .PP
 wminput tracking plugins are, by default, installed to /usr/lib/CWiid/plugins.  Plugins may also be placed in ~/.CWiid/plugins, and plugins placed here will take precedence.
 
@@ -59,26 +59,26 @@
 .B \-h
 Show summary of options.
 .TP
-.B \-v, --version
+.B \-v, \-\-version
 Output version information and exit.
 .TP
-.B \-c, --config [file]
+.B \-c, \-\-config [file]
 Choose config file to use.
 .TP
-.B \-d, --daemon
-Implies -q, -r, and -w.
+.B \-d, \-\-daemon
+Implies \-q, \-r, and \-w.
 .TP
-.B \-q, --quiet
+.B \-q, \-\-quiet
 Reduce output to errors
 .TP
-.B \-r, --reconnect [wait]
+.B \-r, \-\-reconnect [wait]
 Automatically try reconnect after wiimote disconnect.
 .TP
-.B \-w, --wait
+.B \-w, \-\-wait
 Wait indefinitely for wiimote to connect.
 .TP
 .B bdaddr
-Specify the wiimote bluetooth address. The bluetooth device address (bdaddr) of the wiimote can be specified on the command-line, or through the WIIMOTE_BDADDR environment variable, in the that order of precedence.  If neither is given, the first wiimote found by hci_inquiry will be used.
+Specify the wiimote bluetooth address. The bluetooth device address (bdaddr) of the wiimote can be specified on the command\-line, or through the WIIMOTE_BDADDR environment variable, in the that order of precedence.  If neither is given, the first wiimote found by hci_inquiry will be used.
 
 .SH SEE ALSO
 .BR wmgui (1),
