1 \input texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.128 2004/12/29 15:06:41 karl Exp $
3 @c Ordinarily, Texinfo files have the extension .texi. But texinfo.texi
4 @c clashes with texinfo.tex on 8.3 filesystems, so we use texinfo.txi.
6 @c Everything between the start/end of header lines will be passed by
7 @c Emacs's {texinfo,makeinfo}-format region commands. See the `start of
8 @c header' node for more info.
11 @c makeinfo and texinfo.tex ignore all text before @setfilename.
13 @c Ordinarily, the setfilename argument ends with .info. But
14 @c texinfo.info-13 is too long for 14-character filesystems.
17 @c Automake automatically updates version.texi to @set VERSION and
18 @c @set UPDATED to appropriate values.
20 @settitle GNU Texinfo @value{VERSION}
22 @c Define a new index for options.
24 @c Put everything except function (command, in this case) names in one
25 @c index (arbitrarily chosen to be the concept index).
33 @comment %**end of header
36 This manual is for GNU Texinfo (version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}),
37 a documentation system that can produce both online information and a
38 printed manual from a single source.
40 Copyright (C) 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
41 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
44 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
45 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
46 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
47 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
48 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is
49 included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License.''
51 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
52 this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free
53 Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.''
57 @dircategory Texinfo documentation system
59 * Texinfo: (texinfo). The GNU documentation format.
60 * install-info: (texinfo)Invoking install-info. Update info/dir entries.
61 * texi2dvi: (texinfo)Format with texi2dvi. Print Texinfo documents.
62 * texi2pdf: (texinfo)PDF Output. PDF output for Texinfo.
63 * texindex: (texinfo)Format with tex/texindex. Sort Texinfo index files.
64 * makeinfo: (texinfo)Invoking makeinfo. Translate Texinfo source.
67 @c Before release, run C-u C-c C-u C-a (texinfo-all-menus-update with a
68 @c prefix arg). This updates the node pointers, which texinfmt.el needs.
70 @c Set smallbook if printing in smallbook format so the example of the
71 @c smallbook font is actually written using smallbook; in bigbook, a kludge
72 @c is used for TeX output. Do this through the -t option to texi2dvi,
73 @c so this same source can be used for other paper sizes as well.
78 @c If you like blank pages, add through texi2dvi -t.
79 @c setchapternewpage odd
81 @c Currently undocumented command, 5 December 1993:
82 @c nwnode (Same as node, but no warnings; for `makeinfo'.)
85 @shorttitlepage GNU Texinfo
89 @subtitle The GNU Documentation Format
90 @subtitle for Texinfo version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}
92 @author Robert J. Chassell
93 @author Richard M. Stallman
95 @c Include the Distribution inside the titlepage so
96 @c that headings are turned off.
99 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
103 Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
104 59 Temple Place Suite 330 @*
105 Boston, MA 02111-1307 @*
107 ISBN 1-882114-67-1 @c for version 4.0, September 1999.
108 @c ISBN 1-882114-65-5 is for version 3.12, March 1998.
109 @c ISBN 1-882114-64-7 is for edition 2.24 of November 1996.
110 @c ISBN 1-882114-63-9 is for edition 2.20 of 28 February 1995.
113 Cover art by Etienne Suvasa.
127 The first part of this master menu lists the major nodes in this Info
128 document, including the @@-command and concept indices. The rest of
129 the menu lists all the lower level nodes in the document.
134 * Copying Conditions:: Your rights.
135 * Overview:: Texinfo in brief.
136 * Texinfo Mode:: Using the GNU Emacs Texinfo mode.
137 * Beginning a File:: What is at the beginning of a Texinfo file?
138 * Ending a File:: What is at the end of a Texinfo file?
139 * Structuring:: Creating chapters, sections, appendices, etc.
140 * Nodes:: Writing nodes, the basic unit of Texinfo.
141 * Menus:: Writing menus.
142 * Cross References:: Writing cross references.
143 * Marking Text:: Marking words and phrases as code,
144 keyboard input, meta-syntactic
145 variables, and the like.
146 * Quotations and Examples:: Block quotations, examples, etc.
147 * Lists and Tables:: Itemized or numbered lists, and tables.
148 * Special Displays:: Floating figures and footnotes.
149 * Indices:: Creating indices.
150 * Insertions:: Inserting @@-signs, braces, etc.
151 * Breaks:: Forcing or preventing line and page breaks.
152 * Definition Commands:: Describing functions and the like uniformly.
153 * Conditionals:: Specifying text for only some output cases.
154 * Internationalization:: Supporting languages other than English.
155 * Defining New Texinfo Commands:: User-defined macros and aliases.
156 * Hardcopy:: Output for paper, with @TeX{}.
157 * Creating and Installing Info Files:: Details on Info output.
158 * Generating HTML:: Details on HTML output.
160 * Command List:: All the Texinfo @@-commands.
161 * Tips:: Hints on how to write a Texinfo document.
162 * Sample Texinfo Files:: Complete examples, including full texts.
163 * Include Files:: How to incorporate other Texinfo files.
164 * Headings:: How to write page headings and footings.
165 * Catching Mistakes:: How to find formatting mistakes.
166 * Copying This Manual:: The GNU Free Documentation License.
167 * Command and Variable Index:: A menu containing commands and variables.
168 * Concept Index:: A menu covering many topics.
171 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
175 * Reporting Bugs:: Submitting effective bug reports.
176 * Using Texinfo:: Create printed or online output.
177 * Output Formats:: Overview of the supported output formats.
178 * Info Files:: What is an Info file?
179 * Printed Books:: Characteristics of a printed book or manual.
180 * Formatting Commands:: @@-commands are used for formatting.
181 * Conventions:: General rules for writing a Texinfo file.
182 * Comments:: Writing comments and ignored text in general.
183 * Minimum:: What a Texinfo file must have.
184 * Six Parts:: Usually, a Texinfo file has six parts.
185 * Short Sample:: A short sample Texinfo file.
186 * History:: Acknowledgements, contributors and genesis.
190 * Texinfo Mode Overview:: How Texinfo mode can help you.
191 * Emacs Editing:: Texinfo mode adds to GNU Emacs' general
192 purpose editing features.
193 * Inserting:: How to insert frequently used @@-commands.
194 * Showing the Structure:: How to show the structure of a file.
195 * Updating Nodes and Menus:: How to update or create new nodes and menus.
196 * Info Formatting:: How to format for Info.
197 * Printing:: How to format and print part or all of a file.
198 * Texinfo Mode Summary:: Summary of all the Texinfo mode commands.
200 Updating Nodes and Menus
202 * Updating Commands:: Five major updating commands.
203 * Updating Requirements:: How to structure a Texinfo file for
204 using the updating command.
205 * Other Updating Commands:: How to indent descriptions, insert
206 missing nodes lines, and update
209 Beginning a Texinfo File
211 * Sample Beginning:: A sample beginning for a Texinfo file.
212 * Texinfo File Header:: The first lines.
213 * Document Permissions:: Ensuring your manual is free.
214 * Titlepage & Copyright Page:: Creating the title and copyright pages.
215 * Contents:: How to create a table of contents.
216 * The Top Node:: Creating the `Top' node and master menu.
217 * Global Document Commands:: Affecting formatting throughout.
218 * Software Copying Permissions:: Ensure that you and others continue to
219 have the right to use and share software.
223 * First Line:: The first line of a Texinfo file.
224 * Start of Header:: Formatting a region requires this.
225 * setfilename:: Tell Info the name of the Info file.
226 * settitle:: Create a title for the printed work.
227 * End of Header:: Formatting a region requires this.
231 * copying:: Declare the document's copying permissions.
232 * insertcopying:: Where to insert the permissions.
234 Title and Copyright Pages
236 * titlepage:: Create a title for the printed document.
237 * titlefont center sp:: The @code{@@titlefont}, @code{@@center},
238 and @code{@@sp} commands.
239 * title subtitle author:: The @code{@@title}, @code{@@subtitle},
240 and @code{@@author} commands.
241 * Copyright:: How to write the copyright notice and
242 include copying permissions.
243 * end titlepage:: Turn on page headings after the title and
245 * headings on off:: An option for turning headings on and off
246 and double or single sided printing.
248 The `Top' Node and Master Menu
251 * Master Menu Parts::
253 Global Document Commands
255 * documentdescription:: Document summary for the HTML output.
256 * setchapternewpage:: Start chapters on right-hand pages.
257 * paragraphindent:: Specify paragraph indentation.
258 * firstparagraphindent:: Suppress indentation of the first paragraph.
259 * exampleindent:: Specify environment indentation.
261 Ending a Texinfo File
263 * Printing Indices & Menus:: How to print an index in hardcopy and
264 generate index menus in Info.
265 * File End:: How to mark the end of a file.
269 * Tree Structuring:: A manual is like an upside down tree @dots{}
270 * Structuring Command Types:: How to divide a manual into parts.
271 * makeinfo top:: The @code{@@top} command, part of the `Top' node.
273 * unnumbered & appendix::
274 * majorheading & chapheading::
276 * unnumberedsec appendixsec heading::
278 * unnumberedsubsec appendixsubsec subheading::
279 * subsubsection:: Commands for the lowest level sections.
280 * Raise/lower sections:: How to change commands' hierarchical level.
284 * Two Paths:: Different commands to structure
285 Info output and printed output.
286 * Node Menu Illustration:: A diagram, and sample nodes and menus.
287 * node:: Creating nodes, in detail.
288 * makeinfo Pointer Creation:: Letting makeinfo determine node pointers.
289 * anchor:: Defining arbitrary cross-reference targets.
291 The @code{@@node} Command
293 * Node Names:: How to choose node and pointer names.
294 * Writing a Node:: How to write an @code{@@node} line.
295 * Node Line Tips:: Keep names short.
296 * Node Line Requirements:: Keep names unique, without @@-commands.
297 * First Node:: How to write a `Top' node.
298 * makeinfo top command:: How to use the @code{@@top} command.
302 * Menu Location:: Menus go at the ends of short nodes.
303 * Writing a Menu:: What is a menu?
304 * Menu Parts:: A menu entry has three parts.
305 * Less Cluttered Menu Entry:: Two part menu entry.
306 * Menu Example:: Two and three part menu entries.
307 * Other Info Files:: How to refer to a different Info file.
311 * References:: What cross references are for.
312 * Cross Reference Commands:: A summary of the different commands.
313 * Cross Reference Parts:: A cross reference has several parts.
314 * xref:: Begin a reference with `See' @dots{}
315 * Top Node Naming:: How to refer to the beginning of another file.
316 * ref:: A reference for the last part of a sentence.
317 * pxref:: How to write a parenthetical cross reference.
318 * inforef:: How to refer to an Info-only file.
319 * uref:: How to refer to a uniform resource locator.
323 * Reference Syntax:: What a reference looks like and requires.
324 * One Argument:: @code{@@xref} with one argument.
325 * Two Arguments:: @code{@@xref} with two arguments.
326 * Three Arguments:: @code{@@xref} with three arguments.
327 * Four and Five Arguments:: @code{@@xref} with four and five arguments.
329 Marking Words and Phrases
331 * Indicating:: How to indicate definitions, files, etc.
332 * Emphasis:: How to emphasize text.
334 Indicating Definitions, Commands, etc.
336 * Useful Highlighting:: Highlighting provides useful information.
337 * code:: Indicating program code.
338 * kbd:: Showing keyboard input.
339 * key:: Specifying keys.
340 * samp:: A literal sequence of characters.
341 * verb:: A verbatim sequence of characters.
342 * var:: Indicating metasyntactic variables.
343 * env:: Indicating environment variables.
344 * file:: Indicating file names.
345 * command:: Indicating command names.
346 * option:: Indicating option names.
347 * dfn:: Specifying definitions.
348 * cite:: Referring to books not in the Info system.
349 * abbr:: Indicating abbreviations.
350 * acronym:: Indicating acronyms.
351 * indicateurl:: Indicating a World Wide Web reference.
352 * email:: Indicating an electronic mail address.
356 * emph & strong:: How to emphasize text in Texinfo.
357 * Smallcaps:: How to use the small caps font.
358 * Fonts:: Various font commands for printed output.
360 Quotations and Examples
362 * Block Enclosing Commands:: Different constructs for different purposes.
363 * quotation:: Writing a quotation.
364 * example:: Writing an example in a fixed-width font.
365 * verbatim:: Writing a verbatim example.
366 * verbatiminclude:: Including a file verbatim.
367 * lisp:: Illustrating Lisp code.
368 * small:: Examples in a smaller font.
369 * display:: Writing an example in the current font.
370 * format:: Writing an example without narrowed margins.
371 * exdent:: Undo indentation on a line.
372 * flushleft & flushright:: Pushing text flush left or flush right.
373 * noindent:: Preventing paragraph indentation.
374 * indent:: Forcing paragraph indentation.
375 * cartouche:: Drawing rounded rectangles around examples.
379 * Introducing Lists:: Texinfo formats lists for you.
380 * itemize:: How to construct a simple list.
381 * enumerate:: How to construct a numbered list.
382 * Two-column Tables:: How to construct a two-column table.
383 * Multi-column Tables:: How to construct generalized tables.
385 Making a Two-column Table
387 * table:: How to construct a two-column table.
388 * ftable vtable:: Automatic indexing for two-column tables.
389 * itemx:: How to put more entries in the first column.
391 @code{@@multitable}: Multi-column Tables
393 * Multitable Column Widths:: Defining multitable column widths.
394 * Multitable Rows:: Defining multitable rows, with examples.
398 * Floats:: Figures, tables, and the like.
399 * Images:: Including graphics and images.
400 * Footnotes:: Writing footnotes.
404 * float:: Producing floating material.
405 * caption shortcaption:: Specifying descriptions for floats.
406 * listoffloats:: A table of contents for floats.
415 * Footnote Commands:: How to write a footnote in Texinfo.
416 * Footnote Styles:: Controlling how footnotes appear in Info.
420 * Index Entries:: Choose different words for index entries.
421 * Predefined Indices:: Use different indices for different kinds
423 * Indexing Commands:: How to make an index entry.
424 * Combining Indices:: How to combine indices.
425 * New Indices:: How to define your own indices.
429 * syncodeindex:: How to merge two indices, using @code{@@code}
430 font for the merged-from index.
431 * synindex:: How to merge two indices, using the
432 default font of the merged-to index.
436 * Atsign Braces Comma:: Inserting @@ and @{@} and ,.
437 * Inserting Space:: How to insert the right amount of space
439 * Inserting Accents:: How to insert accents and special characters.
440 * Dots Bullets:: How to insert dots and bullets.
441 * TeX and copyright:: How to insert the @TeX{} logo
442 and the copyright symbol.
443 * euro:: How to insert the Euro currency symbol.
444 * pounds:: How to insert the pounds currency symbol.
445 * minus:: How to insert a minus sign.
446 * math:: How to format a mathematical expression.
447 * Glyphs:: How to indicate results of evaluation,
448 expansion of macros, errors, etc.
450 Inserting @@ and @{@} and @comma{}
452 * Inserting an Atsign::
454 * Inserting a Comma::
458 * Not Ending a Sentence:: Sometimes a . doesn't end a sentence.
459 * Ending a Sentence:: Sometimes it does.
460 * Multiple Spaces:: Inserting multiple spaces.
461 * dmn:: How to format a dimension.
463 Inserting Ellipsis and Bullets
465 * dots:: How to insert dots @dots{}
466 * bullet:: How to insert a bullet.
468 Inserting @TeX{} and Legal Symbols: @copyright{}, @registeredsymbol{}
470 * tex:: The @TeX{} logos.
471 * copyright symbol:: The copyright symbol (c in a circle).
472 * registered symbol:: The registered symbol (R in a circle).
477 * result:: How to show the result of expression.
478 * expansion:: How to indicate an expansion.
479 * Print Glyph:: How to indicate printed output.
480 * Error Glyph:: How to indicate an error message.
481 * Equivalence:: How to indicate equivalence.
482 * Point Glyph:: How to indicate the location of point.
493 Forcing and Preventing Breaks
495 * Break Commands:: Summary of break-related commands.
496 * Line Breaks:: Forcing line breaks.
497 * - and hyphenation:: Helping @TeX{} with hyphenation points.
498 * w:: Preventing unwanted line breaks in text.
499 * tie:: Inserting an unbreakable but varying space.
500 * sp:: Inserting blank lines.
501 * page:: Forcing the start of a new page.
502 * group:: Preventing unwanted page breaks.
503 * need:: Another way to prevent unwanted page breaks.
507 * Def Cmd Template:: Writing descriptions using definition commands.
508 * Def Cmd Continuation Lines:: Continuing the heading over source lines.
509 * Optional Arguments:: Handling optional and repeated arguments.
510 * deffnx:: Group two or more `first' lines.
511 * Def Cmds in Detail:: Reference for all the definition commands.
512 * Def Cmd Conventions:: Conventions for writing definitions.
513 * Sample Function Definition:: An example.
515 The Definition Commands
517 * Functions Commands:: Commands for functions and similar entities.
518 * Variables Commands:: Commands for variables and similar entities.
519 * Typed Functions:: Commands for functions in typed languages.
520 * Typed Variables:: Commands for variables in typed languages.
521 * Data Types:: The definition command for data types.
522 * Abstract Objects:: Commands for object-oriented programming.
524 Object-Oriented Programming
526 * Variables: Object-Oriented Variables.
527 * Methods: Object-Oriented Methods.
529 Conditionally Visible Text
531 * Conditional Commands:: Text for a given format.
532 * Conditional Not Commands:: Text for any format other than a given one.
533 * Raw Formatter Commands:: Using raw formatter commands.
534 * set clear value:: Variable tests and substitutions.
535 * Conditional Nesting:: Using conditionals inside conditionals.
537 @code{@@set}, @code{@@clear}, and @code{@@value}
539 * set value:: Expand a flag variable to a string.
540 * ifset ifclear:: Format a region if a flag is set.
541 * value Example:: An easy way to update edition information.
545 * documentlanguage:: Declaring the current language.
546 * documentencoding:: Declaring the input encoding.
548 Defining New Texinfo Commands
550 * Defining Macros:: Defining and undefining new commands.
551 * Invoking Macros:: Using a macro, once you've defined it.
552 * Macro Details:: Limitations of Texinfo macros.
553 * alias:: Command aliases.
554 * definfoenclose:: Customized highlighting.
556 Formatting and Printing Hardcopy
558 * Use TeX:: Use @TeX{} to format for hardcopy.
559 * Format with tex/texindex:: How to format with explicit shell commands.
560 * Format with texi2dvi:: A simpler way to format.
561 * Print with lpr:: How to print.
562 * Within Emacs:: How to format and print from an Emacs shell.
563 * Texinfo Mode Printing:: How to format and print in Texinfo mode.
564 * Compile-Command:: How to print using Emacs's compile command.
565 * Requirements Summary:: @TeX{} formatting requirements summary.
566 * Preparing for TeX:: What to do before you use @TeX{}.
567 * Overfull hboxes:: What are and what to do with overfull hboxes.
568 * smallbook:: How to print small format books and manuals.
569 * A4 Paper:: How to print on A4 or A5 paper.
570 * pagesizes:: How to print with customized page sizes.
571 * Cropmarks and Magnification:: How to print marks to indicate the size
572 of pages and how to print scaled up output.
573 * PDF Output:: Portable Document Format output.
574 * Obtaining TeX:: How to Obtain @TeX{}.
576 Creating and Installing Info Files
578 * Creating an Info File::
579 * Installing an Info File::
581 Creating an Info File
583 * makeinfo advantages:: @code{makeinfo} provides better error checking.
584 * Invoking makeinfo:: How to run @code{makeinfo} from a shell.
585 * makeinfo options:: Specify fill-column and other options.
586 * Pointer Validation:: How to check that pointers point somewhere.
587 * makeinfo in Emacs:: How to run @code{makeinfo} from Emacs.
588 * texinfo-format commands:: Two Info formatting commands written
589 in Emacs Lisp are an alternative
591 * Batch Formatting:: How to format for Info in Emacs Batch mode.
592 * Tag and Split Files:: How tagged and split files help Info
595 Installing an Info File
597 * Directory File:: The top level menu for all Info files.
598 * New Info File:: Listing a new Info file.
599 * Other Info Directories:: How to specify Info files that are
600 located in other directories.
601 * Installing Dir Entries:: How to specify what menu entry to add
602 to the Info directory.
603 * Invoking install-info:: @code{install-info} options.
607 * HTML Translation:: Details of the HTML output.
608 * HTML Splitting:: How HTML output is split.
609 * HTML CSS:: Influencing HTML output with Cascading Style Sheets.
610 * HTML Xref:: Cross-references in HTML output.
612 HTML Cross-references
614 * Link Basics: HTML Xref Link Basics.
615 * Node Expansion: HTML Xref Node Name Expansion.
616 * Command Expansion: HTML Xref Command Expansion.
617 * 8-bit Expansion: HTML Xref 8-bit Character Expansion.
618 * Mismatch: HTML Xref Mismatch.
622 * Command Syntax:: General syntax for varieties of @@-commands.
626 * Short Sample Texinfo File::
628 * Verbatim Copying License::
629 * All-permissive Copying License::
633 * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual.
637 * Using Include Files:: How to use the @code{@@include} command.
638 * texinfo-multiple-files-update:: How to create and update nodes and
639 menus when using included files.
640 * Include Files Requirements:: @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update} needs.
641 * Sample Include File:: A sample outer file with included files
642 within it; and a sample included file.
643 * Include Files Evolution:: How use of the @code{@@include} command
644 has changed over time.
648 * Headings Introduced:: Conventions for using page headings.
649 * Heading Format:: Standard page heading formats.
650 * Heading Choice:: How to specify the type of page heading.
651 * Custom Headings:: How to create your own headings and footings.
655 * makeinfo Preferred:: @code{makeinfo} finds errors.
656 * Debugging with Info:: How to catch errors with Info formatting.
657 * Debugging with TeX:: How to catch errors with @TeX{} formatting.
658 * Using texinfo-show-structure:: How to use @code{texinfo-show-structure}.
659 * Using occur:: How to list all lines containing a pattern.
660 * Running Info-Validate:: How to find badly referenced nodes.
662 Finding Badly Referenced Nodes
664 * Using Info-validate:: How to run @code{Info-validate}.
665 * Unsplit:: How to create an unsplit file.
666 * Tagifying:: How to tagify a file.
667 * Splitting:: How to split a file manually.
671 * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual.
676 @c Reward readers for getting to the end of the menu :).
677 @c Contributed by Arnold Robbins.
679 Documentation is like sex: when it is good, it is very, very good; and
680 when it is bad, it is better than nothing.
685 @node Copying Conditions
686 @unnumbered Texinfo Copying Conditions
687 @cindex Copying conditions
688 @cindex Conditions for copying Texinfo
690 The programs currently being distributed that relate to Texinfo include
691 @code{makeinfo}, @code{info}, @code{texindex}, and @file{texinfo.tex}.
692 These programs are @dfn{free}; this means that everyone is free to use
693 them and free to redistribute them on a free basis. The Texinfo-related
694 programs are not in the public domain; they are copyrighted and there
695 are restrictions on their distribution, but these restrictions are
696 designed to permit everything that a good cooperating citizen would want
697 to do. What is not allowed is to try to prevent others from further
698 sharing any version of these programs that they might get from you.
700 Specifically, we want to make sure that you have the right to give away
701 copies of the programs that relate to Texinfo, that you receive source
702 code or else can get it if you want it, that you can change these
703 programs or use pieces of them in new free programs, and that you know
704 you can do these things.
706 To make sure that everyone has such rights, we have to forbid you to
707 deprive anyone else of these rights. For example, if you distribute
708 copies of the Texinfo related programs, you must give the recipients all
709 the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or
710 can get the source code. And you must tell them their rights.
712 Also, for our own protection, we must make certain that everyone finds
713 out that there is no warranty for the programs that relate to Texinfo.
714 If these programs are modified by someone else and passed on, we want
715 their recipients to know that what they have is not what we distributed,
716 so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on our
719 The precise conditions of the licenses for the programs currently being
720 distributed that relate to Texinfo are found in the General Public
721 Licenses that accompany them. This manual specifically is covered by
722 the GNU Free Documentation License (@pxref{GNU Free Documentation
727 @chapter Overview of Texinfo
728 @cindex Overview of Texinfo
729 @cindex Texinfo overview
731 @dfn{Texinfo}@footnote{The first syllable of ``Texinfo'' is pronounced
732 like ``speck'', not ``hex''. This odd pronunciation is derived from,
733 but is not the same as, the pronunciation of @TeX{}. In the word
734 @TeX{}, the @samp{X} is actually the Greek letter ``chi'' rather than
735 the English letter ``ex''. Pronounce @TeX{} as if the @samp{X} were the
736 last sound in the name `Bach'; but pronounce Texinfo as if the @samp{x}
737 were a `k'. Spell ``Texinfo'' with a capital ``T'' and the other
738 letters in lower case.} is a documentation system that uses a single
739 source file to produce both online information and printed output. This
740 means that instead of writing two different documents, one for the
741 online information and the other for a printed work, you need write only
742 one document. Therefore, when the work is revised, you need revise only
746 * Reporting Bugs:: Submitting effective bug reports.
747 * Using Texinfo:: Create printed or online output.
748 * Output Formats:: Overview of the supported output formats.
749 * Info Files:: What is an Info file?
750 * Printed Books:: Characteristics of a printed book or manual.
751 * Formatting Commands:: @@-commands are used for formatting.
752 * Conventions:: General rules for writing a Texinfo file.
753 * Comments:: Writing comments and ignored text in general.
754 * Minimum:: What a Texinfo file must have.
755 * Six Parts:: Usually, a Texinfo file has six parts.
756 * Short Sample:: A short sample Texinfo file.
757 * History:: Acknowledgements, contributors and genesis.
762 @section Reporting Bugs
764 @cindex Bugs, reporting
765 @cindex Suggestions for Texinfo, making
766 @cindex Reporting bugs
767 We welcome bug reports and suggestions for any aspect of the Texinfo system,
768 programs, documentation, installation, anything. Please email them to
769 @email{bug-texinfo@@gnu.org}. You can get the latest version of Texinfo
770 from @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/texinfo/} and its mirrors worldwide.
772 @cindex Checklist for bug reports
773 For bug reports, please include enough information for the maintainers
774 to reproduce the problem. Generally speaking, that means:
777 @item the version number of Texinfo and the program(s) or manual(s) involved.
778 @item hardware and operating system names and versions.
779 @item the contents of any input files necessary to reproduce the bug.
780 @item a description of the problem and samples of any erroneous output.
781 @item any unusual options you gave to @command{configure}.
782 @item anything else that you think would be helpful.
785 When in doubt whether something is needed or not, include it. It's
786 better to include too much than to leave out something important.
788 @cindex Patches, contributing
789 Patches are most welcome; if possible, please make them with
790 @samp{@w{diff -c}} (@pxref{Top,, Overview, diff, Comparing and Merging
791 Files}) and include @file{ChangeLog} entries (@pxref{Change Log,,,
792 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
794 When sending patches, if possible please do not encode or split them in
795 any way; it's much easier to deal with one plain text message, however
796 large, than many small ones. @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/sharutils/,
797 GNU shar} is a convenient way of packaging multiple and/or binary files
802 @section Using Texinfo
804 @cindex Using Texinfo in general
805 @cindex Texinfo, introduction to
806 @cindex Introduction to Texinfo
808 Using Texinfo, you can create a printed document (via the @TeX{}
809 typesetting system) the normal features of a book, including chapters,
810 sections, cross references, and indices. From the same Texinfo source
811 file, you can create an Info file with special features to make
812 documentation browsing easy. You can also create from that same
813 source file an HTML output file suitable for use with a web browser,
814 or an XML file. See the next section (@pxref{Output Formats}) for
815 details and the exact commands to generate output from the source.
817 @TeX{} works with virtually all printers; Info works with virtually all
818 computer terminals; the HTML output works with virtually all web
819 browsers. Thus Texinfo can be used by almost any computer user.
821 @cindex Source file format
822 A Texinfo source file is a plain @sc{ascii} file containing text
823 interspersed with @dfn{@@-commands} (words preceded by an @samp{@@})
824 that tell the typesetting and formatting programs what to do. You can
825 edit a Texinfo file with any text editor, but it is especially
826 convenient to use GNU Emacs since that editor has a special mode,
827 called Texinfo mode, that provides various Texinfo-related features.
828 (@xref{Texinfo Mode}.)
830 You can use Texinfo to create both online help and printed manuals;
831 moreover, Texinfo is freely redistributable. For these reasons, Texinfo
832 is the official documentation format of the GNU project. More
833 information is available at the @uref{http://www.gnu.org/doc/, GNU
834 documentation web page}.
838 @section Output Formats
839 @cindex Output formats
840 @cindex Back-end output formats
842 Here is a brief overview of the output formats currently supported by
848 (Generated via @command{makeinfo}.) This format is essentially a
849 plain text transliteration of the Texinfo source. It adds a few
850 control characters to separate nodes and provide navigational
851 information for menus, cross-references, indices, and so on. See the
852 next section (@pxref{Info Files}) for more details on this format.
853 The Emacs Info subsystem (@pxref{Top,,Getting Started,info, Info}),
854 and the standalone @command{info} program (@pxref{Top
855 ,, Info Standalone, info-stnd, GNU Info}), among others, can read these
856 files. @xref{Creating and Installing Info Files}.
859 @cindex Plain text output
860 (Generated via @command{makeinfo --no-headers}.) This is almost the
861 same as Info output, except the navigational control characters are
862 omitted. Also, standard output is used by default.
866 @cindex W3 consortium
870 (Generated via @command{makeinfo --html}.) This is the Hyper Text
871 Markup Language that has become the most commonly used language for
872 writing documents on the World Wide Web. Web browsers, such as
873 Mozilla, Lynx, and Emacs-W3, can render this language online. There
874 are many versions of HTML; @command{makeinfo} tries to use a subset
875 of the language that can be interpreted by any common browser. For
876 details of the HTML language and much related information, see
877 @uref{http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/}. @xref{Generating HTML}.
883 (Generated via @command{texi2dvi}.) This DeVice Independent binary
884 format is output by the @TeX{} typesetting program
885 (@uref{http://tug.org}). This is then read by a DVI `driver', which
886 writes the actual device-specific commands that can be viewed or
887 printed, notably Dvips for translation to PostScript (@pxref{Invoking
888 Dvips,,, dvips, Dvips}) and Xdvi for viewing on an X display
889 (@uref{http://sourceforge.net/projects/xdvi/}). @xref{Hardcopy}.
891 Be aware that the Texinfo language is very different from and much
892 stricter than @TeX{}'s usual languages, plain @TeX{} and @LaTeX{}.
893 For more information on @TeX{} in general, please see the book
894 @cite{@TeX{} for the Impatient}, available from
895 @uref{http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/teximpatient}.
899 @cindex Beebe, Nelson
901 (Generated via @command{texi2dvi --pdf} or @command{texi2pdf}.) This
902 was developed by Adobe Systems for portable document interchange,
903 based on their previous PostScript language. It can represent the exact
904 appearance of a document, including fonts, and supporting arbitrary
905 scaling. It is intended to be platform-independent and easily
906 viewable, among other design goals; for a discussion, see
907 @uref{http://tug.org/TUGboat/Articles/tb22-3/tb72beebeI.pdf}. Texinfo
908 uses the @command{pdftex} program, a variant of @TeX{}, to output PDF;
909 see @uref{http://tug.org/applications/pdftex}. @xref{PDF Output}.
913 @cindex DTD, for Texinfo XML
915 (Generated via @command{makeinfo --xml}.) XML is a generic syntax
916 specification usable for any sort of content (see, for example,
917 @uref{http://www.w3.org/XML/}). The @command{makeinfo} xml output,
918 unlike all the formats above, interprets very little of the Texinfo
919 source. Rather, it merely translates the Texinfo markup commands into
920 XML syntax, for processing by further XML tools. The particular
921 syntax output is defined in the file @file{texinfo.dtd} included in
922 the Texinfo source distribution.
925 @cindex Docbook output
926 (Generated via @command{makeinfo --docbook}.) This is an XML-based
927 format developed some years ago, primarily for technical
928 documentation. It therefore bears some resemblance, in broad
929 outlines, to Texinfo. See @uref{http://www.docbook.org}. If you want
930 to convert from Docbook @emph{to} Texinfo, please see
931 @uref{http://docbook2X.sourceforge.net}.
935 @cindex Man page output, not supported
936 From time to time, proposals are made to generate traditional Unix man
937 pages from Texinfo source. However, because man pages have a very
938 strict conventional format, generating a good man page requires a
939 completely different source than the typical Texinfo applications of
940 writing a good user tutorial and/or a good reference manual. This
941 makes generating man pages incompatible with the Texinfo design goal
942 of not having to document the same information in different ways for
943 different output formats. You might as well just write the man page
947 @cindex O'Dea, Brendan
948 Man pages still have their place, and if you wish to support them, you
949 may find the program @command{help2man} to be useful; it generates a
950 traditional man page from the @samp{--help} output of a program. In
951 fact, this is currently used to generate man pages for the programs in
952 the Texinfo distribution. It is GNU software written by Brendan
953 O'Dea, available from @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/help2man/}.
955 @cindex Output formats, supporting more
956 @cindex SGML-tools output format
957 If you are a programmer and would like to contribute to the GNU project
958 by implementing additional output formats for Texinfo, that would be
959 excellent. But please do not write a separate translator texi2foo for
960 your favorite format foo! That is the hard way to do the job, and makes
961 extra work in subsequent maintenance, since the Texinfo language is
962 continually being enhanced and updated. Instead, the best approach is
963 modify @code{makeinfo} to generate the new format.
970 An Info file is a Texinfo file formatted so that the Info documentation
971 reading program can operate on it. (@code{makeinfo}
972 and @code{texinfo-format-buffer} are two commands that convert a Texinfo file
975 Info files are divided into pieces called @dfn{nodes}, each of which
976 contains the discussion of one topic. Each node has a name, and
977 contains both text for the user to read and pointers to other nodes,
978 which are identified by their names. The Info program displays one node
979 at a time, and provides commands with which the user can move to other
982 @xref{Top,,, info, GNU Info}, for more information about using Info.
984 Each node of an Info file may have any number of child nodes that
985 describe subtopics of the node's topic. The names of child
986 nodes are listed in a @dfn{menu} within the parent node; this
987 allows you to use certain Info commands to move to one of the child
988 nodes. Generally, an Info file is organized like a book. If a node
989 is at the logical level of a chapter, its child nodes are at the level
990 of sections; likewise, the child nodes of sections are at the level
993 All the children of any one parent are linked together in a
994 bidirectional chain of `Next' and `Previous' pointers. The `Next'
995 pointer provides a link to the next section, and the `Previous' pointer
996 provides a link to the previous section. This means that all the nodes
997 that are at the level of sections within a chapter are linked together.
998 Normally the order in this chain is the same as the order of the
999 children in the parent's menu. Each child node records the parent node
1000 name as its `Up' pointer. The last child has no `Next' pointer, and the
1001 first child has the parent both as its `Previous' and as its `Up'
1002 pointer.@footnote{In some documents, the first child has no `Previous'
1003 pointer. Occasionally, the last child has the node name of the next
1004 following higher level node as its `Next' pointer.}
1006 The book-like structuring of an Info file into nodes that correspond
1007 to chapters, sections, and the like is a matter of convention, not a
1008 requirement. The `Up', `Previous', and `Next' pointers of a node can
1009 point to any other nodes, and a menu can contain any other nodes.
1010 Thus, the node structure can be any directed graph. But it is usually
1011 more comprehensible to follow a structure that corresponds to the
1012 structure of chapters and sections in a printed book or report.@refill
1014 In addition to menus and to `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers, Info
1015 provides pointers of another kind, called references, that can be
1016 sprinkled throughout the text. This is usually the best way to
1017 represent links that do not fit a hierarchical structure.@refill
1019 Usually, you will design a document so that its nodes match the
1020 structure of chapters and sections in the printed output. But
1021 occasionally there are times when this is not right for the material
1022 being discussed. Therefore, Texinfo uses separate commands to specify
1023 the node structure for the Info file and the section structure for the
1024 printed output.@refill
1026 Generally, you enter an Info file through a node that by convention is
1027 named `Top'. This node normally contains just a brief summary of the
1028 file's purpose, and a large menu through which the rest of the file is
1029 reached. From this node, you can either traverse the file
1030 systematically by going from node to node, or you can go to a specific
1031 node listed in the main menu, or you can search the index menus and then
1032 go directly to the node that has the information you want. Alternatively,
1033 with the standalone Info program, you can specify specific menu items on
1034 the command line (@pxref{Top,,, info, Info}).
1036 If you want to read through an Info file in sequence, as if it were a
1037 printed manual, you can hit @key{SPC} repeatedly, or you get the whole
1038 file with the advanced Info command @kbd{g *}. (@inforef{Advanced,
1039 Advanced Info commands, info}.)@refill
1041 @c !!! dir file may be located in one of many places:
1042 @c /usr/local/emacs/info mentioned in info.c DEFAULT_INFOPATH
1043 @c /usr/local/lib/emacs/info mentioned in info.c DEFAULT_INFOPATH
1044 @c /usr/gnu/info mentioned in info.c DEFAULT_INFOPATH
1046 @c /usr/local/lib/info
1047 The @file{dir} file in the @file{info} directory serves as the
1048 departure point for the whole Info system. From it, you can reach the
1049 `Top' nodes of each of the documents in a complete Info system.@refill
1051 @cindex URI syntax for Info
1052 If you wish to refer to an Info file in a URI, you can use the
1053 (unofficial) syntax exemplified in the following. This works with
1054 Emacs/W3, for example:
1056 info:///usr/info/emacs#Dissociated%20Press
1057 info:emacs#Dissociated%20Press
1058 info://localhost/usr/info/emacs#Dissociated%20Press
1061 The @command{info} program itself does not follow URI's of any kind.
1065 @section Printed Books
1066 @cindex Printed book and manual characteristics
1067 @cindex Manual characteristics, printed
1068 @cindex Book characteristics, printed
1069 @cindex Texinfo printed book characteristics
1070 @cindex Characteristics, printed books or manuals
1072 @cindex Knuth, Donald
1073 A Texinfo file can be formatted and typeset as a printed book or manual.
1074 To do this, you need @TeX{}, a powerful, sophisticated typesetting
1075 program written by Donald Knuth.@footnote{You can also use the
1076 @pindex texi2roff@r{, unsupported software}
1077 @uref{ftp://tug.org/texi2roff.tar.gz, @code{texi2roff}} program if you
1078 do not have @TeX{}; since Texinfo is designed for use with @TeX{},
1079 @code{texi2roff} is not described here. @code{texi2roff} is not part of
1080 the standard GNU distribution and is not maintained or up-to-date with
1081 all the Texinfo features described in this manual.}
1083 A Texinfo-based book is similar to any other typeset, printed work: it
1084 can have a title page, copyright page, table of contents, and preface,
1085 as well as chapters, numbered or unnumbered sections and subsections,
1086 page headers, cross references, footnotes, and indices.@refill
1088 You can use Texinfo to write a book without ever having the intention
1089 of converting it into online information. You can use Texinfo for
1090 writing a printed novel, and even to write a printed memo, although
1091 this latter application is not recommended since electronic mail is so
1094 @TeX{} is a general purpose typesetting program. Texinfo provides a
1095 file @file{texinfo.tex} that contains information (definitions or
1096 @dfn{macros}) that @TeX{} uses when it typesets a Texinfo file.
1097 (@file{texinfo.tex} tells @TeX{} how to convert the Texinfo @@-commands
1098 to @TeX{} commands, which @TeX{} can then process to create the typeset
1099 document.) @file{texinfo.tex} contains the specifications for printing
1100 a document. You can get the latest version of @file{texinfo.tex} from
1101 @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/texinfo/texinfo.tex}.
1103 In the United States, documents are most often printed on 8.5 inch by 11
1104 inch pages (216@dmn{mm} by 280@dmn{mm}); this is the default size. But
1105 you can also print for 7 inch by 9.25 inch pages (178@dmn{mm} by
1106 235@dmn{mm}, the @code{@@smallbook} size; or on A4 or A5 size paper
1107 (@code{@@afourpaper}, @code{@@afivepaper}). (@xref{smallbook, ,
1108 Printing ``Small'' Books}. Also, see @ref{A4 Paper, ,Printing on A4
1111 By changing the parameters in @file{texinfo.tex}, you can change the
1112 size of the printed document. In addition, you can change the style in
1113 which the printed document is formatted; for example, you can change the
1114 sizes and fonts used, the amount of indentation for each paragraph, the
1115 degree to which words are hyphenated, and the like. By changing the
1116 specifications, you can make a book look dignified, old and serious, or
1117 light-hearted, young and cheery.
1119 @TeX{} is freely distributable. It is written in a superset of Pascal
1120 called WEB and can be compiled either in Pascal or (by using a
1121 conversion program that comes with the @TeX{} distribution) in C.
1122 (@xref{TeX Mode, ,@TeX{} Mode, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for information
1123 about @TeX{}.)@refill
1125 @TeX{} is very powerful and has a great many features. Because a
1126 Texinfo file must be able to present information both on a
1127 character-only terminal in Info form and in a typeset book, the
1128 formatting commands that Texinfo supports are necessarily limited.
1130 To get a copy of @TeX{}, see
1131 @ref{Obtaining TeX, , How to Obtain @TeX{}}.
1134 @node Formatting Commands
1135 @section @@-commands
1137 @cindex Formatting commands
1139 In a Texinfo file, the commands that tell @TeX{} how to typeset the
1140 printed manual and tell @code{makeinfo} and
1141 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} how to create an Info file are preceded
1142 by @samp{@@}; they are called @dfn{@@-commands}. For example,
1143 @code{@@node} is the command to indicate a node and @code{@@chapter}
1144 is the command to indicate the start of a chapter.@refill
1147 Almost all @@ command names are entirely lower case.
1150 The Texinfo @@-commands are a strictly limited set of constructs. The
1151 strict limits make it possible for Texinfo files to be understood both
1152 by @TeX{} and by the code that converts them into Info files. You can
1153 display Info files on any terminal that displays alphabetic and
1154 numeric characters. Similarly, you can print the output generated by
1155 @TeX{} on a wide variety of printers.@refill
1157 Depending on what they do or what arguments@footnote{The word
1158 @dfn{argument} comes from the way it is used in mathematics and does not
1159 refer to a dispute between two people; it refers to the information
1160 presented to the command. According to the @cite{Oxford English
1161 Dictionary}, the word derives from the Latin for @dfn{to make clear,
1162 prove}; thus it came to mean `the evidence offered as proof', which is
1163 to say, `the information offered', which led to its mathematical
1164 meaning. In its other thread of derivation, the word came to mean `to
1165 assert in a manner against which others may make counter assertions',
1166 which led to the meaning of `argument' as a dispute.} they take, you
1167 need to write @@-commands on lines of their own or as part of
1172 Write a command such as @code{@@quotation} at the beginning of a line as
1173 the only text on the line. (@code{@@quotation} begins an indented
1177 Write a command such as @code{@@chapter} at the beginning of a line
1178 followed by the command's arguments, in this case the chapter title, on
1179 the rest of the line. (@code{@@chapter} creates chapter titles.)@refill
1182 Write a command such as @code{@@dots@{@}} wherever you wish but usually
1183 within a sentence. (@code{@@dots@{@}} creates dots @dots{})@refill
1186 Write a command such as @code{@@code@{@var{sample-code}@}} wherever you
1187 wish (but usually within a sentence) with its argument,
1188 @var{sample-code} in this example, between the braces. (@code{@@code}
1189 marks text as being code.)@refill
1192 Write a command such as @code{@@example} on a line of its own; write the
1193 body-text on following lines; and write the matching @code{@@end}
1194 command, @code{@@end example} in this case, on a line of its own
1195 after the body-text. (@code{@@example} @dots{} @code{@@end example}
1196 indents and typesets body-text as an example.) It's usually ok to
1197 indent environment commands like this, but in complicated and
1198 hard-to-define circumstances the extra spaces cause extra space to
1199 appear in the output, so beware.
1203 @cindex Braces, when to use
1204 As a general rule, a command requires braces if it mingles among other
1205 text; but it does not need braces if it starts a line of its own. The
1206 non-alphabetic commands, such as @code{@@:}, are exceptions to the rule;
1207 they do not need braces.@refill
1209 As you gain experience with Texinfo, you will rapidly learn how to
1210 write the different commands: the different ways to write commands
1211 actually make it easier to write and read Texinfo files than if all
1212 commands followed exactly the same syntax. @xref{Command Syntax, ,
1213 @@-Command Syntax}, for all the details.
1217 @section General Syntactic Conventions
1218 @cindex General syntactic conventions
1219 @cindex Syntactic conventions
1220 @cindex Conventions, syntactic
1221 @cindex Characters, basic input
1223 This section describes the general conventions used in all Texinfo documents.
1227 @cindex Source files, characters used
1228 All printable @sc{ascii} characters except @samp{@@}, @samp{@{} and
1229 @samp{@}} can appear in a Texinfo file and stand for themselves.
1230 @samp{@@} is the escape character which introduces commands, while
1231 @samp{@{} and @samp{@}} are used to surround arguments to certain
1232 commands. To put one of these special characters into the document, put
1233 an @samp{@@} character in front of it, like this: @samp{@@@@},
1234 @samp{@@@{}, and @samp{@@@}}.
1237 @cindex Paragraph separator
1238 @cindex Blank lines, as paragraph separator
1239 @cindex Newlines, as blank lines
1240 Separate paragraphs with one or more blank lines. Currently Texinfo
1241 only recognizes newline characters as end of line, not the CRLF
1242 sequence used on some systems; so a @dfn{blank line} means exactly two
1243 consecutive newlines. Sometimes blank lines are useful or convenient
1244 in other cases as well; you can use the @code{@@noindent} to inhibit
1245 paragraph indentation if required (@pxref{noindent,,@code{@@noindent}}).
1248 @cindex Quotation characters (`'), in source
1249 Use doubled single-quote characters to begin and end quotations:
1250 @w{@t{`@w{}`@dots{}'@w{}'}}. @TeX{} converts two single quotes to
1251 left- and right-hand doubled quotation marks,
1252 @c this comes out as "like this" in Info, which is just confusing.
1256 and Info converts doubled single-quote characters to @sc{ascii}
1257 double-quotes: @w{@t{`@w{}`@dots{}'@w{}'}} becomes @w{@t{"@dots{}"}}.
1259 You may occasionally need to produce two consecutive single quotes;
1260 for example, in documenting a computer language such as Maxima where
1261 @t{'@w{}'} is a valid command. You can do this with the input
1262 @t{'@@w@{@}'}; the empty @code{@@w} command stops the combination into
1263 the double-quote characters.
1265 @cindex Unicode quotation characters
1266 @cindex Grave accent, vs.@: left quote
1267 The left quote character (@t{`}, ASCII code 96) used in Texinfo is a
1268 grave accent in ANSI and ISO character set standards. We use it as a
1269 quote character because that is how @TeX{} is set up, by default. We
1270 hope to eventually support the various quotation characters in
1274 @cindex Multiple dashes in source
1275 @cindex Dashes in source
1276 @cindex Hyphens in source, two or three in a row
1277 @cindex Em dash, producing
1278 @cindex En dash, producing
1279 Use three hyphens in a row, @samp{---}, to produce a long dash---like
1280 this (called an @dfn{em dash}), used for punctuation in sentences.
1281 Use two hyphens, @samp{--}, to produce a medium dash (called an
1282 @dfn{en dash}), used primarily for numeric ranges, as in ``June
1283 25--26''. Use a single hyphen, @samp{-}, to produce a standard hyphen
1284 used in compound words. For display on the screen, Info reduces three
1285 hyphens to two and two hyphens to one (not transitively!). Of course,
1286 any number of hyphens in the source remain as they are in literal
1287 contexts, such as @code{@@code} and @code{@@example}.
1290 @cindex Tabs; don't use!
1291 @strong{Caution:} Last and most important, do not use tab characters
1292 in a Texinfo file (except in verbatim modes)! @TeX{} uses
1293 variable-width fonts, which means that it is impractical at best to
1294 define a tab to work in all circumstances. Consequently, @TeX{}
1295 treats tabs like single spaces, and that is not what they look like in
1296 the source. Furthermore, @code{makeinfo} does nothing special with
1297 tabs, and thus a tab character in your input file will usually appear
1298 differently in the output.
1301 To avoid this problem, Texinfo mode causes GNU Emacs to insert multiple
1302 spaces when you press the @key{TAB} key.
1305 Also, you can run @code{untabify} in Emacs to convert tabs in a region
1306 to multiple spaces, or use the @code{unexpand} command from the shell.
1315 @findex c @r{(comment)}
1317 You can write comments in a Texinfo file that will not appear in
1318 either the Info file or the printed manual by using the
1319 @code{@@comment} command (which may be abbreviated to @code{@@c}).
1320 Such comments are for the person who revises the Texinfo file. All the
1321 text on a line that follows either @code{@@comment} or @code{@@c} is a
1322 comment; the rest of the line does not appear in either the Info file
1323 or the printed manual.
1325 Often, you can write the @code{@@comment} or @code{@@c} in the middle of
1326 a line, and only the text that follows after the @code{@@comment} or
1327 @code{@@c} command does not appear; but some commands, such as
1328 @code{@@settitle} and @code{@@setfilename}, work on a whole line. You
1329 cannot use @code{@@comment} or @code{@@c} in a line beginning with such
1332 @cindex Ignored text
1333 @cindex Unprocessed text
1335 You can write long stretches of text that will not appear in either
1336 the Info file or the printed manual by using the @code{@@ignore} and
1337 @code{@@end ignore} commands. Write each of these commands on a line
1338 of its own, starting each command at the beginning of the line. Text
1339 between these two commands does not appear in the processed output.
1340 You can use @code{@@ignore} and @code{@@end ignore} for writing
1343 Text enclosed by @code{@@ignore} or by failing @code{@@ifset} or
1344 @code{@@ifclear} conditions is ignored in the sense that it will not
1345 contribute to the formatted output. However, @TeX{} and makeinfo must
1346 still parse the ignored text, in order to understand when to @emph{stop}
1347 ignoring text from the source file; that means that you may still get
1348 error messages if you have invalid Texinfo commands within ignored text.
1352 @section What a Texinfo File Must Have
1353 @cindex Minimal Texinfo file (requirements)
1354 @cindex Must have in Texinfo file
1355 @cindex Required in Texinfo file
1356 @cindex Texinfo file minimum
1358 By convention, the namea of a Texinfo file ends with (in order of
1359 preference) one of the extensions @file{.texinfo}, @file{.texi},
1360 @file{.txi}, or @file{.tex}. The longer extensions are preferred since
1361 they describe more clearly to a human reader the nature of the file.
1362 The shorter extensions are for operating systems that cannot handle long
1365 In order to be made into a printed manual and an Info file, a Texinfo
1366 file @strong{must} begin with lines like this:
1371 @@setfilename @var{info-file-name}
1372 @@settitle @var{name-of-manual}
1377 The contents of the file follow this beginning, and then you
1378 @strong{must} end a Texinfo file with a line like this:
1384 @findex \input @r{(raw @TeX{} startup)}
1386 Here's an explanation:
1390 The @samp{\input texinfo} line tells @TeX{} to use the
1391 @file{texinfo.tex} file, which tells @TeX{} how to translate the Texinfo
1392 @@-commands into @TeX{} typesetting commands. (Note the use of the
1393 backslash, @samp{\}; this is correct for @TeX{}.)
1396 The @code{@@setfilename} line provides a name for the Info file and
1397 tells @TeX{} to open auxiliary files. @strong{All text before
1398 @code{@@setfilename} is ignored!}
1401 The @code{@@settitle} line specifies a title for the page headers (or
1402 footers) of the printed manual, and the default document description for
1403 the @samp{<head>} in HTML format. Strictly speaking, @code{@@settitle}
1404 is optional---if you don't mind your document being titled `Untitled'.
1407 The @code{@@bye} line at the end of the file on a line of its own tells
1408 the formatters that the file is ended and to stop formatting.
1412 Typically, you will not use quite such a spare format, but will include
1413 mode setting and start-of-header and end-of-header lines at the
1414 beginning of a Texinfo file, like this:
1418 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
1419 @@c %**start of header
1420 @@setfilename @var{info-file-name}
1421 @@settitle @var{name-of-manual}
1422 @@c %**end of header
1427 In the first line, @samp{-*-texinfo-*-} causes Emacs to switch into
1428 Texinfo mode when you edit the file.
1430 The @code{@@c} lines which surround the @code{@@setfilename} and
1431 @code{@@settitle} lines are optional, but you need them in order to
1432 run @TeX{} or Info on just part of the file. (@xref{Start of Header}.)
1434 Furthermore, you will usually provide a Texinfo file with a title page,
1435 indices, and the like, all of which are explained in this manual. But
1436 the minimum, which can be useful for short documents, is just the three
1437 lines at the beginning and the one line at the end.
1441 @section Six Parts of a Texinfo File
1443 Generally, a Texinfo file contains more than the minimal beginning and
1444 end described in the previous section---it usually contains the six
1445 parts listed below. These are described fully in the following sections.
1449 The @dfn{Header} names the file, tells @TeX{} which definitions file to
1450 use, and other such housekeeping tasks.
1452 @item 2. Summary and Copyright
1453 The @dfn{Summary and Copyright} segment describes the document and
1454 contains the copyright notice and copying permissions. This is done
1455 with the @code{@@copying} command.
1457 @item 3. Title and Copyright
1458 The @dfn{Title and Copyright} segment contains the title and copyright
1459 pages for the printed manual. The segment must be enclosed between
1460 @code{@@titlepage} and @code{@@end titlepage} commands. The title and
1461 copyright page appear only in the printed manual.
1463 @item 4. `Top' Node and Master Menu
1464 The `Top' node starts off the online output; it does not appear in the
1465 printed manual. We recommend including the copying permissions here as
1466 well as the segments above. And it contains at least a top-level menu
1467 listing the chapters, and possibly a @dfn{Master Menu} listing all the
1468 nodes in the entire document.
1471 The @dfn{Body} of the document is typically structured like a
1472 traditional book or encyclopedia, but it may be free form.
1475 The @dfn{End} segment contains commands for printing indices and
1476 generating the table of contents, and the @code{@@bye} command on a line
1482 @section A Short Sample Texinfo File
1483 @cindex Sample Texinfo file, with comments
1485 Here is a very short but complete Texinfo file, in the six conventional
1486 parts enumerated in the previous section, so you can see how Texinfo
1487 source appears in practice. The first three parts of the file, from
1488 @samp{\input texinfo} through to @samp{@@end titlepage}, look more
1489 intimidating than they are: most of the material is standard
1490 boilerplate; when writing a manual, you simply change the names as
1493 @xref{Beginning a File}, for full documentation on the commands listed
1494 here. @xref{GNU Sample Texts}, for the full texts to be used in GNU
1497 In the following, the sample text is @emph{indented}; comments on it are
1498 not. The complete file, without interspersed comments, is shown in
1499 @ref{Short Sample Texinfo File}.
1501 @subheading Part 1: Header
1504 The header does not appear in either the Info file or the
1505 printed output. It sets various parameters, including the
1506 name of the Info file and the title used in the header.
1510 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
1511 @@c %**start of header
1512 @@setfilename sample.info
1513 @@settitle Sample Manual 1.0
1514 @@c %**end of header
1518 @subheading Part 2: Summary Description and Copyright
1521 A real manual includes more text here, according to the license under
1522 which it is distributed. @xref{GNU Sample Texts}.
1527 This is a short example of a complete Texinfo file, version 1.0.
1529 Copyright @@copyright@{@} 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
1534 @subheading Part 3: Titlepage, Contents, Copyright
1537 The titlepage segment does not appear in the online output, only in the
1538 printed manual. We use the @code{@@insertcopying} command to
1539 include the permission text from the previous section, instead of
1540 writing it out again; it is output on the back of the title page. The
1541 @code{@@contents} command generates a table of contents.
1546 @@title Sample Title
1550 @@c The following two commands start the copyright page.
1552 @@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
1557 @@c Output the table of contents at the beginning.
1561 @subheading Part 4: `Top' Node and Master Menu
1564 The `Top' node contains the master menu for the Info file. Since the
1565 printed manual uses a table of contents rather than a menu, it
1566 excludes the `Top' node. We also include the copying text again for
1567 the benefit of online readers. Since the copying text begins with
1568 a brief description of the manual, no other text is needed in this
1569 case. The @samp{@@top} command itself helps @command{makeinfo}
1570 determine the relationships between nodes.
1582 * First Chapter:: The first chapter is the
1583 only chapter in this sample.
1584 * Index:: Complete index.
1590 @subheading Part 5: The Body of the Document
1593 The body segment contains all the text of the document, but not the
1594 indices or table of contents. This example illustrates a node and a
1595 chapter containing an enumerated list.
1599 @@node First Chapter
1600 @@chapter First Chapter
1602 @@cindex chapter, first
1606 This is the first chapter.
1607 @@cindex index entry, another
1611 Here is a numbered list.
1615 This is the first item.
1618 This is the second item.
1624 @subheading Part 6: The End of the Document
1627 The end segment contains commands for generating an index in a node and
1628 unnumbered chapter of its own, and the @code{@@bye} command that marks
1629 the end of the document.
1645 @subheading Some Results
1647 Here is what the contents of the first chapter of the sample look like:
1652 This is the first chapter.
1654 Here is a numbered list.
1658 This is the first item.
1661 This is the second item.
1669 @cindex Stallman, Richard M.
1670 @cindex Chassell, Robert J.
1673 Richard M.@: Stallman invented the Texinfo format, wrote the initial
1674 processors, and created Edition 1.0 of this manual. @w{Robert J.@:}
1675 Chassell greatly revised and extended the manual, starting with Edition
1676 1.1. Brian Fox was responsible for the standalone Texinfo distribution
1677 until version 3.8, and wrote the standalone @command{makeinfo} and
1678 @command{info} programs. Karl Berry has continued maintenance since
1679 Texinfo 3.8 (manual edition 2.22).
1681 @cindex Pinard, Fran@,{c}ois
1682 @cindex Zuhn, David D.
1683 @cindex Weisshaus, Melissa
1684 @cindex Zaretskii, Eli
1685 @cindex Schwab, Andreas
1686 @cindex Weinberg, Zack
1687 Our thanks go out to all who helped improve this work, particularly the
1688 indefatigable Eli Zaretskii and Andreas Schwab, who have provided
1689 patches beyond counting. Fran@,{c}ois Pinard and @w{David D.@: Zuhn},
1690 tirelessly recorded and reported mistakes and obscurities. Zack
1691 Weinberg did the impossible by implementing the macro syntax in
1692 @file{texinfo.tex}. Special thanks go to Melissa Weisshaus for her
1693 frequent reviews of nearly similar editions. Dozens of others have
1694 contributed patches and suggestions, they are gratefully acknowledged in
1695 the @file{ChangeLog} file. Our mistakes are our own.
1699 @cindex History of Texinfo
1700 @cindex Texinfo history
1701 A bit of history: in the 1970's at CMU, Brian Reid developed a program
1702 and format named Scribe to mark up documents for printing. It used the
1703 @code{@@} character to introduce commands, as Texinfo does. Much more
1704 consequentially, it strived to describe document contents rather than
1705 formatting, an idea wholeheartedly adopted by Texinfo.
1709 Meanwhile, people at MIT developed another, not too dissimilar format
1710 called Bolio. This then was converted to using @TeX{} as its typesetting
1711 language: Bo@TeX{}. The earliest Bo@TeX{} version seems to have been
1712 0.02 on October 31, 1984.
1714 Bo@TeX{} could only be used as a markup language for documents to be
1715 printed, not for online documents. Richard Stallman (RMS) worked on
1716 both Bolio and Bo@TeX{}. He also developed a nifty on-line help format
1717 called Info, and then combined Bo@TeX{} and Info to create Texinfo, a
1718 mark up language for text that is intended to be read both online and
1719 as printed hard copy.
1723 @chapter Using Texinfo Mode
1724 @cindex Texinfo mode
1725 @cindex Mode, using Texinfo
1729 You may edit a Texinfo file with any text editor you choose. A Texinfo
1730 file is no different from any other @sc{ascii} file. However, GNU Emacs
1731 comes with a special mode, called Texinfo mode, that provides Emacs
1732 commands and tools to help ease your work.
1734 This chapter describes features of GNU Emacs' Texinfo mode but not any
1735 features of the Texinfo formatting language. So if you are reading this
1736 manual straight through from the beginning, you may want to skim through
1737 this chapter briefly and come back to it after reading succeeding
1738 chapters which describe the Texinfo formatting language in detail.
1741 * Texinfo Mode Overview:: How Texinfo mode can help you.
1742 * Emacs Editing:: Texinfo mode adds to GNU Emacs' general
1743 purpose editing features.
1744 * Inserting:: How to insert frequently used @@-commands.
1745 * Showing the Structure:: How to show the structure of a file.
1746 * Updating Nodes and Menus:: How to update or create new nodes and menus.
1747 * Info Formatting:: How to format for Info.
1748 * Printing:: How to format and print part or all of a file.
1749 * Texinfo Mode Summary:: Summary of all the Texinfo mode commands.
1752 @node Texinfo Mode Overview
1753 @section Texinfo Mode Overview
1755 Texinfo mode provides special features for working with Texinfo files.
1760 Insert frequently used @@-commands. @refill
1763 Automatically create @code{@@node} lines.
1766 Show the structure of a Texinfo source file.@refill
1769 Automatically create or update the `Next',
1770 `Previous', and `Up' pointers of a node.
1773 Automatically create or update menus.@refill
1776 Automatically create a master menu.@refill
1779 Format a part or all of a file for Info.@refill
1782 Typeset and print part or all of a file.@refill
1785 Perhaps the two most helpful features are those for inserting frequently
1786 used @@-commands and for creating node pointers and menus.@refill
1789 @section The Usual GNU Emacs Editing Commands
1791 In most cases, the usual Text mode commands work the same in Texinfo
1792 mode as they do in Text mode. Texinfo mode adds new editing commands
1793 and tools to GNU Emacs' general purpose editing features. The major
1794 difference concerns filling. In Texinfo mode, the paragraph
1795 separation variable and syntax table are redefined so that Texinfo
1796 commands that should be on lines of their own are not inadvertently
1797 included in paragraphs. Thus, the @kbd{M-q} (@code{fill-paragraph})
1798 command will refill a paragraph but not mix an indexing command on a
1799 line adjacent to it into the paragraph.@refill
1801 In addition, Texinfo mode sets the @code{page-delimiter} variable to
1802 the value of @code{texinfo-chapter-level-regexp}; by default, this is
1803 a regular expression matching the commands for chapters and their
1804 equivalents, such as appendices. With this value for the page
1805 delimiter, you can jump from chapter title to chapter title with the
1806 @kbd{C-x ]} (@code{forward-page}) and @kbd{C-x [}
1807 (@code{backward-page}) commands and narrow to a chapter with the
1808 @kbd{C-x p} (@code{narrow-to-page}) command. (@xref{Pages, , ,emacs,
1809 The GNU Emacs Manual}, for details about the page commands.)@refill
1811 You may name a Texinfo file however you wish, but the convention is to
1812 end a Texinfo file name with one of the extensions
1813 @file{.texinfo}, @file{.texi}, @file{.txi}, or @file{.tex}. A longer
1814 extension is preferred, since it is explicit, but a shorter extension
1815 may be necessary for operating systems that limit the length of file
1816 names. GNU Emacs automatically enters Texinfo mode when you visit a
1817 file with a @file{.texinfo}, @file{.texi} or @file{.txi}
1818 extension. Also, Emacs switches to Texinfo mode
1820 file that has @samp{-*-texinfo-*-} in its first line. If ever you are
1821 in another mode and wish to switch to Texinfo mode, type @code{M-x
1822 texinfo-mode}.@refill
1824 Like all other Emacs features, you can customize or enhance Texinfo
1825 mode as you wish. In particular, the keybindings are very easy to
1826 change. The keybindings described here are the default or standard
1830 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1831 @section Inserting Frequently Used Commands
1832 @cindex Inserting frequently used commands
1833 @cindex Frequently used commands, inserting
1834 @cindex Commands, inserting them
1836 Texinfo mode provides commands to insert various frequently used
1837 @@-commands into the buffer. You can use these commands to save
1840 The insert commands are invoked by typing @kbd{C-c} twice and then the
1841 first letter of the @@-command:@refill
1845 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@code
1846 @findex texinfo-insert-@@code
1847 Insert @code{@@code@{@}} and put the
1848 cursor between the braces.@refill
1851 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@dfn
1852 @findex texinfo-insert-@@dfn
1853 Insert @code{@@dfn@{@}} and put the
1854 cursor between the braces.@refill
1857 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@end
1858 @findex texinfo-insert-@@end
1859 Insert @code{@@end} and attempt to insert the correct following word,
1860 such as @samp{example} or @samp{table}. (This command does not handle
1861 nested lists correctly, but inserts the word appropriate to the
1862 immediately preceding list.)@refill
1865 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@item
1866 @findex texinfo-insert-@@item
1867 Insert @code{@@item} and put the
1868 cursor at the beginning of the next line.@refill
1871 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@kbd
1872 @findex texinfo-insert-@@kbd
1873 Insert @code{@@kbd@{@}} and put the
1874 cursor between the braces.@refill
1877 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@node
1878 @findex texinfo-insert-@@node
1879 Insert @code{@@node} and a comment line
1880 listing the sequence for the `Next',
1881 `Previous', and `Up' nodes.
1882 Leave point after the @code{@@node}.@refill
1885 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@noindent
1886 @findex texinfo-insert-@@noindent
1887 Insert @code{@@noindent} and put the
1888 cursor at the beginning of the next line.@refill
1891 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@samp
1892 @findex texinfo-insert-@@samp
1893 Insert @code{@@samp@{@}} and put the
1894 cursor between the braces.@refill
1897 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@table
1898 @findex texinfo-insert-@@table
1899 Insert @code{@@table} followed by a @key{SPC}
1900 and leave the cursor after the @key{SPC}.@refill
1903 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@var
1904 @findex texinfo-insert-@@var
1905 Insert @code{@@var@{@}} and put the
1906 cursor between the braces.@refill
1909 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-@@example
1910 @findex texinfo-insert-@@example
1911 Insert @code{@@example} and put the
1912 cursor at the beginning of the next line.@refill
1914 @c M-@{ was the binding for texinfo-insert-braces;
1915 @c in Emacs 19, backward-paragraph will take this binding.
1917 @itemx M-x texinfo-insert-braces
1918 @findex texinfo-insert-braces
1919 Insert @code{@{@}} and put the cursor between the braces.@refill
1925 Move from between a pair of braces forward past the closing brace.
1926 Typing @kbd{C-c C-c ]} is easier than typing @kbd{C-c C-c @}}, which
1927 is, however, more mnemonic; hence the two keybindings. (Also, you can
1928 move out from between braces by typing @kbd{C-f}.)@refill
1931 To put a command such as @w{@code{@@code@{@dots{}@}}} around an
1932 @emph{existing} word, position the cursor in front of the word and type
1933 @kbd{C-u 1 C-c C-c c}. This makes it easy to edit existing plain text.
1934 The value of the prefix argument tells Emacs how many words following
1935 point to include between braces---@samp{1} for one word, @samp{2} for
1936 two words, and so on. Use a negative argument to enclose the previous
1937 word or words. If you do not specify a prefix argument, Emacs inserts
1938 the @@-command string and positions the cursor between the braces. This
1939 feature works only for those @@-commands that operate on a word or words
1940 within one line, such as @code{@@kbd} and @code{@@var}.@refill
1942 This set of insert commands was created after analyzing the frequency
1943 with which different @@-commands are used in the @cite{GNU Emacs
1944 Manual} and the @cite{GDB Manual}. If you wish to add your own insert
1945 commands, you can bind a keyboard macro to a key, use abbreviations,
1946 or extend the code in @file{texinfo.el}.@refill
1948 @findex texinfo-start-menu-description
1949 @cindex Menu description, start
1950 @cindex Description for menu, start
1951 @kbd{C-c C-c C-d} (@code{texinfo-start-menu-description}) is an insert
1952 command that works differently from the other insert commands. It
1953 inserts a node's section or chapter title in the space for the
1954 description in a menu entry line. (A menu entry has three parts, the
1955 entry name, the node name, and the description. Only the node name is
1956 required, but a description helps explain what the node is about.
1957 @xref{Menu Parts, , The Parts of a Menu}.)@refill
1959 To use @code{texinfo-start-menu-description}, position point in a menu
1960 entry line and type @kbd{C-c C-c C-d}. The command looks for and copies
1961 the title that goes with the node name, and inserts the title as a
1962 description; it positions point at beginning of the inserted text so you
1963 can edit it. The function does not insert the title if the menu entry
1964 line already contains a description.@refill
1966 This command is only an aid to writing descriptions; it does not do the
1967 whole job. You must edit the inserted text since a title tends to use
1968 the same words as a node name but a useful description uses different
1971 @node Showing the Structure
1972 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1973 @section Showing the Section Structure of a File
1974 @cindex Showing the section structure of a file
1975 @cindex Section structure of a file, showing it
1976 @cindex Structure of a file, showing it
1977 @cindex Outline of file structure, showing it
1978 @cindex Contents-like outline of file structure
1979 @cindex File section structure, showing it
1980 @cindex Texinfo file section structure, showing it
1982 You can show the section structure of a Texinfo file by using the
1983 @kbd{C-c C-s} command (@code{texinfo-show-structure}). This command
1984 shows the section structure of a Texinfo file by listing the lines
1985 that begin with the @@-commands for @code{@@chapter},
1986 @code{@@section}, and the like. It constructs what amounts
1987 to a table of contents. These lines are displayed in another buffer
1988 called the @samp{*Occur*} buffer. In that buffer, you can position
1989 the cursor over one of the lines and use the @kbd{C-c C-c} command
1990 (@code{occur-mode-goto-occurrence}), to jump to the corresponding spot
1991 in the Texinfo file.@refill
1995 @itemx M-x texinfo-show-structure
1996 @findex texinfo-show-structure
1997 Show the @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@section}, and such lines of a
1998 Texinfo file.@refill
2001 @itemx M-x occur-mode-goto-occurrence
2002 @findex occur-mode-goto-occurrence
2003 Go to the line in the Texinfo file corresponding to the line under the
2004 cursor in the @file{*Occur*} buffer.@refill
2007 If you call @code{texinfo-show-structure} with a prefix argument by
2008 typing @w{@kbd{C-u C-c C-s}}, it will list not only those lines with the
2009 @@-commands for @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@section}, and the like, but
2010 also the @code{@@node} lines. You can use @code{texinfo-show-structure}
2011 with a prefix argument to check whether the `Next', `Previous', and `Up'
2012 pointers of an @code{@@node} line are correct.
2014 Often, when you are working on a manual, you will be interested only
2015 in the structure of the current chapter. In this case, you can mark
2016 off the region of the buffer that you are interested in by using the
2017 @kbd{C-x n n} (@code{narrow-to-region}) command and
2018 @code{texinfo-show-structure} will work on only that region. To see
2019 the whole buffer again, use @w{@kbd{C-x n w}} (@code{widen}).
2020 (@xref{Narrowing, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for more
2021 information about the narrowing commands.)@refill
2023 @vindex page-delimiter
2024 @cindex Page delimiter in Texinfo mode
2025 In addition to providing the @code{texinfo-show-structure} command,
2026 Texinfo mode sets the value of the page delimiter variable to match
2027 the chapter-level @@-commands. This enables you to use the @kbd{C-x
2028 ]} (@code{forward-page}) and @kbd{C-x [} (@code{backward-page})
2029 commands to move forward and backward by chapter, and to use the
2030 @kbd{C-x p} (@code{narrow-to-page}) command to narrow to a chapter.
2031 @xref{Pages, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for more information
2032 about the page commands.@refill
2034 @node Updating Nodes and Menus
2035 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
2036 @section Updating Nodes and Menus
2037 @cindex Updating nodes and menus
2038 @cindex Create nodes, menus automatically
2039 @cindex Insert nodes, menus automatically
2040 @cindex Automatically insert nodes, menus
2042 Texinfo mode provides commands for automatically creating or updating
2043 menus and node pointers. The commands are called ``update'' commands
2044 because their most frequent use is for updating a Texinfo file after you
2045 have worked on it; but you can use them to insert the `Next',
2046 `Previous', and `Up' pointers into an @code{@@node} line that has none
2047 and to create menus in a file that has none.
2049 If you do not use the updating commands, you need to write menus and
2050 node pointers by hand, which is a tedious task.@refill
2053 * Updating Commands:: Five major updating commands.
2054 * Updating Requirements:: How to structure a Texinfo file for
2055 using the updating command.
2056 * Other Updating Commands:: How to indent descriptions, insert
2057 missing nodes lines, and update
2061 @node Updating Commands
2062 @subsection The Updating Commands
2064 You can use the updating commands to:@refill
2068 insert or update the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers of a
2072 insert or update the menu for a section, and@refill
2075 create a master menu for a Texinfo source file.@refill
2078 You can also use the commands to update all the nodes and menus in a
2079 region or in a whole Texinfo file.@refill
2081 The updating commands work only with conventional Texinfo files, which
2082 are structured hierarchically like books. In such files, a structuring
2083 command line must follow closely after each @code{@@node} line, except
2084 for the `Top' @code{@@node} line. (A @dfn{structuring command line} is
2085 a line beginning with @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@section}, or other
2088 You can write the structuring command line on the line that follows
2089 immediately after an @code{@@node} line or else on the line that
2090 follows after a single @code{@@comment} line or a single
2091 @code{@@ifinfo} line. You cannot interpose more than one line between
2092 the @code{@@node} line and the structuring command line; and you may
2093 interpose only an @code{@@comment} line or an @code{@@ifinfo} line.
2095 Commands which work on a whole buffer require that the `Top' node be
2096 followed by a node with an @code{@@chapter} or equivalent-level command.
2097 The menu updating commands will not create a main or master menu for a
2098 Texinfo file that has only @code{@@chapter}-level nodes! The menu
2099 updating commands only create menus @emph{within} nodes for lower level
2100 nodes. To create a menu of chapters, you must provide a `Top'
2103 The menu updating commands remove menu entries that refer to other Info
2104 files since they do not refer to nodes within the current buffer. This
2105 is a deficiency. Rather than use menu entries, you can use cross
2106 references to refer to other Info files. None of the updating commands
2107 affect cross references.@refill
2109 Texinfo mode has five updating commands that are used most often: two
2110 are for updating the node pointers or menu of a single node (or a
2111 region); two are for updating every node pointer and menu in a file;
2112 and one, the @code{texinfo-master-menu} command, is for creating a
2113 master menu for a complete file, and optionally, for updating every
2114 node and menu in the whole Texinfo file.@refill
2116 The @code{texinfo-master-menu} command is the primary command:@refill
2120 @itemx M-x texinfo-master-menu
2121 @findex texinfo-master-menu
2122 Create or update a master menu that includes all the other menus
2123 (incorporating the descriptions from pre-existing menus, if
2126 With an argument (prefix argument, @kbd{C-u,} if interactive), first create or
2127 update all the nodes and all the regular menus in the buffer before
2128 constructing the master menu. (@xref{The Top Node, , The Top Node and
2129 Master Menu}, for more about a master menu.)@refill
2131 For @code{texinfo-master-menu} to work, the Texinfo file must have a
2132 `Top' node and at least one subsequent node.@refill
2134 After extensively editing a Texinfo file, you can type the following:
2137 C-u M-x texinfo-master-menu
2143 This updates all the nodes and menus completely and all at once.@refill
2146 The other major updating commands do smaller jobs and are designed for
2147 the person who updates nodes and menus as he or she writes a Texinfo
2151 The commands are:@refill
2155 @itemx M-x texinfo-update-node
2156 @findex texinfo-update-node
2157 Insert the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers for the node that point is
2158 within (i.e., for the @code{@@node} line preceding point). If the
2159 @code{@@node} line has pre-existing `Next', `Previous', or `Up'
2160 pointers in it, the old pointers are removed and new ones inserted.
2161 With an argument (prefix argument, @kbd{C-u}, if interactive), this command
2162 updates all @code{@@node} lines in the region (which is the text
2163 between point and mark).@refill
2166 @itemx M-x texinfo-make-menu
2167 @findex texinfo-make-menu
2168 Create or update the menu in the node that point is within.
2169 With an argument (@kbd{C-u} as prefix argument, if
2170 interactive), the command makes or updates menus for the
2171 nodes which are either within or a part of the
2174 Whenever @code{texinfo-make-menu} updates an existing menu, the
2175 descriptions from that menu are incorporated into the new menu. This
2176 is done by copying descriptions from the existing menu to the entries
2177 in the new menu that have the same node names. If the node names are
2178 different, the descriptions are not copied to the new menu.@refill
2181 @itemx M-x texinfo-every-node-update
2182 @findex texinfo-every-node-update
2183 Insert or update the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers for every
2184 node in the buffer.@refill
2187 @itemx M-x texinfo-all-menus-update
2188 @findex texinfo-all-menus-update
2189 Create or update all the menus in the buffer. With an argument
2190 (@kbd{C-u} as prefix argument, if interactive), first insert
2191 or update all the node
2192 pointers before working on the menus.@refill
2194 If a master menu exists, the @code{texinfo-all-menus-update} command
2195 updates it; but the command does not create a new master menu if none
2196 already exists. (Use the @code{texinfo-master-menu} command for
2199 When working on a document that does not merit a master menu, you can
2205 C-u M-x texinfo-all-menus-update
2209 This updates all the nodes and menus.@refill
2212 The @code{texinfo-column-for-description} variable specifies the
2213 column to which menu descriptions are indented. By default, the value
2214 is 32 although it is often useful to reduce it to as low as 24. You
2215 can set the variable via customization (@pxref{Changing an Option,,,
2216 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) or with the @kbd{M-x set-variable}
2217 command (@pxref{Examining, , Examining and Setting Variables, emacs,
2218 The GNU Emacs Manual}).
2220 Also, the @code{texinfo-indent-menu-description} command may be used to
2221 indent existing menu descriptions to a specified column. Finally, if
2222 you wish, you can use the @code{texinfo-insert-node-lines} command to
2223 insert missing @code{@@node} lines into a file. (@xref{Other Updating
2224 Commands}, for more information.)@refill
2226 @node Updating Requirements
2227 @subsection Updating Requirements
2228 @cindex Updating requirements
2229 @cindex Requirements for updating commands
2231 To use the updating commands, you must organize the Texinfo file
2232 hierarchically with chapters, sections, subsections, and the like.
2233 When you construct the hierarchy of the manual, do not `jump down'
2234 more than one level at a time: you can follow the `Top' node with a
2235 chapter, but not with a section; you can follow a chapter with a
2236 section, but not with a subsection. However, you may `jump up' any
2237 number of levels at one time---for example, from a subsection to a
2240 Each @code{@@node} line, with the exception of the line for the `Top'
2241 node, must be followed by a line with a structuring command such as
2242 @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@section}, or
2243 @code{@@unnumberedsubsec}.@refill
2245 Each @code{@@node} line/structuring-command line combination
2246 must look either like this:
2250 @@node Comments, Minimum, Conventions, Overview
2251 @@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2256 or like this (without the @code{@@comment} line):
2260 @@node Comments, Minimum, Conventions, Overview
2265 or like this (without the explicit node pointers):
2275 In this example, `Comments' is the name of both the node and the
2276 section. The next node is called `Minimum' and the previous node is
2277 called `Conventions'. The `Comments' section is within the `Overview'
2278 node, which is specified by the `Up' pointer. (Instead of an
2279 @code{@@comment} line, you may also write an @code{@@ifinfo} line.)
2281 If a file has a `Top' node, it must be called @samp{top} or @samp{Top}
2282 and be the first node in the file.
2284 The menu updating commands create a menu of sections within a chapter,
2285 a menu of subsections within a section, and so on. This means that
2286 you must have a `Top' node if you want a menu of chapters.@refill
2288 Incidentally, the @code{makeinfo} command will create an Info file for a
2289 hierarchically organized Texinfo file that lacks `Next', `Previous' and
2290 `Up' pointers. Thus, if you can be sure that your Texinfo file will be
2291 formatted with @code{makeinfo}, you have no need for the update node
2292 commands. (@xref{Creating an Info File}, for more information about
2293 @code{makeinfo}.) However, both @code{makeinfo} and the
2294 @code{texinfo-format-@dots{}} commands require that you insert menus in
2298 @node Other Updating Commands
2299 @subsection Other Updating Commands
2301 In addition to the five major updating commands, Texinfo mode
2302 possesses several less frequently used updating commands:@refill
2305 @item M-x texinfo-insert-node-lines
2306 @findex texinfo-insert-node-lines
2307 Insert @code{@@node} lines before the @code{@@chapter},
2308 @code{@@section}, and other sectioning commands wherever they are
2309 missing throughout a region in a Texinfo file.@refill
2311 With an argument (@kbd{C-u} as prefix argument, if interactive), the
2312 @code{texinfo-insert-node-lines} command not only inserts
2313 @code{@@node} lines but also inserts the chapter or section titles as
2314 the names of the corresponding nodes. In addition, it inserts the
2315 titles as node names in pre-existing @code{@@node} lines that lack
2316 names. Since node names should be more concise than section or
2317 chapter titles, you must manually edit node names so inserted.@refill
2319 For example, the following marks a whole buffer as a region and inserts
2320 @code{@@node} lines and titles throughout:@refill
2323 C-x h C-u M-x texinfo-insert-node-lines
2326 This command inserts titles as node names in @code{@@node} lines; the
2327 @code{texinfo-start-menu-description} command (@pxref{Inserting,
2328 Inserting Frequently Used Commands}) inserts titles as descriptions in
2329 menu entries, a different action. However, in both cases, you need to
2330 edit the inserted text.
2332 @item M-x texinfo-multiple-files-update
2333 @findex texinfo-multiple-files-update @r{(in brief)}
2334 Update nodes and menus in a document built from several separate files.
2335 With @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument, create and insert a master menu in
2336 the outer file. With a numeric prefix argument, such as @kbd{C-u 2}, first
2337 update all the menus and all the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers
2338 of all the included files before creating and inserting a master menu in
2339 the outer file. The @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update} command is
2340 described in the appendix on @code{@@include} files.
2341 @xref{texinfo-multiple-files-update}.
2343 @item M-x texinfo-indent-menu-description
2344 @findex texinfo-indent-menu-description
2345 Indent every description in the menu following point to the specified
2346 column. You can use this command to give yourself more space for
2347 descriptions. With an argument (@kbd{C-u} as prefix argument, if
2348 interactive), the @code{texinfo-indent-menu-description} command indents
2349 every description in every menu in the region. However, this command
2350 does not indent the second and subsequent lines of a multi-line
2353 @item M-x texinfo-sequential-node-update
2354 @findex texinfo-sequential-node-update
2355 Insert the names of the nodes immediately following and preceding the
2356 current node as the `Next' or `Previous' pointers regardless of those
2357 nodes' hierarchical level. This means that the `Next' node of a
2358 subsection may well be the next chapter. Sequentially ordered nodes are
2359 useful for novels and other documents that you read through
2360 sequentially. (However, in Info, the @kbd{g *} command lets
2361 you look through the file sequentially, so sequentially ordered nodes
2362 are not strictly necessary.) With an argument (prefix argument, if
2363 interactive), the @code{texinfo-sequential-node-update} command
2364 sequentially updates all the nodes in the region.@refill
2367 @node Info Formatting
2368 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
2369 @section Formatting for Info
2370 @cindex Formatting for Info
2371 @cindex Running an Info formatter
2372 @cindex Info formatting
2374 Texinfo mode provides several commands for formatting part or all of a
2375 Texinfo file for Info. Often, when you are writing a document, you
2376 want to format only part of a file---that is, a region.@refill
2378 You can use either the @code{texinfo-format-region} or the
2379 @code{makeinfo-region} command to format a region:@refill
2382 @findex texinfo-format-region
2384 @itemx M-x texinfo-format-region
2386 @itemx M-x makeinfo-region
2387 Format the current region for Info.@refill
2390 You can use either the @code{texinfo-format-buffer} or the
2391 @code{makeinfo-buffer} command to format a whole buffer:@refill
2394 @findex texinfo-format-buffer
2396 @itemx M-x texinfo-format-buffer
2398 @itemx M-x makeinfo-buffer
2399 Format the current buffer for Info.@refill
2403 For example, after writing a Texinfo file, you can type the following:
2408 C-u M-x texinfo-master-menu
2412 This updates all the nodes and menus. Then type the following to create
2421 For @TeX{} or the Info formatting commands to work, the file @emph{must}
2422 include a line that has @code{@@setfilename} in its header.
2424 @xref{Creating an Info File}, for details about Info formatting.@refill
2427 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
2429 @cindex Formatting for printing
2430 @cindex Printing a region or buffer
2431 @cindex Region formatting and printing
2432 @cindex Buffer formatting and printing
2433 @cindex Part of file formatting and printing
2435 Typesetting and printing a Texinfo file is a multi-step process in which
2436 you first create a file for printing (called a DVI file), and then
2437 print the file. Optionally, you may also create indices. To do this,
2438 you must run the @code{texindex} command after first running the
2439 @code{tex} typesetting command; and then you must run the @code{tex}
2440 command again. Or else run the @code{texi2dvi} command which
2441 automatically creates indices as needed (@pxref{Format with texi2dvi}).
2443 Often, when you are writing a document, you want to typeset and print
2444 only part of a file to see what it will look like. You can use the
2445 @code{texinfo-tex-region} and related commands for this purpose. Use
2446 the @code{texinfo-tex-buffer} command to format all of a
2451 @itemx M-x texinfo-tex-buffer
2452 @findex texinfo-tex-buffer
2453 Run @code{texi2dvi} on the buffer. In addition to running @TeX{} on the
2454 buffer, this command automatically creates or updates indices as
2458 @itemx M-x texinfo-tex-region
2459 @findex texinfo-tex-region
2460 Run @TeX{} on the region.@refill
2463 @itemx M-x texinfo-texindex
2464 Run @code{texindex} to sort the indices of a Texinfo file formatted with
2465 @code{texinfo-tex-region}. The @code{texinfo-tex-region} command does
2466 not run @code{texindex} automatically; it only runs the @code{tex}
2467 typesetting command. You must run the @code{texinfo-tex-region} command
2468 a second time after sorting the raw index files with the @code{texindex}
2469 command. (Usually, you do not format an index when you format a region,
2470 only when you format a buffer. Now that the @code{texi2dvi} command
2471 exists, there is little or no need for this command.)@refill
2474 @itemx M-x texinfo-tex-print
2475 @findex texinfo-tex-print
2476 Print the file (or the part of the file) previously formatted with
2477 @code{texinfo-tex-buffer} or @code{texinfo-tex-region}.@refill
2480 For @code{texinfo-tex-region} or @code{texinfo-tex-buffer} to work, the
2481 file @emph{must} start with a @samp{\input texinfo} line and must
2482 include an @code{@@settitle} line. The file must end with @code{@@bye}
2483 on a line by itself. (When you use @code{texinfo-tex-region}, you must
2484 surround the @code{@@settitle} line with start-of-header and
2485 end-of-header lines.)@refill
2487 @xref{Hardcopy}, for a description of the other @TeX{} related
2488 commands, such as @code{tex-show-print-queue}.@refill
2490 @node Texinfo Mode Summary
2491 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
2492 @section Texinfo Mode Summary
2494 In Texinfo mode, each set of commands has default keybindings that
2495 begin with the same keys. All the commands that are custom-created
2496 for Texinfo mode begin with @kbd{C-c}. The keys are somewhat
2499 @subheading Insert Commands
2501 The insert commands are invoked by typing @kbd{C-c} twice and then the
2502 first letter of the @@-command to be inserted. (It might make more
2503 sense mnemonically to use @kbd{C-c C-i}, for `custom insert', but
2504 @kbd{C-c C-c} is quick to type.)@refill
2507 C-c C-c c @r{Insert} @samp{@@code}.
2508 C-c C-c d @r{Insert} @samp{@@dfn}.
2509 C-c C-c e @r{Insert} @samp{@@end}.
2510 C-c C-c i @r{Insert} @samp{@@item}.
2511 C-c C-c n @r{Insert} @samp{@@node}.
2512 C-c C-c s @r{Insert} @samp{@@samp}.
2513 C-c C-c v @r{Insert} @samp{@@var}.
2514 C-c C-c @{ @r{Insert braces.}
2516 C-c C-c @} @r{Move out of enclosing braces.}
2519 C-c C-c C-d @r{Insert a node's section title}
2520 @r{in the space for the description}
2521 @r{in a menu entry line.}
2525 @subheading Show Structure
2527 The @code{texinfo-show-structure} command is often used within a
2528 narrowed region.@refill
2531 C-c C-s @r{List all the headings.}
2534 @subheading The Master Update Command
2536 The @code{texinfo-master-menu} command creates a master menu; and can
2537 be used to update every node and menu in a file as well.@refill
2539 @c Probably should use @tables in this section.
2543 M-x texinfo-master-menu
2544 @r{Create or update a master menu.}
2548 C-u C-c C-u m @r{With @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument, first}
2549 @r{create or update all nodes and regular}
2550 @r{menus, and then create a master menu.}
2554 @subheading Update Pointers
2556 The update pointer commands are invoked by typing @kbd{C-c C-u} and
2557 then either @kbd{C-n} for @code{texinfo-update-node} or @kbd{C-e} for
2558 @code{texinfo-every-node-update}.@refill
2561 C-c C-u C-n @r{Update a node.}
2562 C-c C-u C-e @r{Update every node in the buffer.}
2565 @subheading Update Menus
2567 Invoke the update menu commands by typing @kbd{C-c C-u}
2568 and then either @kbd{C-m} for @code{texinfo-make-menu} or
2569 @kbd{C-a} for @code{texinfo-all-menus-update}. To update
2570 both nodes and menus at the same time, precede @kbd{C-c C-u
2571 C-a} with @kbd{C-u}.@refill
2574 C-c C-u C-m @r{Make or update a menu.}
2577 C-c C-u C-a @r{Make or update all}
2578 @r{menus in a buffer.}
2582 C-u C-c C-u C-a @r{With @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument,}
2583 @r{first create or update all nodes and}
2584 @r{then create or update all menus.}
2588 @subheading Format for Info
2590 The Info formatting commands that are written in Emacs Lisp are
2591 invoked by typing @kbd{C-c C-e} and then either @kbd{C-r} for a region
2592 or @kbd{C-b} for the whole buffer.@refill
2594 The Info formatting commands that are written in C and based on the
2595 @code{makeinfo} program are invoked by typing @kbd{C-c C-m} and then
2596 either @kbd{C-r} for a region or @kbd{C-b} for the whole buffer.@refill
2600 Use the @code{texinfo-format@dots{}} commands:
2604 C-c C-e C-r @r{Format the region.}
2605 C-c C-e C-b @r{Format the buffer.}
2611 Use @code{makeinfo}:
2614 C-c C-m C-r @r{Format the region.}
2615 C-c C-m C-b @r{Format the buffer.}
2616 C-c C-m C-l @r{Recenter the @code{makeinfo} output buffer.}
2617 C-c C-m C-k @r{Kill the @code{makeinfo} formatting job.}
2620 @subheading Typeset and Print
2622 The @TeX{} typesetting and printing commands are invoked by typing
2623 @kbd{C-c C-t} and then another control command: @kbd{C-r} for
2624 @code{texinfo-tex-region}, @kbd{C-b} for @code{texinfo-tex-buffer},
2628 C-c C-t C-r @r{Run @TeX{} on the region.}
2629 C-c C-t C-b @r{Run} @code{texi2dvi} @r{on the buffer.}
2630 C-c C-t C-i @r{Run} @code{texindex}.
2631 C-c C-t C-p @r{Print the DVI file.}
2632 C-c C-t C-q @r{Show the print queue.}
2633 C-c C-t C-d @r{Delete a job from the print queue.}
2634 C-c C-t C-k @r{Kill the current @TeX{} formatting job.}
2635 C-c C-t C-x @r{Quit a currently stopped @TeX{} formatting job.}
2636 C-c C-t C-l @r{Recenter the output buffer.}
2639 @subheading Other Updating Commands
2641 The remaining updating commands do not have standard keybindings because
2642 they are rarely used.
2646 M-x texinfo-insert-node-lines
2647 @r{Insert missing @code{@@node} lines in region.}
2648 @r{With @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument,}
2649 @r{use section titles as node names.}
2653 M-x texinfo-multiple-files-update
2654 @r{Update a multi-file document.}
2655 @r{With @kbd{C-u 2} as a prefix argument,}
2656 @r{create or update all nodes and menus}
2657 @r{in all included files first.}
2661 M-x texinfo-indent-menu-description
2662 @r{Indent descriptions.}
2666 M-x texinfo-sequential-node-update
2667 @r{Insert node pointers in strict sequence.}
2672 @node Beginning a File
2673 @chapter Beginning a Texinfo File
2674 @cindex Beginning a Texinfo file
2675 @cindex Texinfo file beginning
2676 @cindex File beginning
2678 Certain pieces of information must be provided at the beginning of a
2679 Texinfo file, such as the name for the output file(s), the title of the
2680 document, and the Top node. A table of contents is also generally
2683 This chapter expands on the minimal complete Texinfo source file
2684 previously given (@pxref{Six Parts}). It describes the numerous
2685 commands for handling the traditional frontmatter items in Texinfo.
2687 @cindex Frontmatter, text in
2688 Straight text outside of any command before the Top node should be
2689 avoided. Such text is treated differently in the different output
2690 formats: visible in @TeX{} and HTML, by default not shown in Info
2694 * Sample Beginning:: A sample beginning for a Texinfo file.
2695 * Texinfo File Header:: The first lines.
2696 * Document Permissions:: Ensuring your manual is free.
2697 * Titlepage & Copyright Page:: Creating the title and copyright pages.
2698 * Contents:: How to create a table of contents.
2699 * The Top Node:: Creating the `Top' node and master menu.
2700 * Global Document Commands:: Affecting formatting throughout.
2701 * Software Copying Permissions:: Ensure that you and others continue to
2702 have the right to use and share software.
2706 @node Sample Beginning
2707 @section Sample Texinfo File Beginning
2709 @cindex Example beginning of Texinfo file
2711 The following sample shows what is needed. The elements given here are
2712 explained in more detail in the following sections. Other commands are
2713 often included at the beginning of Texinfo files, but the ones here are
2716 @xref{GNU Sample Texts}, for the full texts to be used in GNU manuals.
2719 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
2720 @@c %**start of header
2721 @@setfilename @var{infoname}.info
2722 @@settitle @var{name-of-manual} @var{version}
2723 @@c %**end of header
2726 This manual is for @var{program}, version @var{version}.
2728 Copyright @@copyright@{@} @var{years} @var{copyright-owner}.
2732 Permission is granted to @dots{}
2739 @@title @var{name-of-manual-when-printed}
2740 @@subtitle @var{subtitle-if-any}
2741 @@subtitle @var{second-subtitle}
2742 @@author @var{author}
2746 @@c The following two commands
2747 @@c start the copyright page.
2749 @@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
2753 Published by @dots{}
2756 @@c So the toc is printed at the start.
2768 * First Chapter:: Getting started @dots{}
2769 * Second Chapter:: @dots{}
2771 * Copying:: Your rights and freedoms.
2776 @@node First Chapter
2777 @@chapter First Chapter
2779 @@cindex first chapter
2780 @@cindex chapter, first
2786 @node Texinfo File Header
2787 @section Texinfo File Header
2788 @cindex Header for Texinfo files
2789 @cindex Texinfo file header
2791 Texinfo files start with at least three lines that provide Info and
2792 @TeX{} with necessary information. These are the @code{\input texinfo}
2793 line, the @code{@@settitle} line, and the @code{@@setfilename} line.
2795 Also, if you want to format just part of the Texinfo file, you must
2796 write the @code{@@settitle} and @code{@@setfilename} lines between
2797 start-of-header and end-of-header lines. The start- and end-of-header
2798 lines are optional, but they do no harm, so you might as well always
2801 Any command that affects document formatting as a whole makes sense to
2802 include in the header. @code{@@synindex} (@pxref{synindex}), for
2803 instance, is another command often included in the header. @xref{GNU
2804 Sample Texts}, for complete sample texts.
2806 Thus, the beginning of a Texinfo file generally looks like this:
2810 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
2811 @@c %**start of header
2812 @@setfilename sample.info
2813 @@settitle Sample Manual 1.0
2814 @@c %**end of header
2819 * First Line:: The first line of a Texinfo file.
2820 * Start of Header:: Formatting a region requires this.
2821 * setfilename:: Tell Info the name of the Info file.
2822 * settitle:: Create a title for the printed work.
2823 * End of Header:: Formatting a region requires this.
2828 @subsection The First Line of a Texinfo File
2829 @cindex First line of a Texinfo file
2830 @cindex Beginning line of a Texinfo file
2831 @cindex Header of a Texinfo file
2833 Every Texinfo file that is to be the top-level input to @TeX{} must begin
2834 with a line that looks like this:
2837 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
2841 This line serves two functions:
2845 When the file is processed by @TeX{}, the @samp{\input texinfo} command
2846 tells @TeX{} to load the macros needed for processing a Texinfo file.
2847 These are in a file called @file{texinfo.tex}, which should have been
2848 installed on your system along with either the @TeX{} or Texinfo
2849 software. @TeX{} uses the backslash, @samp{\}, to mark the beginning of
2850 a command, exactly as Texinfo uses @samp{@@}. The @file{texinfo.tex}
2851 file causes the switch from @samp{\} to @samp{@@}; before the switch
2852 occurs, @TeX{} requires @samp{\}, which is why it appears at the
2853 beginning of the file.
2856 When the file is edited in GNU Emacs, the @samp{-*-texinfo-*-} mode
2857 specification tells Emacs to use Texinfo mode.
2861 @node Start of Header
2862 @subsection Start of Header
2863 @cindex Start of header line
2865 A start-of-header line is a Texinfo comment that looks like this:
2868 @@c %**start of header
2871 Write the start-of-header line on the second line of a Texinfo file.
2872 Follow the start-of-header line with @code{@@setfilename} and
2873 @code{@@settitle} lines and, optionally, with other commands that
2874 globally affect the document formatting, such as @code{@@synindex} or
2875 @code{@@footnotestyle}; and then by an end-of-header line (@pxref{End of
2878 The start- and end-of-header lines allow you to format only part of a
2879 Texinfo file for Info or printing. @xref{texinfo-format commands}.
2881 The odd string of characters, @samp{%**}, is to ensure that no other
2882 comment is accidentally taken for a start-of-header line. You can
2883 change it if you wish by setting the @code{tex-start-of-header} and/or
2884 @code{tex-end-of-header} Emacs variables. @xref{Texinfo Mode Printing}.
2888 @subsection @code{@@setfilename}: Set the output file name
2890 @cindex Texinfo requires @code{@@setfilename}
2892 In order to serve as the primary input file for either @code{makeinfo}
2893 or @TeX{}, a Texinfo file must contain a line that looks like this:
2896 @@setfilename @var{info-file-name}
2899 Write the @code{@@setfilename} command at the beginning of a line and
2900 follow it on the same line by the Info file name. Do not write anything
2901 else on the line; anything on the line after the command is considered
2902 part of the file name, including what would otherwise be a
2905 @cindex Ignored before @code{@@setfilename}
2906 @cindex @samp{\input} source line ignored
2907 The Info formatting commands ignore everything written before the
2908 @code{@@setfilename} line, which is why the very first line of
2909 the file (the @code{\input} line) does not show up in the output.
2911 The @code{@@setfilename} line specifies the name of the output file to
2912 be generated. This name must be different from the name of the Texinfo
2913 file. There are two conventions for choosing the name: you can either
2914 remove the extension (such as @samp{.texi}) entirely from the input file
2915 name, or, preferably, replace it with the @samp{.info} extension.
2917 @cindex Length of file names
2918 @cindex File name collision
2919 @cindex Info file name, choosing
2920 Although an explicit @samp{.info} extension is preferable, some
2921 operating systems cannot handle long file names. You can run into a
2922 problem even when the file name you specify is itself short enough.
2923 This occurs because the Info formatters split a long Info file into
2924 short indirect subfiles, and name them by appending @samp{-1},
2925 @samp{-2}, @dots{}, @samp{-10}, @samp{-11}, and so on, to the original
2926 file name. (@xref{Tag and Split Files}.) The subfile name
2927 @file{texinfo.info-10}, for example, is too long for old systems with a
2928 14-character limit on filenames; so the Info file name for this document
2929 is @file{texinfo} rather than @file{texinfo.info}. When @code{makeinfo}
2930 is running on operating systems such as MS-DOS which impose severe
2931 limits on file names, it may remove some characters from the original
2932 file name to leave enough space for the subfile suffix, thus producing
2933 files named @file{texin-10}, @file{gcc.i12}, etc.
2935 When producing HTML output, @code{makeinfo} will replace any extension
2936 with @samp{html}, or add @samp{.html} if the given name has no
2940 The @code{@@setfilename} line produces no output when you typeset a
2941 manual with @TeX{}, but it is nevertheless essential: it opens the
2942 index, cross-reference, and other auxiliary files used by Texinfo, and
2943 also reads @file{texinfo.cnf} if that file is present on your system
2944 (@pxref{Preparing for TeX,, Preparing for @TeX{}}).
2948 @subsection @code{@@settitle}: Set the document title
2951 In order to be made into a printed manual, a Texinfo file must contain
2952 a line that looks like this:
2955 @@settitle @var{title}
2958 Write the @code{@@settitle} command at the beginning of a line and
2959 follow it on the same line by the title. This tells @TeX{} the title to
2960 use in a header or footer. Do not write anything else on the line;
2961 anything on the line after the command is considered part of the title,
2962 including what would otherwise be a comment.
2964 The @code{@@settitle} command should precede everything that generates
2965 actual output. The best place for it is right after the
2966 @code{@@setfilename} command (see the previous section).
2968 @cindex <title> HTML tag
2969 In the HTML file produced by @command{makeinfo}, @var{title} serves as
2970 the document @samp{<title>}. It also becomes the default document
2971 description in the @samp{<head>} part (@pxref{documentdescription}).
2973 The title in the @code{@@settitle} command does not affect the title as
2974 it appears on the title page. Thus, the two do not need not match
2975 exactly. A practice we recommend is to include the version or edition
2976 number of the manual in the @code{@@settitle} title; on the title page,
2977 the version number generally appears as a @code{@@subtitle} so it would
2978 be omitted from the @code{@@title}. @xref{titlepage}.
2980 Conventionally, when @TeX{} formats a Texinfo file for double-sided
2981 output, the title is printed in the left-hand (even-numbered) page
2982 headings and the current chapter title is printed in the right-hand
2983 (odd-numbered) page headings. (@TeX{} learns the title of each chapter
2984 from each @code{@@chapter} command.) By default, no page footer is
2987 Even if you are printing in a single-sided style, @TeX{} looks for an
2988 @code{@@settitle} command line, in case you include the manual title
2991 @TeX{} prints page headings only for that text that comes after the
2992 @code{@@end titlepage} command in the Texinfo file, or that comes
2993 after an @code{@@headings} command that turns on headings.
2994 (@xref{headings on off, , The @code{@@headings} Command}, for more
2997 You may, if you wish, create your own, customized headings and footings.
2998 @xref{Headings}, for a detailed discussion of this.
3002 @subsection End of Header
3003 @cindex End of header line
3005 Follow the header lines with an @w{end-of-header} line, which is a
3006 Texinfo comment that looks like this:
3009 @@c %**end of header
3012 @xref{Start of Header}.
3015 @node Document Permissions
3016 @section Document Permissions
3017 @cindex Document Permissions
3018 @cindex Copying Permissions
3020 The copyright notice and copying permissions for a document need to
3021 appear in several places in the various Texinfo output formats.
3022 Therefore, Texinfo provides a command (@code{@@copying}) to declare
3023 this text once, and another command (@code{@@insertcopying}) to
3024 insert the text at appropriate points.
3027 * copying:: Declare the document's copying permissions.
3028 * insertcopying:: Where to insert the permissions.
3033 @subsection @code{@@copying}: Declare Copying Permissions
3036 The @code{@@copying} command should be given very early in the document;
3037 the recommended location is right after the header material
3038 (@pxref{Texinfo File Header}). It conventionally consists of a sentence
3039 or two about what the program is, identification of the documentation
3040 itself, the legal copyright line, and the copying permissions. Here is
3045 This manual is for @var{program} (version @var{version}, updated
3046 @var{date}), which @dots{}
3048 Copyright @@copyright@{@} @var{years} @var{copyright-owner}.
3051 Permission is granted to @dots{}
3056 The @code{@@quotation} has no legal significance; it's there to improve
3057 readability in some contexts.
3059 @xref{GNU Sample Texts}, for the full text to be used in GNU manuals.
3060 @xref{GNU Free Documentation License}, for the license itself under
3061 which GNU and other free manuals are distributed. You need to include
3062 the license as an appendix to your document.
3064 The text of @code{@@copying} is output as a comment at the beginning of
3065 Info, HTML, and XML output files. It is @emph{not} output implicitly in
3066 plain text or @TeX{}; it's up to you to use @code{@@insertcopying} to
3067 emit the copying information. See the next section for details.
3070 The @code{@@copyright@{@}} command generates a @samp{c} inside a circle
3071 in output formats that support this (print and HTML). In the other
3072 formats (Info and plain text), it generates @samp{(C)}. The copyright
3073 notice itself has the following legally defined sequence:
3076 Copyright @copyright{} @var{years} @var{copyright-owner}.
3079 @cindex Copyright word, always in English
3080 The word `Copyright' must always be written in English, even if the
3081 document is otherwise written in another language. This is due to
3084 @cindex Years, in copyright line
3085 The list of years should include all years in which a version was
3086 completed (even if it was released in a subsequent year). Ranges are
3087 not allowed; each year must be written out individually and in full,
3088 separated by commas.
3090 @cindex Copyright holder for FSF works
3091 @cindex Holder of copyright for FSF works
3092 @cindex Owner of copyright for FSF works
3093 The copyright owner (or owners) is whoever holds legal copyright on the
3094 work. In the case of works assigned to the FSF, the owner is `Free
3095 Software Foundation, Inc.'.
3097 The copyright `line' may actually be split across multiple
3098 lines, both in the source document and in the output. This often
3099 happens for documents with a long history, having many different years
3102 @xref{Copyright Notices,,,maintain,GNU Maintenance Instructions}, for
3103 additional information.
3107 @subsection @code{@@insertcopying}: Include Permissions Text
3108 @findex insertcopying
3109 @cindex Copying text, including
3110 @cindex Permissions text, including
3111 @cindex Including permissions text
3113 The @code{@@insertcopying} command is simply written on a line by
3120 This inserts the text previously defined by @code{@@copying}. To meet
3121 legal requirements, it must be used on the copyright page in the printed
3122 manual (@pxref{Copyright}).
3124 We also strongly recommend using @code{@@insertcopying} in the Top node
3125 of your manual (@pxref{The Top Node}), although it is not required
3126 legally. Here's why:
3128 The @code{@@copying} command itself causes the permissions text to
3129 appear in an Info file @emph{before} the first node. The text is also
3130 copied into the beginning of each split Info output file, as is legally
3131 necessary. This location implies a human reading the manual using Info
3132 does @emph{not} see this text (except when using the advanced Info
3133 command @kbd{g *}). Therefore, an explicit @code{@@insertcopying}
3134 in the Top node makes it apparent to readers that the manual is free.
3136 Similarly, the @code{@@copying} text is automatically included at the
3137 beginning of each HTML output file, as an HTML comment. Again, this
3138 text is not visible (unless the reader views the HTML source). And
3139 therefore again, the @code{@@insertcopying} in the Top node is valuable
3140 because it makes the copying permissions visible and thus promotes
3143 The permissions text defined by @code{@@copying} also appears
3144 automatically at the beginning of the XML output file.
3147 @node Titlepage & Copyright Page
3148 @section Title and Copyright Pages
3150 In hard copy output, the manual's name and author are usually printed on
3151 a title page. Copyright information is usually printed on the back of
3154 The title and copyright pages appear in the printed manual, but not in
3155 the Info file. Because of this, it is possible to use several slightly
3156 obscure @TeX{} typesetting commands that cannot be used in an Info file.
3157 In addition, this part of the beginning of a Texinfo file contains the
3158 text of the copying permissions that appears in the printed manual.
3160 @cindex Title page, for plain text
3161 @cindex Copyright page, for plain text
3162 You may wish to include titlepage-like information for plain text
3163 output. Simply place any such leading material between
3164 @code{@@ifplaintext} and @code{@@end ifplaintext}; @command{makeinfo}
3165 includes this when writing plain text (@samp{--no-headers}), along with
3166 an @code{@@insertcopying}.
3169 * titlepage:: Create a title for the printed document.
3170 * titlefont center sp:: The @code{@@titlefont}, @code{@@center},
3171 and @code{@@sp} commands.
3172 * title subtitle author:: The @code{@@title}, @code{@@subtitle},
3173 and @code{@@author} commands.
3174 * Copyright:: How to write the copyright notice and
3175 include copying permissions.
3176 * end titlepage:: Turn on page headings after the title and
3178 * headings on off:: An option for turning headings on and off
3179 and double or single sided printing.
3184 @subsection @code{@@titlepage}
3188 Start the material for the title page and following copyright page
3189 with @code{@@titlepage} on a line by itself and end it with
3190 @code{@@end titlepage} on a line by itself.
3192 The @code{@@end titlepage} command starts a new page and turns on page
3193 numbering. (@xref{Headings, , Page Headings}, for details about how to
3194 generate page headings.) All the material that you want to appear on
3195 unnumbered pages should be put between the @code{@@titlepage} and
3196 @code{@@end titlepage} commands. You can force the table of contents to
3197 appear there with the @code{@@setcontentsaftertitlepage} command
3200 @findex page@r{, within @code{@@titlepage}}
3201 By using the @code{@@page} command you can force a page break within the
3202 region delineated by the @code{@@titlepage} and @code{@@end titlepage}
3203 commands and thereby create more than one unnumbered page. This is how
3204 the copyright page is produced. (The @code{@@titlepage} command might
3205 perhaps have been better named the @code{@@titleandadditionalpages}
3206 command, but that would have been rather long!)
3208 When you write a manual about a computer program, you should write the
3209 version of the program to which the manual applies on the title page.
3210 If the manual changes more frequently than the program or is independent
3211 of it, you should also include an edition number@footnote{We have found
3212 that it is helpful to refer to versions of independent manuals as
3213 `editions' and versions of programs as `versions'; otherwise, we find we
3214 are liable to confuse each other in conversation by referring to both
3215 the documentation and the software with the same words.} for the manual.
3216 This helps readers keep track of which manual is for which version of
3217 the program. (The `Top' node should also contain this information; see
3218 @ref{The Top Node}.)
3220 Texinfo provides two main methods for creating a title page. One method
3221 uses the @code{@@titlefont}, @code{@@sp}, and @code{@@center} commands
3222 to generate a title page in which the words on the page are
3225 The second method uses the @code{@@title}, @code{@@subtitle}, and
3226 @code{@@author} commands to create a title page with black rules under
3227 the title and author lines and the subtitle text set flush to the
3228 right hand side of the page. With this method, you do not specify any
3229 of the actual formatting of the title page. You specify the text
3230 you want, and Texinfo does the formatting.
3232 You may use either method, or you may combine them; see the examples in
3235 @findex shorttitlepage
3236 @cindex Bastard title page
3237 @cindex Title page, bastard
3238 For extremely simple documents, and for the bastard title page in
3239 traditional book frontmatter, Texinfo also provides a command
3240 @code{@@shorttitlepage} which takes the rest of the line as the title.
3241 The argument is typeset on a page by itself and followed by a blank
3245 @node titlefont center sp
3246 @subsection @code{@@titlefont}, @code{@@center}, and @code{@@sp}
3249 @findex sp @r{(titlepage line spacing)}
3251 You can use the @code{@@titlefont}, @code{@@sp}, and @code{@@center}
3252 commands to create a title page for a printed document. (This is the
3253 first of the two methods for creating a title page in Texinfo.)
3255 Use the @code{@@titlefont} command to select a large font suitable for
3256 the title itself. You can use @code{@@titlefont} more than once if you
3257 have an especially long title.
3259 For HTML output, each @code{@@titlefont} command produces an
3260 @code{<h1>} heading, but the HTML document @code{<title>} is not
3261 affected. For that, you must put an @code{@@settitle} command before
3262 the @code{@@titlefont} command (@pxref{settitle}).
3268 @@titlefont@{Texinfo@}
3271 Use the @code{@@center} command at the beginning of a line to center
3272 the remaining text on that line. Thus,
3275 @@center @@titlefont@{Texinfo@}
3279 centers the title, which in this example is ``Texinfo'' printed
3282 Use the @code{@@sp} command to insert vertical space. For example:
3289 This inserts two blank lines on the printed page. (@xref{sp, ,
3290 @code{@@sp}}, for more information about the @code{@@sp}
3293 A template for this method looks like this:
3299 @@center @@titlefont@{@var{name-of-manual-when-printed}@}
3301 @@center @var{subtitle-if-any}
3303 @@center @var{author}
3309 The spacing of the example fits an 8.5 by 11 inch manual.
3311 You can in fact use these commands anywhere, not just on a title page,
3312 but since they are not logical markup commands, we don't recommend
3315 @node title subtitle author
3316 @subsection @code{@@title}, @code{@@subtitle}, and @code{@@author}
3321 You can use the @code{@@title}, @code{@@subtitle}, and @code{@@author}
3322 commands to create a title page in which the vertical and horizontal
3323 spacing is done for you automatically. This contrasts with the method
3324 described in the previous section, in which the @code{@@sp} command is
3325 needed to adjust vertical spacing.
3327 Write the @code{@@title}, @code{@@subtitle}, or @code{@@author}
3328 commands at the beginning of a line followed by the title, subtitle,
3329 or author. These commands are only effective in @TeX{} output; it's
3330 an error to use them anywhere except within @code{@@titlepage}.
3332 The @code{@@title} command produces a line in which the title is set
3333 flush to the left-hand side of the page in a larger than normal font.
3334 The title is underlined with a black rule. Only a single line is
3335 allowed; the @code{@@*} command may not be used to break the title into
3336 two lines. To handle very long titles, you may find it profitable to
3337 use both @code{@@title} and @code{@@titlefont}; see the final example in
3340 The @code{@@subtitle} command sets subtitles in a normal-sized font
3341 flush to the right-hand side of the page.
3343 The @code{@@author} command sets the names of the author or authors in
3344 a middle-sized font flush to the left-hand side of the page on a line
3345 near the bottom of the title page. The names are underlined with a
3346 black rule that is thinner than the rule that underlines the title.
3347 (The black rule only occurs if the @code{@@author} command line is
3348 followed by an @code{@@page} command line.)
3350 There are two ways to use the @code{@@author} command: you can write
3351 the name or names on the remaining part of the line that starts with
3352 an @code{@@author} command:
3355 @@author by Jane Smith and John Doe
3359 or you can write the names one above each other by using two (or more)
3360 @code{@@author} commands:
3370 (Only the bottom name is underlined with a black rule.)
3373 A template for this method looks like this:
3378 @@title @var{name-of-manual-when-printed}
3379 @@subtitle @var{subtitle-if-any}
3380 @@subtitle @var{second-subtitle}
3381 @@author @var{author}
3388 You may also combine the @code{@@titlefont} method described in the
3389 previous section and @code{@@title} method described in this one. This
3390 may be useful if you have a very long title. Here is a real-life example:
3395 @@titlefont@{GNU Software@}
3397 @@title for MS-Windows and MS-DOS
3398 @@subtitle Edition @@value@{e@} for Release @@value@{cde@}
3399 @@author by Daniel Hagerty, Melissa Weisshaus
3400 @@author and Eli Zaretskii
3405 (The use of @code{@@value} here is explained in @ref{value Example}.
3409 @subsection Copyright Page
3410 @cindex Copyright page
3411 @cindex Printed permissions
3412 @cindex Permissions, printed
3414 By international treaty, the copyright notice for a book must be either
3415 on the title page or on the back of the title page. When the copyright
3416 notice is on the back of the title page, that page is customarily not
3417 numbered. Therefore, in Texinfo, the information on the copyright page
3418 should be within @code{@@titlepage} and @code{@@end titlepage}
3421 @findex vskip @r{@TeX{} vertical skip}
3422 @findex filll @r{@TeX{} dimension}
3423 Use the @code{@@page} command to cause a page break. To push the
3424 copyright notice and the other text on the copyright page towards the
3425 bottom of the page, use the following incantantion after @code{@@page}:
3428 @@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
3432 This is a @TeX{} command that is not supported by the Info formatting
3433 commands. The @code{@@vskip} command inserts whitespace. The @samp{0pt
3434 plus 1filll} means to put in zero points of mandatory whitespace, and as
3435 much optional whitespace as needed to push the following text to the
3436 bottom of the page. Note the use of three @samp{l}s in the word
3437 @samp{filll}; this is correct.
3439 To insert the copyright text itself, write @code{@@insertcopying}
3440 next (@pxref{Document Permissions}):
3446 Follow the copying text by the publisher, ISBN numbers, cover art
3447 credits, and other such information.
3449 Here is an example putting all this together:
3455 @@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
3458 Published by @dots{}
3460 Cover art by @dots{}
3466 @subsection Heading Generation
3467 @findex end titlepage
3468 @cindex Headings, page, begin to appear
3469 @cindex Titlepage end starts headings
3470 @cindex End titlepage starts headings
3472 Like all @code{@@end} commands (@pxref{Quotations and Examples}), the @code{@@end titlepage} command
3473 must be written at the beginning of a line by itself, with only one
3474 space between the @code{@@end} and the @code{titlepage}. It not only
3475 marks the end of the title and copyright pages, but also causes @TeX{}
3476 to start generating page headings and page numbers.
3478 To repeat what is said elsewhere, Texinfo has two standard page heading
3479 formats, one for documents which are printed on one side of each sheet of paper
3480 (single-sided printing), and the other for documents which are printed on both
3481 sides of each sheet (double-sided printing).
3482 You can specify these formats in different ways:
3486 The conventional way is to write an @code{@@setchapternewpage} command
3487 before the title page commands, and then have the @code{@@end
3488 titlepage} command start generating page headings in the manner desired.
3489 (@xref{setchapternewpage}.)
3492 Alternatively, you can use the @code{@@headings} command to prevent page
3493 headings from being generated or to start them for either single or
3494 double-sided printing. (Write an @code{@@headings} command immediately
3495 after the @code{@@end titlepage} command. @xref{headings on off, , The
3496 @code{@@headings} Command}, for more information.)@refill
3499 Or, you may specify your own page heading and footing format.
3500 @xref{Headings, , Page Headings}, for detailed
3501 information about page headings and footings.
3504 Most documents are formatted with the standard single-sided or
3505 double-sided format, using @code{@@setchapternewpage odd} for
3506 double-sided printing and no @code{@@setchapternewpage} command for
3507 single-sided printing.
3510 @node headings on off
3511 @subsection The @code{@@headings} Command
3514 The @code{@@headings} command is rarely used. It specifies what kind of
3515 page headings and footings to print on each page. Usually, this is
3516 controlled by the @code{@@setchapternewpage} command. You need the
3517 @code{@@headings} command only if the @code{@@setchapternewpage} command
3518 does not do what you want, or if you want to turn off pre-defined page
3519 headings prior to defining your own. Write an @code{@@headings} command
3520 immediately after the @code{@@end titlepage} command.@refill
3522 You can use @code{@@headings} as follows:@refill
3525 @item @@headings off
3526 Turn off printing of page headings.@refill
3528 @item @@headings single
3529 Turn on page headings appropriate for single-sided printing.
3532 @item @@headings double
3533 @itemx @@headings on
3534 Turn on page headings appropriate for double-sided printing. The two
3535 commands, @code{@@headings on} and @code{@@headings double}, are
3538 @item @@headings singleafter
3539 @itemx @@headings doubleafter
3540 Turn on @code{single} or @code{double} headings, respectively, after the
3541 current page is output.
3544 Turn on page headings: @code{single} if @samp{@@setchapternewpage
3545 on}, @code{double} otherwise.
3548 For example, suppose you write @code{@@setchapternewpage off} before the
3549 @code{@@titlepage} command to tell @TeX{} to start a new chapter on the
3550 same page as the end of the last chapter. This command also causes
3551 @TeX{} to typeset page headers for single-sided printing. To cause
3552 @TeX{} to typeset for double sided printing, write @code{@@headings
3553 double} after the @code{@@end titlepage} command.
3555 You can stop @TeX{} from generating any page headings at all by
3556 writing @code{@@headings off} on a line of its own immediately after the
3557 line containing the @code{@@end titlepage} command, like this:@refill
3565 The @code{@@headings off} command overrides the @code{@@end titlepage}
3566 command, which would otherwise cause @TeX{} to print page
3569 You can also specify your own style of page heading and footing.
3570 @xref{Headings, , Page Headings}, for more information.@refill
3574 @section Generating a Table of Contents
3575 @cindex Table of contents
3576 @cindex Contents, Table of
3577 @cindex Short table of contents
3579 @findex summarycontents
3580 @findex shortcontents
3582 The @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@section}, and other structuring commands
3583 (@pxref{Structuring}) supply the information to make up a
3584 table of contents, but they do not cause an actual table to appear in
3585 the manual. To do this, you must use the @code{@@contents} and/or
3586 @code{@@summarycontents} command(s).
3590 Generates a table of contents in a printed manual, including all
3591 chapters, sections, subsections, etc., as well as appendices and
3592 unnumbered chapters. Headings generated by @code{@@majorheading},
3593 @code{@@chapheading}, and the other @code{@@@dots{}heading} commands
3594 do not appear in the table of contents (@pxref{Structuring Command
3597 @item @@shortcontents
3598 @itemx @@summarycontents
3599 (@code{@@summarycontents} is a synonym for @code{@@shortcontents}.)
3601 Generates a short or summary table of contents that lists only the
3602 chapters, appendices, and unnumbered chapters. Sections, subsections
3603 and subsubsections are omitted. Only a long manual needs a short
3604 table of contents in addition to the full table of contents.
3608 Both contents commands should be written on a line by themselves, and
3609 are best placed near the beginning of the file, after the @code{@@end
3610 titlepage} (@pxref{titlepage}). The contents commands automatically
3611 generate a chapter-like heading at the top of the first table of
3612 contents page, so don't include any sectioning command such as
3613 @code{@@unnumbered} before them.
3615 Since an Info file uses menus instead of tables of contents, the Info
3616 formatting commands ignore the contents commands. But the contents are
3617 included in plain text output (generated by @code{makeinfo
3618 --no-headers}), unless @code{makeinfo} is writing its output to standard
3621 When @code{makeinfo} writes a short table of contents while producing
3622 html output, the links in the short table of contents point to
3623 corresponding entries in the full table of contents rather than the text
3624 of the document. The links in the full table of contents point to the
3625 main text of the document.
3627 In the past, the contents commands were sometimes placed at the end of
3628 the file, after any indices and just before the @code{@@bye}, but we
3629 no longer recommend this.
3631 @findex setcontentsaftertitlepage
3632 @findex setshortcontentsaftertitlepage
3633 @cindex Contents, after title page
3634 @cindex Table of contents, after title page
3635 However, since many existing Texinfo documents still do have the
3636 @code{@@contents} at the end of the manual, if you are a user printing
3637 a manual, you may wish to force the contents to be printed after the
3638 title page. You can do this by specifying
3639 @code{@@setcontentsaftertitlepage} and/or
3640 @code{@@setshortcontentsaftertitlepage}. The first prints only the
3641 main contents after the @code{@@end titlepage}; the second prints both
3642 the short contents and the main contents. In either case, any
3643 subsequent @code{@@contents} or @code{@@shortcontents} is ignored
3644 (unless, erroneously, no @code{@@end titlepage} is ever encountered).
3646 You need to include the @code{@@set@dots{}contentsaftertitlepage}
3647 commands early in the document (just after @code{@@setfilename}, for
3648 example). We recommend using @command{texi2dvi} (@pxref{Format with
3649 texi2dvi}) to specify this without altering the source file at all. For
3652 texi2dvi --texinfo=@@setcontentsaftertitlepage foo.texi
3657 @section The `Top' Node and Master Menu
3661 The `Top' node is the node in which a reader enters an Info manual. As
3662 such, it should begin with the @code{@@insertcopying} command
3663 (@pxref{Document Permissions}) to provide a brief description of the
3664 manual (including the version number) and copying permissions, and end
3665 with a master menu for the whole manual. Of course you should include
3666 any other general information you feel a reader would find helpful.
3669 It is also conventional to write an @code{@@top} sectioning command line
3670 containing the title of the document immediately after the @code{@@node
3671 Top} line (@pxref{makeinfo top command, , The @code{@@top} Sectioning
3674 The contents of the `Top' node should appear only in the online output;
3675 none of it should appear in printed output, so enclose it between
3676 @code{@@ifnottex} and @code{@@end ifnottex} commands. (@TeX{} does not
3677 print either an @code{@@node} line or a menu; they appear only in Info;
3678 strictly speaking, you are not required to enclose these parts between
3679 @code{@@ifnottex} and @code{@@end ifnottext}, but it is simplest to do
3680 so. @xref{Conditionals, , Conditionally Visible Text}.)
3683 * Top Node Example::
3684 * Master Menu Parts::
3688 @node Top Node Example
3689 @subsection Top Node Example
3691 @cindex Top node example
3693 Here is an example of a Top node.
3704 Additional general information.
3717 @node Master Menu Parts
3718 @subsection Parts of a Master Menu
3720 @cindex Menu, master
3721 @cindex Parts of a master menu
3723 A @dfn{master menu} is a detailed main menu listing all the nodes in a
3726 A master menu is enclosed in @code{@@menu} and @code{@@end menu}
3727 commands and does not appear in the printed document.
3729 Generally, a master menu is divided into parts.
3733 The first part contains the major nodes in the Texinfo file: the nodes
3734 for the chapters, chapter-like sections, and the appendices.
3737 The second part contains nodes for the indices.
3740 The third and subsequent parts contain a listing of the other, lower
3741 level nodes, often ordered by chapter. This way, rather than go
3742 through an intermediary menu, an inquirer can go directly to a
3743 particular node when searching for specific information. These menu
3744 items are not required; add them if you think they are a
3745 convenience. If you do use them, put @code{@@detailmenu} before the
3746 first one, and @code{@@end detailmenu} after the last; otherwise,
3747 @code{makeinfo} will get confused.
3750 Each section in the menu can be introduced by a descriptive line. So
3751 long as the line does not begin with an asterisk, it will not be
3752 treated as a menu entry. (@xref{Writing a Menu}, for more
3755 For example, the master menu for this manual looks like the following
3756 (but has many more entries):
3761 * Copying Conditions:: Your rights.
3762 * Overview:: Texinfo in brief.
3766 * Command and Variable Index::
3772 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
3776 * Reporting Bugs:: @dots{}
3781 Beginning a Texinfo File
3783 * Sample Beginning:: @dots{}
3791 @node Global Document Commands
3792 @section Global Document Commands
3793 @cindex Global Document Commands
3795 Besides the basic commands mentioned in the previous sections, here are
3796 additional commands which affect the document as a whole. They are
3797 generally all given before the Top node, if they are given at all.
3800 * documentdescription:: Document summary for the HTML output.
3801 * setchapternewpage:: Start chapters on right-hand pages.
3802 * paragraphindent:: Specify paragraph indentation.
3803 * firstparagraphindent:: Suppress indentation of the first paragraph.
3804 * exampleindent:: Specify environment indentation.
3808 @node documentdescription
3809 @subsection @code{@@documentdescription}: Summary Text
3810 @cindex Document description
3811 @cindex Description of document
3812 @cindex Summary of document
3813 @cindex Abstract of document
3814 @cindex <meta> HTML tag, and document description
3815 @findex documentdescription
3817 When producing HTML output for a document, @command{makeinfo} writes a
3818 @samp{<meta>} element in the @samp{<head>} to give some idea of the
3819 content of the document. By default, this @dfn{description} is the title
3820 of the document, taken from the @code{@@settitle} command
3821 (@pxref{settitle}). To change this, use the @code{@@documentdescription}
3825 @@documentdescription
3827 @@end documentdescription
3831 This will produce the following output in the @samp{<head>} of the HTML:
3834 <meta name=description content="descriptive text.">
3837 @code{@@documentdescription} must be specified before the first node of
3841 @node setchapternewpage
3842 @subsection @code{@@setchapternewpage}:
3843 @cindex Starting chapters
3844 @cindex Pages, starting odd
3845 @findex setchapternewpage
3847 In an officially bound book, text is usually printed on both sides of
3848 the paper, chapters start on right-hand pages, and right-hand pages have
3849 odd numbers. But in short reports, text often is printed only on one
3850 side of the paper. Also in short reports, chapters sometimes do not
3851 start on new pages, but are printed on the same page as the end of the
3852 preceding chapter, after a small amount of vertical whitespace.
3854 You can use the @code{@@setchapternewpage} command with various
3855 arguments to specify how @TeX{} should start chapters and whether it
3856 should format headers for printing on one or both sides of the paper
3857 (single-sided or double-sided printing).
3859 Write the @code{@@setchapternewpage} command at the beginning of a
3860 line followed by its argument.
3862 For example, you would write the following to cause each chapter to
3863 start on a fresh odd-numbered page:
3866 @@setchapternewpage odd
3869 You can specify one of three alternatives with the
3870 @code{@@setchapternewpage} command:
3874 @item @code{@@setchapternewpage off}
3875 Cause @TeX{} to typeset a new chapter on the same page as the last
3876 chapter, after skipping some vertical whitespace. Also, cause @TeX{} to
3877 format page headers for single-sided printing.
3879 @item @code{@@setchapternewpage on}
3880 Cause @TeX{} to start new chapters on new pages and to format page
3881 headers for single-sided printing. This is the form most often used for
3882 short reports or personal printing. This is the default.
3884 @item @code{@@setchapternewpage odd}
3885 Cause @TeX{} to start new chapters on new, odd-numbered pages
3886 (right-handed pages) and to typeset for double-sided printing. This is
3887 the form most often used for books and manuals.
3890 Texinfo does not have an @code{@@setchapternewpage even} command,
3891 because there is no printing tradition of starting chapters or books on
3892 an even-numbered page.
3894 If you don't like the default headers that @code{@@setchapternewpage}
3895 sets, you can explicit control them with the @code{@@headings} command.
3896 @xref{headings on off, , The @code{@@headings} Command}.
3898 At the beginning of a manual or book, pages are not numbered---for
3899 example, the title and copyright pages of a book are not numbered. By
3900 convention, table of contents and frontmatter pages are numbered with
3901 roman numerals and not in sequence with the rest of the document.
3903 Since an Info file does not have pages, the @code{@@setchapternewpage}
3904 command has no effect on it.
3906 We recommend not including any @code{@@setchapternewpage} command in
3907 your manual sources at all, since the desired output is not intrinsic to
3908 the document. For a particular hard copy run, if you don't want the
3909 default option (no blank pages, same headers on all pages) use the
3910 @option{--texinfo} option to @command{texi2dvi} to specify the output
3914 @node paragraphindent
3915 @subsection @code{@@paragraphindent}: Paragraph Indenting
3916 @cindex Indenting paragraphs, control of
3917 @cindex Paragraph indentation control
3918 @findex paragraphindent
3920 The Texinfo processors may insert whitespace at the beginning of the
3921 first line of each paragraph, thereby indenting that paragraph. You can
3922 use the @code{@@paragraphindent} command to specify this indentation.
3923 Write an @code{@@paragraphindent} command at the beginning of a line
3924 followed by either @samp{asis} or a number:
3927 @@paragraphindent @var{indent}
3930 The indentation is according to the value of @var{indent}:
3934 Do not change the existing indentation (not implemented in @TeX{}).
3938 Omit all indentation.
3941 Indent by @var{n} space characters in Info output, by @var{n} ems in
3946 The default value of @var{indent} is 3. @code{@@paragraphindent} is
3947 ignored for HTML output.
3949 It is best to write the @code{@@paragraphindent} command before the
3950 end-of-header line at the beginning of a Texinfo file, so the region
3951 formatting commands indent paragraphs as specified. @xref{Start of
3954 A peculiarity of the @code{texinfo-format-buffer} and
3955 @code{texinfo-format-region} commands is that they do not indent (nor
3956 fill) paragraphs that contain @code{@@w} or @code{@@*} commands.
3959 @node firstparagraphindent
3960 @subsection @code{@@firstparagraphindent}: Indenting After Headings
3961 @cindex First paragraph, suppressing indentation of
3962 @cindex Suppressing first paragraph indentation
3963 @cindex Preventing first paragraph indentation
3964 @cindex Indenting, suppressing of first paragraph
3965 @cindex Headings, indentation after
3966 @findex firstparagraphindent
3968 As you can see in the present manual, the first paragraph in any
3969 section is not indented by default. Typographically, indentation is a
3970 paragraph separator, which means that it is unnecessary when a new
3971 section begins. This indentation is controlled with the
3972 @code{@@firstparagraphindent} command:
3975 @@firstparagraphindent @var{word}
3978 The first paragraph after a heading is indented according to the value
3983 Prevents the first paragraph from being indented (default).
3984 This option is ignored by @command{makeinfo} if
3985 @code{@@paragraphindent asis} is in effect.
3988 Include normal paragraph indentation. This respects the paragraph
3989 indentation set by a @code{@@paragraphindent} command
3990 (@pxref{paragraphindent}).
3993 For HTML and XML output, the @code{@@firstparagraphindent} setting is
3996 It is best to write the @code{@@paragraphindent} command before the
3997 end-of-header line at the beginning of a Texinfo file, so the region
3998 formatting commands indent paragraphs as specified. @xref{Start of
4003 @subsection @code{@@exampleindent}: Environment Indenting
4004 @cindex Indenting environments
4005 @cindex Environment indentation
4006 @cindex Example indentation
4007 @findex exampleindent
4009 The Texinfo processors indent each line of @code{@@example} and similar
4010 environments. You can use the @code{@@exampleindent} command to specify
4011 this indentation. Write an @code{@@exampleindent} command at the
4012 beginning of a line followed by either @samp{asis} or a number:
4015 @@exampleindent @var{indent}
4018 @code{@@exampleindent} is ignored for HTML output. Otherwise, the
4019 indentation is according to the value of @var{indent}:
4023 Do not change the existing indentation (not implemented in @TeX{}).
4026 Omit all indentation.
4029 Indent environments by @var{n} space characters in Info output, by
4030 @var{n} ems in @TeX{}.
4034 The default value of @var{indent} is 5 spaces in Info, and 0.4@dmn{in}
4035 in @TeX{}, which is somewhat less. (The reduction is to help @TeX{}
4036 fit more characters onto physical lines.)
4038 It is best to write the @code{@@exampleindent} command before the
4039 end-of-header line at the beginning of a Texinfo file, so the region
4040 formatting commands indent paragraphs as specified. @xref{Start of
4044 @node Software Copying Permissions
4045 @section Software Copying Permissions
4046 @cindex Software copying permissions
4047 @cindex Copying software
4048 @cindex Distribution
4049 @cindex License agreement
4051 If the Texinfo file has a section containing the ``General Public
4052 License'' and the distribution information and a warranty disclaimer for
4053 the software that is documented, we recommend placing this right after
4054 the `Top' node. The General Public License is very important to Project
4055 GNU software. It ensures that you and others will continue to have a
4056 right to use and share the software.
4058 The copying and distribution information and the disclaimer are followed
4059 by an introduction or else by the first chapter of the manual.
4061 @cindex Introduction, as part of file
4062 Although an introduction is not a required part of a Texinfo file, it
4063 is very helpful. Ideally, it should state clearly and concisely what
4064 the file is about and who would be interested in reading it. In
4065 general, an introduction would follow the licensing and distribution
4066 information, although sometimes people put it earlier in the document.
4070 @chapter Ending a Texinfo File
4071 @cindex Ending a Texinfo file
4072 @cindex Texinfo file ending
4076 The end of a Texinfo file should include commands to create indices,
4077 and the @code{@@bye} command to mark the last line to be processed.
4091 * Printing Indices & Menus:: How to print an index in hardcopy and
4092 generate index menus in Info.
4093 * File End:: How to mark the end of a file.
4097 @node Printing Indices & Menus
4098 @section Printing Indices and Menus
4099 @cindex Printing an index
4100 @cindex Indices, printing and menus
4101 @cindex Generating menus with indices
4102 @cindex Menus generated with indices
4104 To print an index means to include it as part of a manual or Info file.
4105 This does not happen automatically just because you use @code{@@cindex}
4106 or other index-entry generating commands in the Texinfo file; those just
4107 cause the raw data for the index to be accumulated. To generate an
4108 index, you must include the @code{@@printindex} command at the place in
4109 the document where you want the index to appear. Also, as part of the
4110 process of creating a printed manual, you must run a program called
4111 @code{texindex} (@pxref{Hardcopy}) to sort the raw data to produce a
4112 sorted index file. The sorted index file is what is actually used to
4115 Texinfo offers six separate types of predefined index, which suffice
4116 in most cases. @xref{Indices}, for information on this, as well
4117 defining your own new indices, combining indices, and, most
4118 importantly advice on writing the actual index entries. This section
4119 focuses on printing indices, which is done with the
4120 @code{@@printindex} command.
4123 @code{@@printindex} takes one argument, a two-letter index
4124 abbreviation. It reads the corresponding sorted index file (for
4125 printed output), and formats it appropriately into an index.
4127 The @code{@@printindex} command does not generate a chapter heading
4128 for the index, since different manuals have different needs.
4129 Consequently, you should precede the @code{@@printindex} command with
4130 a suitable section or chapter command (usually @code{@@appendix} or
4131 @code{@@unnumbered}) to supply the chapter heading and put the index
4132 into the table of contents. Precede the chapter heading with an
4133 @code{@@node} line as usual.
4139 @@node Variable Index
4140 @@unnumbered Variable Index
4146 @@node Concept Index
4147 @@unnumbered Concept Index
4153 If you have more than one index, we recommend placing the concept index last.
4157 In printed output, @code{@@printindex} produces a traditional
4158 two-column index, with dot leaders between the index terms and page
4162 In Info output, @code{@@printindex} produces a special menu containing
4163 the line number of the entry, relative to the start of the node. Info
4164 readers can use this to go to the exact line of an entry, not just the
4165 containing node. (Older Info readers will just go to the node.)
4169 * First index entry: Top. (line 7)
4172 @noindent The actual number of spaces is variable, to right-justify
4173 the line number; it's been reduced here to make the line fit in the
4177 In plain text output, @code{@@printindex} produces the same menu, but
4178 the line numbers are relative to the start of the file, since that's
4179 more convenient for that format.
4182 In HTML and Docbook output, @code{@@printindex} produces links
4183 to the index entries.
4186 In XML output, it simply records the index to be printed.
4189 It's not possible to generate an index when writing to standard
4190 output; @command{makeinfo} generates a warning in this case.
4194 @section @code{@@bye} File Ending
4197 An @code{@@bye} command terminates Texinfo processing. None of the
4198 formatters read anything following @code{@@bye}. The @code{@@bye}
4199 command should be on a line by itself.
4201 If you wish, you may follow the @code{@@bye} line with notes. These
4202 notes will not be formatted and will not appear in either Info or a
4203 printed manual; it is as if text after @code{@@bye} were within
4204 @code{@@ignore} @dots{} @code{@@end ignore}. Also, you may follow the
4205 @code{@@bye} line with a local variables list for Emacs.
4206 @xref{Compile-Command, , Using Local Variables and the Compile Command},
4207 for more information.
4211 @chapter Chapter Structuring
4212 @cindex Chapter structuring
4213 @cindex Structuring of chapters
4215 The @dfn{chapter structuring} commands divide a document into a hierarchy of
4216 chapters, sections, subsections, and subsubsections. These commands
4217 generate large headings; they also provide information for the table
4218 of contents of a printed manual (@pxref{Contents, , Generating a Table
4219 of Contents}).@refill
4221 The chapter structuring commands do not create an Info node structure,
4222 so normally you should put an @code{@@node} command immediately before
4223 each chapter structuring command (@pxref{Nodes}). The only time you
4224 are likely to use the chapter structuring commands without using the
4225 node structuring commands is if you are writing a document that
4226 contains no cross references and will never be transformed into Info
4229 It is unlikely that you will ever write a Texinfo file that is
4230 intended only as an Info file and not as a printable document. If you
4231 do, you might still use chapter structuring commands to create a
4232 heading at the top of each node---but you don't need to.@refill
4235 * Tree Structuring:: A manual is like an upside down tree @dots{}
4236 * Structuring Command Types:: How to divide a manual into parts.
4237 * makeinfo top:: The @code{@@top} command, part of the `Top' node.
4239 * unnumbered & appendix::
4240 * majorheading & chapheading::
4242 * unnumberedsec appendixsec heading::
4244 * unnumberedsubsec appendixsubsec subheading::
4245 * subsubsection:: Commands for the lowest level sections.
4246 * Raise/lower sections:: How to change commands' hierarchical level.
4250 @node Tree Structuring
4251 @section Tree Structure of Sections
4252 @cindex Tree structuring
4254 A Texinfo file is usually structured like a book with chapters,
4255 sections, subsections, and the like. This structure can be visualized
4256 as a tree (or rather as an upside-down tree) with the root at the top
4257 and the levels corresponding to chapters, sections, subsection, and
4258 subsubsections.@refill
4260 Here is a diagram that shows a Texinfo file with three chapters,
4261 each of which has two sections.@refill
4267 -------------------------------------
4269 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3
4271 -------- -------- --------
4273 Section Section Section Section Section Section
4274 1.1 1.2 2.1 2.2 3.1 3.2
4279 In a Texinfo file that has this structure, the beginning of Chapter 2
4280 looks like this:@refill
4284 @@node Chapter 2, Chapter 3, Chapter 1, top
4289 The chapter structuring commands are described in the sections that
4290 follow; the @code{@@node} and @code{@@menu} commands are described in
4291 following chapters. (@xref{Nodes}, and see @ref{Menus}.)@refill
4294 @node Structuring Command Types
4295 @section Structuring Command Types
4297 The chapter structuring commands fall into four groups or series, each
4298 of which contains structuring commands corresponding to the
4299 hierarchical levels of chapters, sections, subsections, and
4300 subsubsections.@refill
4302 The four groups are the @code{@@chapter} series, the
4303 @code{@@unnumbered} series, the @code{@@appendix} series, and the
4304 @code{@@heading} series.@refill
4306 Each command produces titles that have a different appearance on the
4307 printed page or Info file; only some of the commands produce
4308 titles that are listed in the table of contents of a printed book or
4313 The @code{@@chapter} and @code{@@appendix} series of commands produce
4314 numbered or lettered entries both in the body of a printed work and in
4315 its table of contents.@refill
4318 The @code{@@unnumbered} series of commands produce unnumbered entries
4319 both in the body of a printed work and in its table of contents. The
4320 @code{@@top} command, which has a special use, is a member of this
4321 series (@pxref{makeinfo top, , @code{@@top}}). An @code{@@unnumbered}
4322 section should be associated with a node and be a normal part of the
4326 The @code{@@heading} series of commands produce simple unnumbered
4327 headings that do not appear in a table of contents, are not associated
4328 with nodes, and cannot be cross-referenced. The heading commands
4329 never start a new page.
4332 The @code{@@majorheading} command is similar to @code{@@chapheading},
4333 except that it generates a larger vertical whitespace before the
4337 When an @code{@@setchapternewpage} command says to do so, the
4338 @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@unnumbered}, and @code{@@appendix} commands
4339 start new pages in the printed manual; the @code{@@heading} commands
4343 Here are the four groups of chapter structuring commands:
4346 {\globaldefs = 1 \smallfonts}
4349 @multitable @columnfractions .19 .30 .29 .22
4350 @item @tab @tab @tab No new page
4351 @item @i{Numbered} @tab @i{Unnumbered} @tab @i{Lettered/numbered} @tab @i{Unnumbered}
4352 @item In contents @tab In contents @tab In contents @tab Not in contents
4353 @item @tab @code{@@top} @tab @tab @code{@@majorheading}
4354 @item @code{@@chapter} @tab @code{@@unnumbered} @tab @code{@@appendix} @tab @code{@@chapheading}
4355 @item @code{@@section} @tab @code{@@unnumberedsec} @tab @code{@@appendixsec} @tab @code{@@heading}
4356 @item @code{@@subsection} @tab @code{@@unnumberedsubsec} @tab @code{@@appendixsubsec} @tab @code{@@subheading}
4357 @item @code{@@subsubsection} @tab @code{@@unnumberedsubsubsec} @tab @code{@@appendixsubsubsec} @tab @code{@@subsubheading}
4360 {\globaldefs = 1 \textfonts}
4365 @section @code{@@top}
4367 The @code{@@top} command is a special sectioning command that you use
4368 only after an @samp{@@node Top} line at the beginning of a Texinfo file.
4369 The @code{@@top} command tells the @code{makeinfo} formatter which node
4370 is the `Top' node, so it can use it as the root of the node tree if your
4371 manual uses implicit node pointers. It has the same typesetting effect as
4372 @code{@@unnumbered} (@pxref{unnumbered & appendix, , @code{@@unnumbered}
4373 and @code{@@appendix}}). For detailed information, see @ref{makeinfo
4374 top command, , The @code{@@top} Command}.
4376 The @code{@@top} node and its menu (if any) is conventionally wrapped in
4377 an @code{@@ifnottex} conditional so that it will appear only in Info and
4378 HTML output, not @TeX{}.
4382 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4383 @section @code{@@chapter}
4386 @code{@@chapter} identifies a chapter in the document. Write the
4387 command at the beginning of a line and follow it on the same line by
4388 the title of the chapter.@refill
4390 For example, this chapter in this manual is entitled ``Chapter
4391 Structuring''; the @code{@@chapter} line looks like this:@refill
4394 @@chapter Chapter Structuring
4397 In @TeX{}, the @code{@@chapter} command creates a chapter in the
4398 document, specifying the chapter title. The chapter is numbered
4399 automatically.@refill
4401 In Info, the @code{@@chapter} command causes the title to appear on a
4402 line by itself, with a line of asterisks inserted underneath. Thus,
4403 in Info, the above example produces the following output:@refill
4411 Texinfo also provides a command @code{@@centerchap}, which is analogous
4412 to @code{@@unnumbered}, but centers its argument in the printed output.
4413 This kind of stylistic choice is not usually offered by Texinfo.
4414 @c but the Hacker's Dictionary wanted it ...
4417 @node unnumbered & appendix
4418 @section @code{@@unnumbered} and @code{@@appendix}
4422 Use the @code{@@unnumbered} command to create a chapter that appears
4423 in a printed manual without chapter numbers of any kind. Use the
4424 @code{@@appendix} command to create an appendix in a printed manual
4425 that is labelled by letter instead of by number.@refill
4427 For Info file output, the @code{@@unnumbered} and @code{@@appendix}
4428 commands are equivalent to @code{@@chapter}: the title is printed on a
4429 line by itself with a line of asterisks underneath. (@xref{chapter, ,
4430 @code{@@chapter}}.)@refill
4432 To create an appendix or an unnumbered chapter, write an
4433 @code{@@appendix} or @code{@@unnumbered} command at the beginning of a
4434 line and follow it on the same line by the title, as you would if you
4435 were creating a chapter.@refill
4438 @node majorheading & chapheading
4439 @section @code{@@majorheading}, @code{@@chapheading}
4440 @findex majorheading
4443 The @code{@@majorheading} and @code{@@chapheading} commands put
4444 chapter-like headings in the body of a document.@refill
4446 However, neither command causes @TeX{} to produce a numbered heading
4447 or an entry in the table of contents; and neither command causes
4448 @TeX{} to start a new page in a printed manual.@refill
4450 In @TeX{}, an @code{@@majorheading} command generates a larger vertical
4451 whitespace before the heading than an @code{@@chapheading} command but
4452 is otherwise the same.
4455 the @code{@@majorheading} and
4456 @code{@@chapheading} commands are equivalent to
4457 @code{@@chapter}: the title is printed on a line by itself with a line
4458 of asterisks underneath. (@xref{chapter, , @code{@@chapter}}.)@refill
4462 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4463 @section @code{@@section}
4466 In a printed manual, an @code{@@section} command identifies a
4467 numbered section within a chapter. The section title appears in the
4468 table of contents. In Info, an @code{@@section} command provides a
4469 title for a segment of text, underlined with @samp{=}.@refill
4471 This section is headed with an @code{@@section} command and looks like
4472 this in the Texinfo file:@refill
4475 @@section @@code@{@@@@section@}
4478 To create a section, write the @code{@@section} command at the
4479 beginning of a line and follow it on the same line by the section
4485 @@section This is a section
4502 @node unnumberedsec appendixsec heading
4503 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4504 @section @code{@@unnumberedsec}, @code{@@appendixsec}, @code{@@heading}
4505 @findex unnumberedsec
4509 The @code{@@unnumberedsec}, @code{@@appendixsec}, and @code{@@heading}
4510 commands are, respectively, the unnumbered, appendix-like, and
4511 heading-like equivalents of the @code{@@section} command.
4512 (@xref{section, , @code{@@section}}.)@refill
4515 @item @@unnumberedsec
4516 The @code{@@unnumberedsec} command may be used within an
4517 unnumbered chapter or within a regular chapter or appendix to
4518 provide an unnumbered section.@refill
4521 @itemx @@appendixsection
4522 @code{@@appendixsection} is a longer spelling of the
4523 @code{@@appendixsec} command; the two are synonymous.@refill
4524 @findex appendixsection
4526 Conventionally, the @code{@@appendixsec} or @code{@@appendixsection}
4527 command is used only within appendices.@refill
4530 You may use the @code{@@heading} command anywhere you wish for a
4531 section-style heading that will not appear in the table of contents.@refill
4536 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4537 @section The @code{@@subsection} Command
4540 Subsections are to sections as sections are to chapters.
4541 (@xref{section, , @code{@@section}}.) In Info, subsection titles are
4542 underlined with @samp{-}. For example,@refill
4545 @@subsection This is a subsection
4553 This is a subsection
4554 --------------------
4558 In a printed manual, subsections are listed in the table of contents
4559 and are numbered three levels deep.@refill
4561 @node unnumberedsubsec appendixsubsec subheading
4562 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
4563 @section The @code{@@subsection}-like Commands
4564 @cindex Subsection-like commands
4565 @findex unnumberedsubsec
4566 @findex appendixsubsec
4569 The @code{@@unnumberedsubsec}, @code{@@appendixsubsec}, and
4570 @code{@@subheading} commands are, respectively, the unnumbered,
4571 appendix-like, and heading-like equivalents of the @code{@@subsection}
4572 command. (@xref{subsection, , @code{@@subsection}}.)@refill
4574 In Info, the @code{@@subsection}-like commands generate a title
4575 underlined with hyphens. In a printed manual, an @code{@@subheading}
4576 command produces a heading like that of a subsection except that it is
4577 not numbered and does not appear in the table of contents. Similarly,
4578 an @code{@@unnumberedsubsec} command produces an unnumbered heading like
4579 that of a subsection and an @code{@@appendixsubsec} command produces a
4580 subsection-like heading labelled with a letter and numbers; both of
4581 these commands produce headings that appear in the table of
4585 @section The `subsub' Commands
4586 @cindex Subsub commands
4587 @findex subsubsection
4588 @findex unnumberedsubsubsec
4589 @findex appendixsubsubsec
4590 @findex subsubheading
4592 The fourth and lowest level sectioning commands in Texinfo are the
4593 `subsub' commands. They are:@refill
4596 @item @@subsubsection
4597 Subsubsections are to subsections as subsections are to sections.
4598 (@xref{subsection, , @code{@@subsection}}.) In a printed manual,
4599 subsubsection titles appear in the table of contents and are numbered
4600 four levels deep.@refill
4602 @item @@unnumberedsubsubsec
4603 Unnumbered subsubsection titles appear in the table of contents of a
4604 printed manual, but lack numbers. Otherwise, unnumbered
4605 subsubsections are the same as subsubsections. In Info, unnumbered
4606 subsubsections look exactly like ordinary subsubsections.@refill
4608 @item @@appendixsubsubsec
4609 Conventionally, appendix commands are used only for appendices and are
4610 lettered and numbered appropriately in a printed manual. They also
4611 appear in the table of contents. In Info, appendix subsubsections look
4612 exactly like ordinary subsubsections.@refill
4614 @item @@subsubheading
4615 The @code{@@subsubheading} command may be used anywhere that you need
4616 a small heading that will not appear in the table of contents. In
4617 Info, subsubheadings look exactly like ordinary subsubsection
4621 In Info, `subsub' titles are underlined with periods.
4625 @@subsubsection This is a subsubsection
4633 This is a subsubsection
4634 .......................
4639 @node Raise/lower sections
4640 @section @code{@@raisesections} and @code{@@lowersections}
4641 @findex raisesections
4642 @findex lowersections
4643 @cindex Raising and lowering sections
4644 @cindex Lowering and raising sections
4645 @cindex Sections, raising and lowering
4647 The @code{@@raisesections} and @code{@@lowersections} commands
4648 implicitly raise and lower the hierarchical level of following
4649 chapters, sections and the other sectioning commands.
4651 That is, the @code{@@raisesections} command changes sections to
4652 chapters, subsections to sections, and so on. Conversely, the
4653 @code{@@lowersections} command changes chapters to sections, sections
4654 to subsections, and so on. Thus, an @code{@@lowersections} command
4655 cancels an @code{@@raisesections} command, and vice versa.
4657 @cindex Include files, and section levels
4658 You can use @code{@@lowersections} to include text written as an outer
4659 or standalone Texinfo file in another Texinfo file as an inner,
4660 included file. Typical usage looks like this:
4664 @@include somefile.texi
4668 @noindent (Without the @code{@@raisesections}, all the subsequent
4669 sections in the document would be lowered.)
4671 If the included file being lowered has a @code{@@top} node, you'll
4672 need to conditionalize its inclusion with a flag (@pxref{set value}).
4674 Another difficulty can arise with documents that use the (recommended)
4675 feature of @command{makeinfo} for implicitly determining node
4676 pointers. Since @command{makeinfo} must assume a hierarchically
4677 organized document to determine the pointers, you cannot just
4678 arbitrarily sprinkle @code{@@raisesections} and @code{@@lowersections}
4679 commands in the document. The final result has to have menus that
4680 take the raising and lowering into account. Therefore, as a practical
4681 matter, you generally only want to raise or lower large chunks,
4682 usually in external files as shown above.
4684 Repeated use of the commands continue to raise or lower the
4685 hierarchical level a step at a time. An attempt to raise above
4686 `chapter' reproduces chapter commands; an attempt to lower below
4687 `subsubsection' reproduces subsubsection commands. Also, lowered
4688 subsubsections and raised chapters will not work with
4689 @command{makeinfo}'s feature of implicitly determining node pointers,
4690 since the menu structure won't be correct.
4692 Write each @code{@@raisesections} and @code{@@lowersections} command
4693 on a line of its own.
4699 @dfn{Nodes} are the primary segments of a Texinfo file. They do not
4700 in and of themselves impose a hierarchical or any other kind of
4701 structure on a file. Nodes contain @dfn{node pointers} that name
4702 other nodes, and can contain @dfn{menus} which are lists of nodes. In
4703 Info, the movement commands can carry you to a pointed-to node or to a
4704 node listed in a menu.
4706 Node pointers and menus provide structure for Info files just as
4707 chapters, sections, subsections, and the like, provide structure for
4710 Because node names are used in cross-references, it is not desirable
4711 to casually change them. Such name changes invalidate references from
4712 other manuals, from mail archives, and so on.
4715 * Two Paths:: Different commands to structure
4716 Info output and printed output.
4717 * Node Menu Illustration:: A diagram, and sample nodes and menus.
4718 * node:: Creating nodes, in detail.
4719 * makeinfo Pointer Creation:: Letting makeinfo determine node pointers.
4720 * anchor:: Defining arbitrary cross-reference targets.
4727 The node and menu commands and the chapter structuring commands are
4728 technically independent of each other:
4732 In Info, node and menu commands provide structure. The chapter
4733 structuring commands generate headings with different kinds of
4734 underlining---asterisks for chapters, hyphens for sections, and so on;
4735 they do nothing else.@refill
4738 In @TeX{}, the chapter structuring commands generate chapter and section
4739 numbers and tables of contents. The node and menu commands provide
4740 information for cross references; they do nothing else.@refill
4743 You can use node pointers and menus to structure an Info file any way
4744 you want; and you can write a Texinfo file so that its Info output has a
4745 different structure than its printed output. However, virtually all
4746 Texinfo files are written such that the structure for the Info output
4747 corresponds to the structure for the printed output. It is neither
4748 convenient nor understandable to the reader to do otherwise.@refill
4750 Generally, printed output is structured in a tree-like hierarchy in
4751 which the chapters are the major limbs from which the sections branch
4752 out. Similarly, node pointers and menus are organized to create a
4753 matching structure in the Info output.@refill
4756 @node Node Menu Illustration
4757 @section Node and Menu Illustration
4759 Here is a copy of the diagram shown earlier that illustrates a Texinfo
4760 file with three chapters, each of which contains two sections.@refill
4762 The ``root'' is at the top of the diagram and the ``leaves'' are at the
4763 bottom. This is how such a diagram is drawn conventionally; it
4764 illustrates an upside-down tree. For this reason, the root node is
4765 called the `Top' node, and `Up' node pointers carry you closer to the
4772 -------------------------------------
4774 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3
4776 -------- -------- --------
4778 Section Section Section Section Section Section
4779 1.1 1.2 2.1 2.2 3.1 3.2
4783 The fully-written command to start Chapter 2 would be this:
4787 @@node Chapter 2, Chapter 3, Chapter 1, Top
4788 @@comment node-name, next, previous, up
4793 This @code{@@node} line says that the name of this node is ``Chapter
4794 2'', the name of the `Next' node is ``Chapter 3'', the name of the
4795 `Previous' node is ``Chapter 1'', and the name of the `Up' node is
4796 ``Top''. You can omit writing out these node names if your document is
4797 hierarchically organized (@pxref{makeinfo Pointer Creation}), but the
4798 pointer relationships still obtain.
4801 @strong{Please Note:} `Next' refers to the next node at the same
4802 hierarchical level in the manual, not necessarily to the next node
4803 within the Texinfo file. In the Texinfo file, the subsequent node may
4804 be at a lower level---a section-level node most often follows a
4805 chapter-level node, for example. `Next' and `Previous' refer to nodes
4806 at the @emph{same} hierarchical level. (The `Top' node contains the
4807 exception to this rule. Since the `Top' node is the only node at that
4808 level, `Next' refers to the first following node, which is almost always
4809 a chapter or chapter-level node.)@refill
4812 To go to Sections 2.1 and 2.2 using Info, you need a menu inside Chapter
4813 2. (@xref{Menus}.) You would write the menu just
4814 before the beginning of Section 2.1, like this:@refill
4819 * Sect. 2.1:: Description of this section.
4825 Write the node for Sect. 2.1 like this:@refill
4829 @@node Sect. 2.1, Sect. 2.2, Chapter 2, Chapter 2
4830 @@comment node-name, next, previous, up
4834 In Info format, the `Next' and `Previous' pointers of a node usually
4835 lead to other nodes at the same level---from chapter to chapter or from
4836 section to section (sometimes, as shown, the `Previous' pointer points
4837 up); an `Up' pointer usually leads to a node at the level above (closer
4838 to the `Top' node); and a `Menu' leads to nodes at a level below (closer
4839 to `leaves'). (A cross reference can point to a node at any level;
4840 see @ref{Cross References}.)@refill
4842 Usually, an @code{@@node} command and a chapter structuring command are
4843 used in sequence, along with indexing commands. (You may follow the
4844 @code{@@node} line with a comment line that reminds you which pointer is
4847 Here is the beginning of the chapter in this manual called ``Ending a
4848 Texinfo File''. This shows an @code{@@node} line followed by a comment
4849 line, an @code{@@chapter} line, and then by indexing lines.@refill
4853 @@node Ending a File, Structuring, Beginning a File, Top
4854 @@comment node-name, next, previous, up
4855 @@chapter Ending a Texinfo File
4856 @@cindex Ending a Texinfo file
4857 @@cindex Texinfo file ending
4858 @@cindex File ending
4864 @section The @code{@@node} Command
4866 @cindex Node, defined
4869 A @dfn{node} is a segment of text that begins at an @code{@@node}
4870 command and continues until the next @code{@@node} command. The
4871 definition of node is different from that for chapter or section. A
4872 chapter may contain sections and a section may contain subsections;
4873 but a node cannot contain subnodes; the text of a node continues only
4874 until the next @code{@@node} command in the file. A node usually
4875 contains only one chapter structuring command, the one that follows
4876 the @code{@@node} line. On the other hand, in printed output nodes
4877 are used only for cross references, so a chapter or section may
4878 contain any number of nodes. Indeed, a chapter usually contains
4879 several nodes, one for each section, subsection, and
4882 To create a node, write an @code{@@node} command at the beginning of a
4883 line, and follow it with up to four arguments, separated by commas, on
4884 the rest of the same line. The first argument is required; it is the
4885 name of this node. The subsequent arguments are the names of the
4886 `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers, in that order, and may be omitted
4887 if your Texinfo document is hierarchically organized (@pxref{makeinfo
4890 You may insert spaces before each name if you wish; the spaces are
4891 ignored. You must write the name of the node and (if present) the names
4892 of the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers all on the same line.
4893 Otherwise, the formatters fail. (@inforef{Top, info, info}, for more
4894 information about nodes in Info.)
4896 Usually, you write one of the chapter-structuring command lines
4897 immediately after an @code{@@node} line---for example, an
4898 @code{@@section} or @code{@@subsection} line. (@xref{Structuring
4902 The GNU Emacs Texinfo mode updating commands work
4903 only with Texinfo files in which @code{@@node} lines are followed by chapter
4904 structuring lines. @xref{Updating Requirements}.
4907 @TeX{} uses @code{@@node} lines to identify the names to use for cross
4908 references. For this reason, you must write @code{@@node} lines in a
4909 Texinfo file that you intend to format for printing, even if you do not
4910 intend to format it for Info. (Cross references, such as the one at the
4911 end of this sentence, are made with @code{@@xref} and related commands;
4912 see @ref{Cross References}.)
4915 * Node Names:: How to choose node and pointer names.
4916 * Writing a Node:: How to write an @code{@@node} line.
4917 * Node Line Tips:: Keep names short.
4918 * Node Line Requirements:: Keep names unique, without @@-commands.
4919 * First Node:: How to write a `Top' node.
4920 * makeinfo top command:: How to use the @code{@@top} command.
4925 @subsection Choosing Node and Pointer Names
4927 @cindex Node names, choosing
4928 The name of a node identifies the node. The pointers enable
4929 you to reach other nodes and consist simply of the names of those nodes.
4931 Normally, a node's `Up' pointer contains the name of the node whose menu
4932 mentions that node. The node's `Next' pointer contains the name of the
4933 node that follows that node in that menu and its `Previous' pointer
4934 contains the name of the node that precedes it in that menu. When a
4935 node's `Previous' node is the same as its `Up' node, both node pointers
4938 Usually, the first node of a Texinfo file is the `Top' node, and its
4939 `Up' and `Previous' pointers point to the @file{dir} file, which
4940 contains the main menu for all of Info.
4942 The `Top' node itself contains the main or master menu for the manual.
4943 Also, it is helpful to include a brief description of the manual in the
4944 `Top' node. @xref{First Node}, for information on how to write the
4945 first node of a Texinfo file.
4947 Even when you explicitly specify all pointers, that does not mean you
4948 can write the nodes in the Texinfo source file in an arbitrary order!
4949 Because @TeX{} processes the file sequentially, irrespective of node
4950 pointers, you must write the nodes in the order you wish them to appear
4951 in the printed output.
4954 @node Writing a Node
4955 @subsection How to Write an @code{@@node} Line
4956 @cindex Writing an @code{@@node} line
4957 @cindex @code{@@node} line writing
4958 @cindex Node line writing
4960 The easiest way to write an @code{@@node} line is to write @code{@@node}
4961 at the beginning of a line and then the name of the node, like
4965 @@node @var{node-name}
4968 If you are using GNU Emacs, you can use the update node commands
4969 provided by Texinfo mode to insert the names of the pointers; or you
4970 can leave the pointers out of the Texinfo file and let @code{makeinfo}
4971 insert node pointers into the Info file it creates. (@xref{Texinfo
4972 Mode}, and @ref{makeinfo Pointer Creation}.)@refill
4974 Alternatively, you can insert the `Next', `Previous', and `Up'
4975 pointers yourself. If you do this, you may find it helpful to use the
4976 Texinfo mode keyboard command @kbd{C-c C-c n}. This command inserts
4977 @samp{@@node} and a comment line listing the names of the pointers in
4978 their proper order. The comment line helps you keep track of which
4979 arguments are for which pointers. This comment line is especially useful
4980 if you are not familiar with Texinfo.@refill
4982 The template for a fully-written-out node line with `Next', `Previous',
4983 and `Up' pointers looks like this:@refill
4986 @@node @var{node-name}, @var{next}, @var{previous}, @var{up}
4989 If you wish, you can ignore @code{@@node} lines altogether in your first
4990 draft and then use the @code{texinfo-insert-node-lines} command to
4991 create @code{@@node} lines for you. However, we do not recommend this
4992 practice. It is better to name the node itself at the same time that
4993 you write a segment so you can easily make cross references. A large
4994 number of cross references are an especially important feature of a good
4997 After you have inserted an @code{@@node} line, you should immediately
4998 write an @@-command for the chapter or section and insert its name.
4999 Next (and this is important!), put in several index entries. Usually,
5000 you will find at least two and often as many as four or five ways of
5001 referring to the node in the index. Use them all. This will make it
5002 much easier for people to find the node.
5005 @node Node Line Tips
5006 @subsection @code{@@node} Line Tips
5008 Here are three suggestions:
5012 Try to pick node names that are informative but short.@refill
5014 In the Info file, the file name, node name, and pointer names are all
5015 inserted on one line, which may run into the right edge of the window.
5016 (This does not cause a problem with Info, but is ugly.)@refill
5019 Try to pick node names that differ from each other near the beginnings
5020 of their names. This way, it is easy to use automatic name completion in
5024 By convention, node names are capitalized just as they would be for
5025 section or chapter titles---initial and significant words are
5026 capitalized; others are not.@refill
5030 @node Node Line Requirements
5031 @subsection @code{@@node} Line Requirements
5033 @cindex Node line requirements
5034 @cindex Restrictions on node names
5035 Here are several requirements for @code{@@node} lines:
5038 @cindex Unique nodename requirement
5039 @cindex Node name must be unique
5041 All the node names for a single Info file must be unique.
5043 Duplicates confuse the Info movement commands. This means, for
5044 example, that if you end every chapter with a summary, you must name
5045 each summary node differently. You cannot just call each one
5046 ``Summary''. You may, however, duplicate the titles of chapters, sections,
5047 and the like. Thus you can end each chapter in a book with a section
5048 called ``Summary'', so long as the node names for those sections are all
5052 A pointer name must be the name of a node.
5054 The node to which a pointer points may come before or after the
5055 node containing the pointer.
5057 @cindex @@-commands in nodename
5058 @cindex Node name, should not contain @@-commands
5060 @@-commands in node names are not allowed. This includes punctuation
5061 characters that are escaped with a @samp{@@}, such as @code{@@} and
5062 @code{@{}, and accent commands such as @samp{@@'}. (For a few cases
5063 when this is useful, Texinfo has limited support for using
5064 @w{@@-commands} in node names; see @ref{Pointer Validation}.) Perhaps
5065 this limitation will be removed some day.
5068 @cindex Colon in nodename
5069 @cindex Comma in nodename
5070 @cindex Parentheses in nodename
5071 @cindex Period in nodename
5072 @cindex Characters, invalid in node name
5073 @cindex Invalid characters in node names
5074 @cindex Node names, invalid characters in
5075 Unfortunately, you cannot use periods, commas, colons or parentheses
5076 within a node name; these confuse the Texinfo processors. Perhaps
5077 this limitation will be removed some day, too.
5080 For example, the following is a section title in this manual:
5083 @@code@{@@@@unnumberedsec@}, @@code@{@@@@appendixsec@}, @@code@{@@@@heading@}
5087 But the corresponding node name lacks the commas and the @@'s:
5090 unnumberedsec appendixsec heading
5093 @cindex Case in node name
5095 Case is significant in node names.
5097 @cindex White space in node name
5098 @cindex Spaces in node name
5099 Spaces before and after names on the @samp{@@node} line are ignored,
5100 but spaces ``inside'' a name are significant. For example:
5108 @noindent all define the same node, @samp{foo bar}. References to the
5109 node should all use that name, without the leading or trailing spaces,
5110 but with the internal spaces.
5115 @subsection The First Node
5116 @cindex Top node is first
5119 The first node of a Texinfo file is the @dfn{Top} node, except in an
5120 included file (@pxref{Include Files}). The Top node should contain a
5121 short summary, copying permissions, and a master menu. @xref{The Top
5122 Node}, for more information on the Top node contents and examples.
5124 Here is a description of the node pointers to be used in the Top node:
5129 @cindex Up node of Top node
5130 @cindex (dir) as Up node of Top node
5131 The Top node (which must be named @samp{top} or @samp{Top}) should have
5132 as its `Up' node the name of a node in another file, where there is a
5133 menu that leads to this file. Specify the file name in parentheses.
5135 Usually, all Info files are installed in the same Info directory tree;
5136 in this case, use @samp{(dir)} as the parent of the Top node; this is
5137 short for @samp{(dir)top}, and specifies the Top node in the @file{dir}
5138 file, which contains the main menu for the Info system as a whole.
5141 @cindex Previous node of Top node
5142 On the other hand, do not define the `Previous' node of the Top node to
5143 be @samp{(dir)}, as it causes confusing behavior for users: if you are
5144 in the Top node and hits @key{DEL} to go backwards, you wind up in the
5145 middle of the some other entry in the @file{dir} file, which has nothing
5146 to do with what you were reading.
5149 @cindex Next node of Top node
5150 The `Next' node of the Top node should be the first chapter in your
5155 @xref{Installing an Info File}, for more information about installing
5156 an Info file in the @file{info} directory.
5158 For concreteness, here is an example with explicit pointers (which you
5159 can maintain automatically with the texinfo mode commands):
5161 Or you can leave the pointers off entirely and let the tools implicitly
5162 define them. This is recommended. Thus:
5169 @node makeinfo top command
5170 @subsection The @code{@@top} Sectioning Command
5171 @findex top @r{(@@-command)}
5173 A special sectioning command, @code{@@top} should be used with the
5174 @code{@@node Top} line. The @code{@@top} sectioning command tells
5175 @code{makeinfo} that it marks the `Top' node in the file. It provides
5176 the information that @code{makeinfo} needs to insert node pointers
5177 automatically. Write the @code{@@top} command at the beginning of the
5178 line immediately following the @code{@@node Top} line. Write the title
5179 on the remaining part of the same line as the @code{@@top} command.
5181 In Info, the @code{@@top} sectioning command causes the title to appear
5182 on a line by itself, with a line of asterisks inserted underneath, as
5183 other sectioning commands do.
5185 In @TeX{} and @code{texinfo-format-buffer}, the @code{@@top}
5186 sectioning command is merely a synonym for @code{@@unnumbered}.
5187 Neither of these formatters require an @code{@@top} command, and do
5188 nothing special with it. You can use @code{@@chapter} or
5189 @code{@@unnumbered} after the @code{@@node Top} line when you use
5190 these formatters. Also, you can use @code{@@chapter} or
5191 @code{@@unnumbered} when you use the Texinfo updating commands to
5192 create or update pointers and menus.
5194 Thus, in practice, a Top node starts like this:
5198 @@top Your Manual Title
5202 @node makeinfo Pointer Creation
5203 @section Creating Pointers with @code{makeinfo}
5204 @cindex Creating pointers with @code{makeinfo}
5205 @cindex Pointer creation with @code{makeinfo}
5206 @cindex Automatic pointer creation with @code{makeinfo}
5208 The @code{makeinfo} program has a feature for automatically determining
5209 node pointers for a hierarchically organized document.
5211 When you take advantage of this feature, you do not need to write the
5212 `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers after the name of a node.
5213 However, you must write a sectioning command, such as @code{@@chapter}
5214 or @code{@@section}, on the line immediately following each truncated
5215 @code{@@node} line (except that comment lines may intervene).
5217 In addition, you must follow the `Top' @code{@@node} line with a line
5218 beginning with @code{@@top} to mark the `Top' node in the
5219 file. @xref{makeinfo top, , @code{@@top}}.
5221 Finally, you must write the name of each node (except for the `Top'
5222 node) in a menu that is one or more hierarchical levels above the
5223 node's hierarchical level.
5225 This implicit node pointer insertion feature in @code{makeinfo}
5226 relieves you from the need to update menus and pointers manually or
5227 with Texinfo mode commands. (@xref{Updating Nodes and Menus}.)
5229 In most cases, you will want to take advantage of this feature and not
5230 redundantly specify node pointers. However, Texinfo documents are not
5231 required to be organized hierarchically or in fact to contain
5232 sectioning commands at all (for example, if you never intend the
5233 document to be printed). The special procedure for handling the short
5234 text before a menu (@pxref{Menus}) also disables this
5235 feature, for that group of nodes. In those cases, you will need to
5236 explicitly specify the pointers.
5240 @section @code{@@anchor}: Defining Arbitrary Cross-reference Targets
5244 @cindex Cross-reference targets, arbitrary
5245 @cindex Targets for cross-references, arbitrary
5247 An @dfn{anchor} is a position in your document, labeled so that
5248 cross-references can refer to it, just as they can to nodes. You create
5249 an anchor with the @code{@@anchor} command, and give the label as a
5250 normal brace-delimited argument. For example:
5253 This marks the @@anchor@{x-spot@}spot.
5255 @@xref@{x-spot,,the spot@}.
5261 This marks the spot.
5263 See [the spot], page 1.
5266 As you can see, the @code{@@anchor} command itself produces no output.
5267 This example defines an anchor `x-spot' just before the word `spot'.
5268 You can refer to it later with an @code{@@xref} or other cross-reference
5269 command, as shown. @xref{Cross References}, for details on the
5270 cross-reference commands.
5272 It is best to put @code{@@anchor} commands just before the position you
5273 wish to refer to; that way, the reader's eye is led on to the correct
5274 text when they jump to the anchor. You can put the @code{@@anchor}
5275 command on a line by itself if that helps readability of the source.
5276 Spaces are always ignored after @code{@@anchor}.
5278 Anchor names and node names may not conflict. Anchors and nodes are
5279 given similar treatment in some ways; for example, the @code{goto-node}
5280 command in standalone Info takes either an anchor name or a node name as
5281 an argument. (@xref{goto-node,,,info-stnd,GNU Info}.)
5289 @dfn{Menus} contain pointers to subordinate nodes. In online output,
5290 you use menus to go to such nodes. Menus have no effect in printed
5291 manuals and do not appear in them.
5293 A node with a menu should not contain much text. If you find yourself
5294 writing a lot of before a menu, we generally recommend moving most of
5295 the text into a new subnode---all but a paragraph or two. Otherwise,
5296 a reader with a terminal that displays only a few lines may miss the
5297 menu and its associated text. As a practical matter, it is best to
5298 locate a menu within 20 or so lines of the beginning of the node.
5301 * Menu Location:: Menus go at the ends of short nodes.
5302 * Writing a Menu:: What is a menu?
5303 * Menu Parts:: A menu entry has three parts.
5304 * Less Cluttered Menu Entry:: Two part menu entry.
5305 * Menu Example:: Two and three part menu entries.
5306 * Other Info Files:: How to refer to a different Info file.
5311 @section Menu Location
5312 @cindex Menu location
5313 @cindex Location of menus
5315 A menu must be located at the end of a node, without any regular text
5316 or additional commands between the @code{@@end menu} and the beginning
5317 of the next node. (As a consequence, there may be at most one menu in
5320 @cindex Info format, and menus
5321 This is actually a useful restriction, since a reader who uses the
5322 menu could easily miss any such text. Technically, it is necessary
5323 because in Info format, there is no marker for the end of a menu, so
5324 Info-reading programs would have no way to know when the menu ends and
5325 normal text resumes.
5327 @cindex Hierarchical documents, and menus
5328 Technically, menus can carry you to any node, regardless of the
5329 structure of the document; even to nodes in a different Info file.
5330 However, we do not recommend ever making use of this, because the
5331 @command{makeinfo} implicit pointer creation feature (@pxref{makeinfo
5332 Pointer Creation}) and GNU Emacs Texinfo mode updating commands work
5333 only to create menus of subordinate nodes in a hierarchically
5334 structured document. Instead, use cross references to refer to
5337 In the past, we recommended using a @samp{@@heading} command within an
5338 @code{@@ifinfo} conditional instead of the normal sectioning commands
5339 after a very short node with a menu. This had the advantage of making
5340 the printed output look better, because there was no very short text
5341 between two headings on the page. But aside from not working with
5342 @command{makeinfo}'s implicit pointer creation, it also makes the XML
5343 output incorrect, since it does not reflect the true document
5344 structure. So, unfortunately we can no longer recommend this.
5347 @node Writing a Menu
5348 @section Writing a Menu
5349 @cindex Writing a menu
5350 @cindex Menu writing
5352 A menu consists of an @code{@@menu} command on a line by itself
5353 followed by menu entry lines or menu comment lines and then by an
5354 @code{@@end menu} command on a line by itself.
5356 A menu looks like this:
5361 Larger Units of Text
5363 * Files:: All about handling files.
5364 * Multiples: Buffers. Multiple buffers; editing
5365 several files at once.
5370 In a menu, every line that begins with an @w{@samp{* }} is a @dfn{menu
5371 entry}. (Note the space after the asterisk.) A line that does not
5372 start with an @w{@samp{* }} may also appear in a menu. Such a line is
5373 not a menu entry but is a menu comment line that appears in the Info
5374 file. In the example above, the line @samp{Larger Units of Text} is a
5375 menu comment line; the two lines starting with @w{@samp{* }} are menu
5376 @cindex Spaces, in menus
5377 entries. Space characters in a menu are preserved as-is; this allows
5378 you to format the menu as you wish.
5382 @section The Parts of a Menu
5383 @cindex Parts of a menu
5385 @cindex @code{@@menu} parts
5387 A menu entry has three parts, only the second of which is required:
5391 The menu entry name (optional).
5394 The name of the node (required).
5397 A description of the item (optional).
5400 The template for a menu entry looks like this:@refill
5403 * @var{menu-entry-name}: @var{node-name}. @var{description}
5406 Follow the menu entry name with a single colon and follow the node name
5407 with tab, comma, period, or newline.@refill
5409 In Info, a user selects a node with the @kbd{m} (@code{Info-menu})
5410 command. The menu entry name is what the user types after the @kbd{m}
5413 The third part of a menu entry is a descriptive phrase or sentence.
5414 Menu entry names and node names are often short; the description
5415 explains to the reader what the node is about. A useful description
5416 complements the node name rather than repeats it. The description,
5417 which is optional, can spread over two or more lines; if it does, some
5418 authors prefer to indent the second line while others prefer to align it
5419 with the first (and all others). It's up to you.
5422 @node Less Cluttered Menu Entry
5423 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
5424 @section Less Cluttered Menu Entry
5425 @cindex Two part menu entry
5426 @cindex Double-colon menu entries
5427 @cindex Menu entries with two colons
5428 @cindex Less cluttered menu entry
5429 @cindex Uncluttered menu entry
5431 When the menu entry name and node name are the same, you can write
5432 the name immediately after the asterisk and space at the beginning of
5433 the line and follow the name with two colons.@refill
5439 * Name:: @var{description}
5447 * Name: Name. @var{description}
5450 You should use the node name for the menu entry name whenever possible,
5451 since it reduces visual clutter in the menu.@refill
5454 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
5455 @section A Menu Example
5456 @cindex Menu example
5457 @cindex Example menu
5459 A menu looks like this in Texinfo:@refill
5464 * menu entry name: Node name. A short description.
5465 * Node name:: This form is preferred.
5478 * menu entry name: Node name. A short description.
5479 * Node name:: This form is preferred.
5484 Here is an example as you might see it in a Texinfo file:@refill
5489 Larger Units of Text
5491 * Files:: All about handling files.
5492 * Multiples: Buffers. Multiple buffers; editing
5493 several files at once.
5505 Larger Units of Text
5507 * Files:: All about handling files.
5508 * Multiples: Buffers. Multiple buffers; editing
5509 several files at once.
5513 In this example, the menu has two entries. @samp{Files} is both a menu
5514 entry name and the name of the node referred to by that name.
5515 @samp{Multiples} is the menu entry name; it refers to the node named
5516 @samp{Buffers}. The line @samp{Larger Units of Text} is a comment; it
5517 appears in the menu, but is not an entry.@refill
5519 Since no file name is specified with either @samp{Files} or
5520 @samp{Buffers}, they must be the names of nodes in the same Info file
5521 (@pxref{Other Info Files, , Referring to Other Info Files}).@refill
5523 @node Other Info Files
5524 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
5525 @section Referring to Other Info Files
5526 @cindex Referring to other Info files
5527 @cindex Nodes in other Info files
5528 @cindex Other Info files' nodes
5529 @cindex Going to other Info files' nodes
5530 @cindex Info; other files' nodes
5532 You can create a menu entry that enables a reader in Info to go to a
5533 node in another Info file by writing the file name in parentheses just
5534 before the node name. In this case, you should use the three-part menu
5535 entry format, which saves the reader from having to type the file
5539 The format looks like this:@refill
5544 * @var{first-entry-name}:(@var{filename})@var{nodename}. @var{description}
5545 * @var{second-entry-name}:(@var{filename})@var{second-node}. @var{description}
5550 For example, to refer directly to the @samp{Outlining} and
5551 @samp{Rebinding} nodes in the @cite{Emacs Manual}, you would write a
5552 menu like this:@refill
5557 * Outlining: (emacs)Outline Mode. The major mode for
5559 * Rebinding: (emacs)Rebinding. How to redefine the
5565 If you do not list the node name, but only name the file, then Info
5566 presumes that you are referring to the `Top' node.@refill
5568 The @file{dir} file that contains the main menu for Info has menu
5569 entries that list only file names. These take you directly to the `Top'
5570 nodes of each Info document. (@xref{Installing an Info File}.)
5577 * Info: (info). Documentation browsing system.
5578 * Emacs: (emacs). The extensible, self-documenting
5584 (The @file{dir} top level directory for the Info system is an Info file,
5585 not a Texinfo file, but a menu entry looks the same in both types of
5588 The GNU Emacs Texinfo mode menu updating commands only work with nodes
5589 within the current buffer, so you cannot use them to create menus that
5590 refer to other files. You must write such menus by hand.
5593 @node Cross References
5594 @chapter Cross References
5595 @cindex Making cross references
5596 @cindex Cross references
5599 @dfn{Cross references} are used to refer the reader to other parts of the
5600 same or different Texinfo files. In Texinfo, nodes and anchors are the
5601 places to which cross references can refer.
5604 * References:: What cross references are for.
5605 * Cross Reference Commands:: A summary of the different commands.
5606 * Cross Reference Parts:: A cross reference has several parts.
5607 * xref:: Begin a reference with `See' @dots{}
5608 * Top Node Naming:: How to refer to the beginning of another file.
5609 * ref:: A reference for the last part of a sentence.
5610 * pxref:: How to write a parenthetical cross reference.
5611 * inforef:: How to refer to an Info-only file.
5612 * uref:: How to refer to a uniform resource locator.
5616 @section What References Are For
5618 Often, but not always, a printed document should be designed so that
5619 it can be read sequentially. People tire of flipping back and forth
5620 to find information that should be presented to them as they need
5623 However, in any document, some information will be too detailed for
5624 the current context, or incidental to it; use cross references to
5625 provide access to such information. Also, an online help system or a
5626 reference manual is not like a novel; few read such documents in
5627 sequence from beginning to end. Instead, people look up what they
5628 need. For this reason, such creations should contain many cross
5629 references to help readers find other information that they may not
5632 In a printed manual, a cross reference results in a page reference,
5633 unless it is to another manual altogether, in which case the cross
5634 reference names that manual.@refill
5636 In Info, a cross reference results in an entry that you can follow
5637 using the Info @samp{f} command. (@inforef{Help-Xref, Following
5638 cross-references, info}.)
5640 The various cross reference commands use nodes (or anchors,
5641 @pxref{anchor,,@code{@@anchor}}) to define cross reference locations.
5642 This is evident in Info, in which a cross reference takes you to the
5643 specified location. @TeX{} also uses nodes to define cross reference
5644 locations, but the action is less obvious. When @TeX{} generates a DVI
5645 file, it records each node's page number and uses the page numbers in making
5646 references. Thus, if you are writing a manual that will only be
5647 printed, and will not be used online, you must nonetheless write
5648 @code{@@node} lines to name the places to which you make cross
5652 @node Cross Reference Commands
5653 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
5654 @section Different Cross Reference Commands
5655 @cindex Different cross reference commands
5657 There are four different cross reference commands:@refill
5661 Used to start a sentence in the printed manual saying @w{`See @dots{}'}
5662 or an Info cross-reference saying @samp{*Note @var{name}: @var{node}.}.
5665 Used within or, more often, at the end of a sentence; same as
5666 @code{@@xref} for Info; produces just the reference in the printed
5667 manual without a preceding `See'.@refill
5670 Used within parentheses to make a reference that suits both an Info
5671 file and a printed book. Starts with a lower case `see' within the
5672 printed manual. (@samp{p} is for `parenthesis'.)@refill
5675 Used to make a reference to an Info file for which there is no printed
5680 (The @code{@@cite} command is used to make references to books and
5681 manuals for which there is no corresponding Info file and, therefore,
5682 no node to which to point. @xref{cite, , @code{@@cite}}.)@refill
5684 @node Cross Reference Parts
5685 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
5686 @section Parts of a Cross Reference
5687 @cindex Cross reference parts
5688 @cindex Parts of a cross reference
5690 A cross reference command requires only one argument, which is the
5691 name of the node to which it refers. But a cross reference command
5692 may contain up to four additional arguments. By using these
5693 arguments, you can provide a cross reference name for Info, a topic
5694 description or section title for the printed output, the name of a
5695 different Info file, and the name of a different printed
5698 Here is a simple cross reference example:@refill
5701 @@xref@{Node name@}.
5715 See Section @var{nnn} [Node name], page @var{ppp}.
5719 Here is an example of a full five-part cross reference:@refill
5723 @@xref@{Node name, Cross Reference Name, Particular Topic,
5724 info-file-name, A Printed Manual@}, for details.
5732 *Note Cross Reference Name: (info-file-name)Node name,
5740 See section ``Particular Topic'' in @i{A Printed Manual}, for details.
5746 The five possible arguments for a cross reference are:@refill
5750 The node or anchor name (required). This is the location to which the
5751 cross reference takes you. In a printed document, the location of the
5752 node provides the page reference only for references within the same
5756 The cross reference name for the Info reference, if it is to be different
5757 from the node name. If you include this argument, it becomes
5758 the first part of the cross reference. It is usually omitted.@refill
5761 A topic description or section name. Often, this is the title of the
5762 section. This is used as the name of the reference in the printed
5763 manual. If omitted, the node name is used.@refill
5766 The name of the Info file in which the reference is located, if it is
5767 different from the current file. You need not include any @samp{.info}
5768 suffix on the file name, since Info readers try appending it
5772 The name of a printed manual from a different Texinfo file.@refill
5775 The template for a full five argument cross reference looks like
5780 @@xref@{@var{node-name}, @var{cross-reference-name}, @var{title-or-topic},
5781 @var{info-file-name}, @var{printed-manual-title}@}.
5785 Cross references with one, two, three, four, and five arguments are
5786 described separately following the description of @code{@@xref}.@refill
5788 Write a node name in a cross reference in exactly the same way as in
5789 the @code{@@node} line, including the same capitalization; otherwise, the
5790 formatters may not find the reference.@refill
5792 You can write cross reference commands within a paragraph, but note
5793 how Info and @TeX{} format the output of each of the various commands:
5794 write @code{@@xref} at the beginning of a sentence; write
5795 @code{@@pxref} only within parentheses, and so on.@refill
5798 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
5799 @section @code{@@xref}
5801 @cindex Cross references using @code{@@xref}
5802 @cindex References using @code{@@xref}
5804 The @code{@@xref} command generates a cross reference for the
5805 beginning of a sentence. The Info formatting commands convert it into
5806 an Info cross reference, which the Info @samp{f} command can use to
5807 bring you directly to another node. The @TeX{} typesetting commands
5808 convert it into a page reference, or a reference to another book or
5812 * Reference Syntax:: What a reference looks like and requires.
5813 * One Argument:: @code{@@xref} with one argument.
5814 * Two Arguments:: @code{@@xref} with two arguments.
5815 * Three Arguments:: @code{@@xref} with three arguments.
5816 * Four and Five Arguments:: @code{@@xref} with four and five arguments.
5819 @node Reference Syntax
5820 @subsection What a Reference Looks Like and Requires
5822 Most often, an Info cross reference looks like this:@refill
5825 *Note @var{node-name}::.
5832 *Note @var{cross-reference-name}: @var{node-name}.
5836 In @TeX{}, a cross reference looks like this:
5839 See Section @var{section-number} [@var{node-name}], page @var{page}.
5846 See Section @var{section-number} [@var{title-or-topic}], page @var{page}.
5849 The @code{@@xref} command does not generate a period or comma to end
5850 the cross reference in either the Info file or the printed output.
5851 You must write that period or comma yourself; otherwise, Info will not
5852 recognize the end of the reference. (The @code{@@pxref} command works
5853 differently. @xref{pxref, , @code{@@pxref}}.)@refill
5856 A period or comma @strong{must} follow the closing
5857 brace of an @code{@@xref}. It is required to terminate the cross
5858 reference. This period or comma will appear in the output, both in
5859 the Info file and in the printed manual.@refill
5862 @code{@@xref} must refer to an Info node by name. Use @code{@@node}
5863 to define the node (@pxref{Writing a Node}).@refill
5865 @code{@@xref} is followed by several arguments inside braces, separated by
5866 commas. Whitespace before and after these commas is ignored.@refill
5868 A cross reference requires only the name of a node; but it may contain
5869 up to four additional arguments. Each of these variations produces a
5870 cross reference that looks somewhat different.@refill
5873 Commas separate arguments in a cross reference;
5874 avoid including them in the title or other part lest the formatters
5875 mistake them for separators.@refill
5879 @subsection @code{@@xref} with One Argument
5881 The simplest form of @code{@@xref} takes one argument, the name of
5882 another node in the same Info file. The Info formatters produce
5883 output that the Info readers can use to jump to the reference; @TeX{}
5884 produces output that specifies the page and section number for you.@refill
5891 @@xref@{Tropical Storms@}.
5898 *Note Tropical Storms::.
5905 See Section 3.1 [Tropical Storms], page 24.
5909 (Note that in the preceding example the closing brace is followed by a
5912 You can write a clause after the cross reference, like this:@refill
5915 @@xref@{Tropical Storms@}, for more info.
5922 *Note Tropical Storms::, for more info.
5929 See Section 3.1 [Tropical Storms], page 24, for more info.
5933 (Note that in the preceding example the closing brace is followed by a
5934 comma, and then by the clause, which is followed by a period.)@refill
5937 @subsection @code{@@xref} with Two Arguments
5939 With two arguments, the second is used as the name of the Info cross
5940 reference, while the first is still the name of the node to which the
5941 cross reference points.@refill
5945 The template is like this:
5948 @@xref@{@var{node-name}, @var{cross-reference-name}@}.
5956 @@xref@{Electrical Effects, Lightning@}.
5963 *Note Lightning: Electrical Effects.
5970 See Section 5.2 [Electrical Effects], page 57.
5974 (Note that in the preceding example the closing brace is followed by a
5975 period; and that the node name is printed, not the cross reference name.)
5977 You can write a clause after the cross reference, like this:@refill
5980 @@xref@{Electrical Effects, Lightning@}, for more info.
5986 *Note Lightning: Electrical Effects, for more info.
5993 See Section 5.2 [Electrical Effects], page 57, for more info.
5997 (Note that in the preceding example the closing brace is followed by a
5998 comma, and then by the clause, which is followed by a period.)@refill
6000 @node Three Arguments
6001 @subsection @code{@@xref} with Three Arguments
6003 A third argument replaces the node name in the @TeX{} output. The third
6004 argument should be the name of the section in the printed output, or
6005 else state the topic discussed by that section. Often, you will want to
6006 use initial upper case letters so it will be easier to read when the
6007 reference is printed. Use a third argument when the node name is
6008 unsuitable because of syntax or meaning.@refill
6010 Remember to avoid placing a comma within the title or topic section of
6011 a cross reference, or within any other section. The formatters divide
6012 cross references into arguments according to the commas; a comma
6013 within a title or other section will divide it into two arguments. In
6014 a reference, you need to write a title such as ``Clouds, Mist, and
6015 Fog'' without the commas.@refill
6017 Also, remember to write a comma or period after the closing brace of an
6018 @code{@@xref} to terminate the cross reference. In the following
6019 examples, a clause follows a terminating comma.@refill
6024 The template is like this:
6028 @@xref@{@var{node-name}, @var{cross-reference-name}, @var{title-or-topic}@}.
6038 @@xref@{Electrical Effects, Lightning, Thunder and Lightning@},
6047 *Note Lightning: Electrical Effects, for details.
6054 See Section 5.2 [Thunder and Lightning], page 57, for details.
6057 If a third argument is given and the second one is empty, then the
6058 third argument serves both. (Note how two commas, side by side, mark
6059 the empty second argument.)@refill
6063 @@xref@{Electrical Effects, , Thunder and Lightning@},
6072 *Note Thunder and Lightning: Electrical Effects, for details.
6079 See Section 5.2 [Thunder and Lightning], page 57, for details.
6082 As a practical matter, it is often best to write cross references with
6083 just the first argument if the node name and the section title are the
6084 same, and with the first and third arguments if the node name and title
6085 are different.@refill
6087 Here are several examples from @cite{The GNU Awk User's Guide}:@refill
6090 @@xref@{Sample Program@}.
6092 @@xref@{Case-sensitivity, ,Case-sensitivity in Matching@}.
6093 @@xref@{Close Output, , Closing Output Files and Pipes@},
6094 for more information.
6095 @@xref@{Regexp, , Regular Expressions as Patterns@}.
6098 @node Four and Five Arguments
6099 @subsection @code{@@xref} with Four and Five Arguments
6101 In a cross reference, a fourth argument specifies the name of another
6102 Info file, different from the file in which the reference appears, and
6103 a fifth argument specifies its title as a printed manual.@refill
6105 Remember that a comma or period must follow the closing brace of an
6106 @code{@@xref} command to terminate the cross reference. In the
6107 following examples, a clause follows a terminating comma.@refill
6115 @@xref@{@var{node-name}, @var{cross-reference-name}, @var{title-or-topic},
6116 @var{info-file-name}, @var{printed-manual-title}@}.
6125 @@xref@{Electrical Effects, Lightning, Thunder and Lightning,
6126 weather, An Introduction to Meteorology@}, for details.
6133 *Note Lightning: (weather)Electrical Effects, for details.
6137 The name of the Info file is enclosed in parentheses and precedes
6138 the name of the node.
6141 In a printed manual, the reference looks like this:@refill
6144 See section ``Thunder and Lightning'' in @i{An Introduction to
6145 Meteorology}, for details.
6149 The title of the printed manual is typeset in italics; and the
6150 reference lacks a page number since @TeX{} cannot know to which page a
6151 reference refers when that reference is to another manual.@refill
6153 Often, you will leave out the second argument when you use the long
6154 version of @code{@@xref}. In this case, the third argument, the topic
6155 description, will be used as the cross reference name in Info.@refill
6158 The template looks like this:
6161 @@xref@{@var{node-name}, , @var{title-or-topic}, @var{info-file-name},
6162 @var{printed-manual-title}@}, for details.
6169 *Note @var{title-or-topic}: (@var{info-file-name})@var{node-name}, for details.
6176 See section @var{title-or-topic} in @var{printed-manual-title}, for details.
6184 @@xref@{Electrical Effects, , Thunder and Lightning,
6185 weather, An Introduction to Meteorology@}, for details.
6193 *Note Thunder and Lightning: (weather)Electrical Effects,
6202 See section ``Thunder and Lightning'' in @i{An Introduction to
6203 Meteorology}, for details.
6206 On rare occasions, you may want to refer to another Info file that
6207 is within a single printed manual---when multiple Texinfo files are
6208 incorporated into the same @TeX{} run but make separate Info files.
6209 In this case, you need to specify only the fourth argument, and not
6212 @node Top Node Naming
6213 @section Naming a `Top' Node
6214 @cindex Naming a `Top' Node in references
6215 @cindex @samp{@r{Top}} node naming for references
6217 In a cross reference, you must always name a node. This means that in
6218 order to refer to a whole manual, you must identify the `Top' node by
6219 writing it as the first argument to the @code{@@xref} command. (This
6220 is different from the way you write a menu entry; see @ref{Other Info
6221 Files, , Referring to Other Info Files}.) At the same time, to
6222 provide a meaningful section topic or title in the printed cross
6223 reference (instead of the word `Top'), you must write an appropriate
6224 entry for the third argument to the @code{@@xref} command.
6228 Thus, to make a cross reference to @cite{The GNU Make Manual},
6232 @@xref@{Top, , Overview, make, The GNU Make Manual@}.
6239 *Note Overview: (make)Top.
6246 See section ``Overview'' in @i{The GNU Make Manual}.
6250 In this example, @samp{Top} is the name of the first node, and
6251 @samp{Overview} is the name of the first section of the manual.
6255 @section @code{@@ref}
6256 @cindex Cross references using @code{@@ref}
6257 @cindex References using @code{@@ref}
6260 @code{@@ref} is nearly the same as @code{@@xref} except that it does
6261 not generate a `See' in the printed output, just the reference itself.
6262 This makes it useful as the last part of a sentence.
6264 @noindent For example,
6268 For more information, see @@ref@{Hurricanes@}.
6271 @noindent produces (in Info):
6274 For more information, see *Note Hurricanes::.
6277 @noindent and (in printed output):
6280 For more information, see Section 8.2 [Hurricanes], page 123.
6283 The @code{@@ref} command sometimes tempts writers to express
6284 themselves in a manner that is suitable for a printed manual but looks
6285 awkward in the Info format. Bear in mind that your audience will be
6286 using both the printed and the Info format. For example:
6290 Sea surges are described in @@ref@{Hurricanes@}.
6293 @noindent looks ok in the printed output:
6296 Sea surges are described in Section 6.7 [Hurricanes], page 72.
6299 @noindent but is awkward to read in Info:
6302 Sea surges are described in *Note Hurricanes::.
6305 As a general rule, you should write a period or comma immediately
6306 after an @code{@@ref} command with two or more arguments.
6308 If there is no such following punctuation, @command{makeinfo} will
6309 generate a (grammatically incorrect) period in the Info output;
6310 otherwise, the cross-reference would fail completely, due to the
6311 current syntax of Info format.
6315 @section @code{@@pxref}
6316 @cindex Cross references using @code{@@pxref}
6317 @cindex References using @code{@@pxref}
6320 The parenthetical reference command, @code{@@pxref}, is nearly the
6321 same as @code{@@xref}, but you use it @emph{only} inside parentheses
6322 and you do @emph{not} type a comma or period (or anything else) after
6323 the command's closing brace. The command differs from @code{@@xref}
6328 @TeX{} typesets the reference for the printed manual with a lower case
6329 `see' rather than an upper case `See'.@refill
6332 The Info formatting commands automatically end the reference with a
6333 closing colon or period.@refill
6336 Because one type of formatting automatically inserts closing
6337 punctuation and the other does not, you should use @code{@@pxref}
6338 @emph{only} inside parentheses as part of another sentence. Also, you
6339 yourself should not insert punctuation after the reference (or any
6340 other text), as you do with @code{@@xref}. In the Info
6341 output, such text would follow a period, which is grammatically wrong.
6343 @code{@@pxref} is designed so that the output looks right and works
6344 right between parentheses both in printed output and in an Info file.
6345 In a printed manual, a closing comma or period should not follow a
6346 cross reference within parentheses; such punctuation is wrong. But in
6347 an Info file, suitable closing punctuation must follow the cross
6348 reference so Info can recognize its end. @code{@@pxref} spares you
6349 the need to use complicated methods to put a terminator into one form
6350 of the output and not the other.@refill
6353 With one argument, a parenthetical cross reference looks like
6358 @dots{} storms cause flooding (@@pxref@{Hurricanes@}) @dots{}
6367 @dots{} storms cause flooding (*Note Hurricanes::) @dots{}
6375 @dots{} storms cause flooding (see Section 6.7 [Hurricanes], page 72) @dots{}
6378 With two arguments, a parenthetical cross reference has this
6382 @dots{} (@@pxref@{@var{node-name}, @var{cross-reference-name}@}) @dots{}
6389 @dots{} (*Note @var{cross-reference-name}: @var{node-name}.) @dots{}
6397 @dots{} (see Section @var{nnn} [@var{node-name}], page @var{ppp}) @dots{}
6400 @code{@@pxref} can be used with up to five arguments just like
6401 @code{@@xref} (@pxref{xref, , @code{@@xref}}).@refill
6404 Use @code{@@pxref} only as a parenthetical
6405 reference. Do not try to use @code{@@pxref} as a clause in a sentence.
6406 It will look bad in either the Info file, the printed output, or
6410 Parenthetical cross references look best at the ends of sentences.
6411 Although they technically work in the middle of a sentence, that
6412 location breaks up the flow of reading.
6416 @section @code{@@inforef}
6417 @cindex Cross references using @code{@@inforef}
6418 @cindex References using @code{@@inforef}
6421 @code{@@inforef} is used for making cross references to Info
6422 documents---even from a printed manual. This might be because you
6423 want to refer to conditional @code{@@ifinfo} text
6424 (@pxref{Conditionals}), or because printed output is not available
6425 (perhaps because there is no Texinfo source), among other
6428 The command takes either two or three arguments, in the following
6436 The cross reference name (optional).
6443 Separate the arguments with commas, as with @code{@@xref}. Also, you
6444 must terminate the reference with a comma or period after the
6445 @samp{@}}, as you do with @code{@@xref}.@refill
6451 @@inforef@{@var{node-name}, @var{cross-reference-name}, @var{info-file-name}@},
6460 @@inforef@{Advanced, Advanced Info commands, info@},
6461 for more information.
6471 *Note Advanced Info commands: (info)Advanced,
6472 for more information.
6478 and (in the printed output):
6481 See Info file @file{info}, node @samp{Advanced}, for more information.
6484 (This particular example is not realistic, since the Info manual is
6485 written in Texinfo, so all formats are available.)
6487 The converse of @code{@@inforef} is @code{@@cite}, which is used to
6488 refer to printed works for which no Info form exists. @xref{cite, ,
6493 @section @code{@@url}, @code{@@uref@{@var{url}[, @var{text}][, @var{replacement}]@}}
6495 @cindex Uniform resource locator, referring to
6496 @cindex URL, referring to
6498 @cindex @code{href}, producing HTML
6499 @code{@@uref} produces a reference to a uniform resource locator (url).
6500 It takes one mandatory argument, the url, and two optional arguments
6501 which control the text that is displayed. In HTML output, @code{@@uref}
6502 produces a link you can follow.
6504 @code{@@url} is a synonym for @code{@@uref}. Originally, @code{@@url}
6505 had the meaning of @code{@@indicateurl}
6506 (@pxref{indicateurl,,@code{@@indicateurl}}), but in actual practice it
6507 was misused the vast majority of the time. So we've changed the
6510 The second argument, if specified, is the text to display (the default
6511 is the url itself); in Info and DVI output, but not in HTML output, the
6514 @cindex Man page, reference to
6515 The third argument, if specified, is the text to display, but in this
6516 case the url is @emph{not} output in any format. This is useful when
6517 the text is already sufficiently referential, as in a man page. If
6518 the third argument is given, the second argument is ignored.
6520 If the url is long enough to cause problems with line breaking, you
6521 may find it useful to insert @code{@@/} at places where a line break
6522 would be acceptable (after @samp{/} characters, for instance). This
6523 tells @TeX{} to allow (but not force) a line break at those places.
6526 Here is an example of the simple one argument form, where the url is
6527 both the target and the text of the link:
6530 The official GNU ftp site is @@uref@{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu@}.
6535 The official GNU ftp site is @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu}.
6539 An example of the two-argument form:
6541 The official @@uref@{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu, GNU ftp site@}
6542 holds programs and texts.
6547 The official @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu, GNU ftp site}
6548 holds programs and texts.
6551 @noindent that is, the Info output is this:
6553 The official GNU ftp site (ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu)
6554 holds programs and texts.
6557 @noindent and the HTML output is this:
6559 The official <a href="ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu">GNU ftp site</a>
6560 holds programs and texts.
6564 An example of the three-argument form:
6566 The @@uref@{/man.cgi/1/ls,,ls(1)@} program @dots{}
6571 The @uref{/man.cgi/1/ls,,ls(1)} program @dots{}
6574 @noindent but with HTML:
6576 The <a href="/man.cgi/1/ls">ls(1)</a> program @dots{}
6579 To merely indicate a url without creating a link people can follow, use
6580 @code{@@indicateurl} (@pxref{indicateurl, @code{@@indicateurl}}).
6582 Some people prefer to display url's in the unambiguous format:
6585 <URL:http://@var{host}/@var{path}>
6589 @cindex <URL: convention, not used
6590 You can use this form in the input file if you wish. We feel it's not
6591 necessary to include the @samp{<URL:} and @samp{>} in the output,
6592 since any software that tries to detect url's in text already has to
6593 detect them without the @samp{<URL:} to be useful.
6597 @chapter Marking Words and Phrases
6598 @cindex Paragraph, marking text within
6599 @cindex Marking words and phrases
6600 @cindex Words and phrases, marking them
6601 @cindex Marking text within a paragraph
6602 @cindex Text, marking up
6604 In Texinfo, you can mark words and phrases in a variety of ways.
6605 The Texinfo formatters use this information to determine how to
6607 You can specify, for example, whether a word or phrase is a
6608 defining occurrence, a metasyntactic variable, or a symbol used in a
6609 program. Also, you can emphasize text, in several different ways.
6612 * Indicating:: How to indicate definitions, files, etc.
6613 * Emphasis:: How to emphasize text.
6618 @section Indicating Definitions, Commands, etc.
6619 @cindex Highlighting text
6620 @cindex Indicating commands, definitions, etc.
6622 Texinfo has commands for indicating just what kind of object a piece of
6623 text refers to. For example, metasyntactic variables are marked by
6624 @code{@@var}, and code by @code{@@code}. Since the pieces of text are
6625 labelled by commands that tell what kind of object they are, it is easy
6626 to change the way the Texinfo formatters prepare such text. (Texinfo is
6627 an @emph{intentional} formatting language rather than a @emph{typesetting}
6628 formatting language.)@refill
6630 For example, in a printed manual,
6631 code is usually illustrated in a typewriter font;
6632 @code{@@code} tells @TeX{} to typeset this text in this font. But it
6633 would be easy to change the way @TeX{} highlights code to use another
6634 font, and this change would not affect how keystroke examples are
6635 highlighted. If straight typesetting commands were used in the body
6636 of the file and you wanted to make a change, you would need to check
6637 every single occurrence to make sure that you were changing code and
6638 not something else that should not be changed.@refill
6641 * Useful Highlighting:: Highlighting provides useful information.
6642 * code:: Indicating program code.
6643 * kbd:: Showing keyboard input.
6644 * key:: Specifying keys.
6645 * samp:: Indicating a literal sequence of characters.
6646 * verb:: Indicating a verbatim sequence of characters.
6647 * var:: Indicating metasyntactic variables.
6648 * env:: Indicating environment variables.
6649 * file:: Indicating file names.
6650 * command:: Indicating command names.
6651 * option:: Indicating option names.
6652 * dfn:: Specifying definitions.
6653 * cite:: Referring to books not in the Info system.
6654 * abbr:: Indicating abbreviations.
6655 * acronym:: Indicating acronyms.
6656 * indicateurl:: Indicating an example URL.
6657 * email:: Indicating an electronic mail address.
6661 @node Useful Highlighting
6662 @subsection Highlighting Commands are Useful
6664 The highlighting commands can be used to extract useful information
6665 from the file, such as lists of functions or file names. It is
6666 possible, for example, to write a program in Emacs Lisp (or a keyboard
6667 macro) to insert an index entry after every paragraph that contains
6668 words or phrases marked by a specified command. You could do this to
6669 construct an index of functions if you had not already made the
6672 The commands serve a variety of purposes:@refill
6675 @item @@code@{@var{sample-code}@}
6676 Indicate text that is a literal example of a piece of a program.
6677 @xref{code,,@code{@@code}}.
6679 @item @@kbd@{@var{keyboard-characters}@}
6680 Indicate keyboard input.
6681 @xref{kbd,,@code{@@kbd}}.
6683 @item @@key@{@var{key-name}@}
6684 Indicate the conventional name for a key on a keyboard.
6685 @xref{key,,@code{@@key}}.
6687 @item @@samp@{@var{text}@}
6688 Indicate text that is a literal example of a sequence of characters.
6689 @xref{samp,,@code{@@samp}}.
6691 @item @@verb@{@var{text}@}
6692 Write a verbatim sequence of characters.
6693 @xref{verb,,@code{@@verb}}.
6695 @item @@var@{@var{metasyntactic-variable}@}
6696 Indicate a metasyntactic variable.
6697 @xref{var,,@code{@@var}}.
6699 @item @@env@{@var{environment-variable}@}
6700 Indicate an environment variable.
6701 @xref{env,,@code{@@kenv}}.
6703 @item @@file@{@var{file-name}@}
6704 Indicate the name of a file.
6705 @xref{file,,@code{@@file}}.
6707 @item @@command@{@var{command-name}@}
6708 Indicate the name of a command.
6709 @xref{command,,@code{@@command}}.
6711 @item @@option@{@var{option}@}
6712 Indicate a command-line option.
6713 @xref{option,,@code{@@option}}.
6715 @item @@dfn@{@var{term}@}
6716 Indicate the introductory or defining use of a term.
6717 @xref{dfn,,@code{@@dfn}}.
6719 @item @@cite@{@var{reference}@}
6720 Indicate the name of a book.
6721 @xref{cite,,@code{@@cite}}.
6723 @item @@abbr@{@var{abbreviation}@}
6724 Indicate an abbreviation.
6726 @item @@acronym@{@var{acronym}@}
6727 Indicate an acronym.
6728 @xref{acronym,,@code{@@acronym}}.
6730 @item @@indicateurl@{@var{uniform-resource-locator}@}
6731 Indicate an example (that is, nonfunctional) uniform resource locator.
6732 @xref{indicateurl,,@code{@@indicateurl}}. (Use @code{@@url}
6733 (@pxref{uref,,@code{@@url}}) for live url's.)
6735 @item @@email@{@var{email-address}[, @var{displayed-text}]@}
6736 Indicate an electronic mail address.
6737 @xref{email,,@code{@@email}}.
6740 @item @@ctrl@{@var{ctrl-char}@}
6741 Use for an @sc{ascii} control character.@refill
6747 @subsection @code{@@code}@{@var{sample-code}@}
6750 @cindex Syntactic tokens, indicating
6751 Use the @code{@@code} command to indicate text that is a piece of a
6752 program and which consists of entire syntactic tokens. Enclose the
6755 @cindex Expressions in a program, indicating
6756 @cindex Keywords, indicating
6757 @cindex Reserved words, indicating
6758 Thus, you should use @code{@@code} for an expression in a program, for
6759 the name of a variable or function used in a program, or for a
6760 keyword in a programming language.
6762 Use @code{@@code} for command names in languages that resemble
6763 programming languages, such as Texinfo. For example, @code{@@code} and
6764 @code{@@samp} are produced by writing @samp{@@code@{@@@@code@}} and
6765 @samp{@@code@{@@@@samp@}} in the Texinfo source, respectively.
6767 @cindex Case, not altering in @code{@@code}
6768 It is incorrect to alter the case of a word inside an @code{@@code}
6769 command when it appears at the beginning of a sentence. Most computer
6770 languages are case sensitive. In C, for example, @code{Printf} is
6771 different from the identifier @code{printf}, and most likely is a
6772 misspelling of it. Even in languages which are not case sensitive, it
6773 is confusing to a human reader to see identifiers spelled in different
6774 ways. Pick one spelling and always use that. If you do not want to
6775 start a sentence with a command name written all in lower case, you
6776 should rearrange the sentence.
6778 In the printed manual, @code{@@code} causes @TeX{} to typeset the
6779 argument in a typewriter face. In the Info file, it causes the Info
6780 formatting commands to use single quotation marks around the text.
6786 The function returns @@code@{nil@}.
6790 produces this in the printed manual:
6793 The function returns @code{nil}.
6798 and this in the Info file:
6800 The function returns `nil'.
6804 Here are some cases for which it is preferable not to use @code{@@code}:
6808 For shell command names such as @command{ls} (use @code{@@command}).
6811 For shell options such as @samp{-c} when such options stand alone (use
6815 Also, an entire shell command often looks better if written using
6816 @code{@@samp} rather than @code{@@code}. In this case, the rule is to
6817 choose the more pleasing format.
6820 For environment variable such as @env{TEXINPUTS} (use @code{@@env}).
6823 For a string of characters shorter than a syntactic token. For example,
6824 if you are writing about @samp{goto-ch}, which is just a part of the
6825 name for the @code{goto-char} Emacs Lisp function, you should use
6829 In general, when writing about the characters used in a token; for
6830 example, do not use @code{@@code} when you are explaining what letters
6831 or printable symbols can be used in the names of functions. (Use
6832 @code{@@samp}.) Also, you should not use @code{@@code} to mark text
6833 that is considered input to programs unless the input is written in a
6834 language that is like a programming language. For example, you should
6835 not use @code{@@code} for the keystroke commands of GNU Emacs (use
6836 @code{@@kbd} instead) although you may use @code{@@code} for the names
6837 of the Emacs Lisp functions that the keystroke commands invoke.
6841 Since @code{@@command}, @code{@@option}, and @code{@@env} were
6842 introduced relatively recently, it is acceptable to use @code{@@code} or
6843 @code{@@samp} for command names, options, and environment variables.
6844 The new commands allow you to express the markup more precisely, but
6845 there is no real harm in using the older commands, and of course the
6846 long-standing manuals do so.
6850 @subsection @code{@@kbd}@{@var{keyboard-characters}@}
6852 @cindex Keyboard input
6854 Use the @code{@@kbd} command for characters of input to be typed by
6855 users. For example, to refer to the characters @kbd{M-a}, write:
6862 and to refer to the characters @kbd{M-x shell}, write:
6869 @cindex Slanted typewriter font, for @code{@@kbd}
6870 By default, the @code{@@kbd} command produces a different font
6871 (slanted typewriter instead of normal typewriter) in the printed
6872 manual, so users can distinguish the characters that they are supposed
6873 to type from those that the computer outputs.
6875 In Info output, @code{@@kbd} is usually the same as @code{@@code},
6876 producing `quotes' around its argument. However, in typewriter-like
6877 contexts such as the @code{@@example} environment (@pxref{example})
6878 and @code{@@code} command itself, the quotes are omitted, since Info
6879 format cannot use distinguishing fonts.
6881 @findex kbdinputstyle
6882 Since the usage of @code{@@kbd} varies from manual to manual, you can
6883 control the font switching with the @code{@@kbdinputstyle} command.
6884 This command has no effect on Info output. Write this command at the
6885 beginning of a line with a single word as an argument, one of the
6888 @vindex distinct@r{, value for @code{@@kbdinputstyle}}
6889 @vindex example@r{, value for @code{@@kbdinputstyle}}
6890 @vindex code@r{, value for @code{@@kbdinputstyle}}
6893 Always use the same font for @code{@@kbd} as @code{@@code}.
6895 Use the distinguishing font for @code{@@kbd} only in @code{@@example}
6896 and similar environments.
6898 (the default) Always use the distinguishing font for @code{@@kbd}.
6901 You can embed another @@-command inside the braces of an @code{@@kbd}
6902 command. Here, for example, is the way to describe a command that
6903 would be described more verbosely as ``press the @samp{r} key and then
6904 press the @key{RETURN} key'':
6907 @@kbd@{r @@key@{RET@}@}
6911 This produces: @kbd{r @key{RET}}. (The present manual accepts the
6912 default for @code{@@kbdinputstyle}.)
6914 You also use the @code{@@kbd} command if you are spelling out the letters
6915 you type; for example:
6918 To give the @@code@{logout@} command,
6919 type the characters @@kbd@{l o g o u t @@key@{RET@}@}.
6926 To give the @code{logout} command,
6927 type the characters @kbd{l o g o u t @key{RET}}.
6930 (Also, this example shows that you can add spaces for clarity. If you
6931 explicitly want to mention a space character as one of the characters of
6932 input, write @kbd{@@key@{SPC@}} for it.)@refill
6936 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
6937 @subsection @code{@@key}@{@var{key-name}@}
6940 Use the @code{@@key} command for the conventional name for a key on a
6941 keyboard, as in:@refill
6947 You can use the @code{@@key} command within the argument of an
6948 @code{@@kbd} command when the sequence of characters to be typed
6949 includes one or more keys that are described by name.@refill
6952 For example, to produce @kbd{C-x @key{ESC}} you would type:@refill
6955 @@kbd@{C-x @@key@{ESC@}@}
6958 Here is a list of the recommended names for keys:
6959 @cindex Recommended names for keys
6960 @cindex Keys, recommended names
6961 @cindex Names recommended for keys
6962 @cindex Abbreviations for keys
6971 Linefeed (however, since most keyboards nowadays do not have a Linefeed key,
6972 it might be better to call this character @kbd{C-j}.
6991 There are subtleties to handling words like `meta' or `ctrl' that are
6992 names of modifier keys. When mentioning a character in which the
6993 modifier key is used, such as @kbd{Meta-a}, use the @code{@@kbd} command
6994 alone; do not use the @code{@@key} command; but when you are referring
6995 to the modifier key in isolation, use the @code{@@key} command. For
6996 example, write @samp{@@kbd@{Meta-a@}} to produce @kbd{Meta-a} and
6997 @samp{@@key@{META@}} to produce @key{META}.
6999 @c I don't think this is a good explanation.
7000 @c I think it will puzzle readers more than it clarifies matters. -- rms.
7001 @c In other words, use @code{@@kbd} for what you do, and use @code{@@key}
7002 @c for what you talk about: ``Press @code{@@kbd@{M-a@}} to move point to
7003 @c the beginning of the sentence. The @code{@@key@{META@}} key is often in
7004 @c the lower left of the keyboard.''@refill
7007 @subsection @code{@@samp}@{@var{text}@}
7010 Use the @code{@@samp} command to indicate text that is a literal example
7011 or `sample' of a sequence of characters in a file, string, pattern, etc.
7012 Enclose the text in braces. The argument appears within single
7013 quotation marks in both the Info file and the printed manual; in
7014 addition, it is printed in a fixed-width font.@refill
7017 To match @@samp@{foo@} at the end of the line,
7018 use the regexp @@samp@{foo$@}.
7025 To match @samp{foo} at the end of the line, use the regexp
7029 Any time you are referring to single characters, you should use
7030 @code{@@samp} unless @code{@@kbd} or @code{@@key} is more appropriate.
7031 Also, you may use @code{@@samp} for entire statements in C and for entire
7032 shell commands---in this case, @code{@@samp} often looks better than
7033 @code{@@code}. Basically, @code{@@samp} is a catchall for whatever is
7034 not covered by @code{@@code}, @code{@@kbd}, or @code{@@key}.@refill
7036 Only include punctuation marks within braces if they are part of the
7037 string you are specifying. Write punctuation marks outside the braces
7038 if those punctuation marks are part of the English text that surrounds
7039 the string. In the following sentence, for example, the commas and
7040 period are outside of the braces:@refill
7044 In English, the vowels are @@samp@{a@}, @@samp@{e@},
7045 @@samp@{i@}, @@samp@{o@}, @@samp@{u@}, and sometimes
7054 In English, the vowels are @samp{a}, @samp{e},
7055 @samp{i}, @samp{o}, @samp{u}, and sometimes
7061 @subsection @code{@@verb}@{<char>@var{text}<char>@}
7063 @cindex Verbatim in-line text
7065 @cindex Delimiter character, for verbatim
7066 Use the @code{@@verb} command to print a verbatim sequence of
7069 Like @LaTeX{}'s @code{\verb} command, the verbatim text can be quoted using
7070 any unique delimiter character. Enclose the verbatim text, including the
7071 delimiters, in braces. Text is printed in a fixed-width font:
7074 How many @@verb@{|@@|@}-escapes does one need to print this
7075 @@verb@{.@@a @@b @@c.@} string or @@verb@{+@@'e@?`@!`@{@}\+@} this?
7082 How many @verb{|@|}-escapes does one need to print this
7083 @verb{.@a @b @c.} string or these @verb{+@'e?`{}!`\+} this?
7086 This is in contrast to @code{@@samp} (see the previous section),
7087 @code{@@code}, and similar commands; in those cases, the argument is
7088 normal Texinfo text, where the three characters @code{@@@{@}} are
7089 special. With @code{@@verb}, nothing is special except the delimiter
7090 character you choose.
7092 It is not reliable to use @code{@@verb} inside other Texinfo
7093 constructs. In particular, it does not work to use @code{@@verb} in
7094 anything related to cross-referencing, such as section titles or
7099 @subsection @code{@@var}@{@var{metasyntactic-variable}@}
7102 Use the @code{@@var} command to indicate metasyntactic variables. A
7103 @dfn{metasyntactic variable} is something that stands for another piece of
7104 text. For example, you should use a metasyntactic variable in the
7105 documentation of a function to describe the arguments that are passed
7106 to that function.@refill
7108 Do not use @code{@@var} for the names of particular variables in
7109 programming languages. These are specific names from a program, so
7110 @code{@@code} is correct for them (@pxref{code}). For example, the
7111 Emacs Lisp variable @code{texinfo-tex-command} is not a metasyntactic
7112 variable; it is properly formatted using @code{@@code}.
7114 Do not use @code{@@var} for environment variables either; @code{@@env}
7115 is correct for them (see the next section).
7117 The effect of @code{@@var} in the Info file is to change the case of the
7118 argument to all upper case. In the printed manual and HTML output, the
7119 argument is printed in slanted type.
7125 To delete file @@var@{filename@},
7126 type @@samp@{rm @@var@{filename@}@}.
7133 To delete file @var{filename}, type @samp{rm @var{filename}}.
7137 (Note that @code{@@var} may appear inside @code{@@code},
7138 @code{@@samp}, @code{@@file}, etc.)@refill
7140 Write a metasyntactic variable all in lower case without spaces, and
7141 use hyphens to make it more readable. Thus, the Texinfo source for
7142 the illustration of how to begin a Texinfo manual looks like
7148 @@@@setfilename @@var@{info-file-name@}
7149 @@@@settitle @@var@{name-of-manual@}
7159 @@setfilename @var{info-file-name}
7160 @@settitle @var{name-of-manual}
7164 In some documentation styles, metasyntactic variables are shown with
7165 angle brackets, for example:@refill
7168 @dots{}, type rm <filename>
7172 However, that is not the style that Texinfo uses. (You can, of
7173 course, modify the sources to @file{texinfo.tex} and the Info formatting commands
7174 to output the @code{<@dots{}>} format if you wish.)@refill
7178 @subsection @code{@@env}@{@var{environment-variable}@}
7181 Use the @code{@@env} command to indicate environment variables, as used
7182 by many operating systems, including GNU. Do not use it for
7183 metasyntactic variables; use @code{@@var} instead (see the previous
7186 @code{@@env} is equivalent to @code{@@code} in its effects.
7190 The @@env@{PATH@} environment variable @dots{}
7194 The @env{PATH} environment variable @dots{}
7199 @subsection @code{@@file}@{@var{file-name}@}
7202 Use the @code{@@file} command to indicate text that is the name of a
7203 file, buffer, or directory, or is the name of a node in Info. You can
7204 also use the command for file name suffixes. Do not use @code{@@file}
7205 for symbols in a programming language; use @code{@@code}.
7207 Currently, @code{@@file} is equivalent to @code{@@samp} in its effects.
7211 The @@file@{.el@} files are in
7212 the @@file@{/usr/local/emacs/lisp@} directory.
7219 The @file{.el} files are in
7220 the @file{/usr/local/emacs/lisp} directory.
7225 @subsection @code{@@command}@{@var{command-name}@}
7227 @cindex Command names, indicating
7228 @cindex Program names, indicating
7230 Use the @code{@@command} command to indicate command names, such as
7231 @command{ls} or @command{cc}.
7233 @code{@@command} is equivalent to @code{@@code} in its effects.
7237 The command @@command@{ls@} lists directory contents.
7241 The command @command{ls} lists directory contents.
7244 You should write the name of a program in the ordinary text font, rather
7245 than using @code{@@command}, if you regard it as a new English word,
7246 such as `Emacs' or `Bison'.
7248 When writing an entire shell command invocation, as in @samp{ls -l},
7249 you should use either @code{@@samp} or @code{@@code} at your discretion.
7253 @subsection @code{@@option}@{@var{option-name}@}
7256 Use the @code{@@option} command to indicate a command-line option; for
7257 example, @option{-l} or @option{--version} or
7258 @option{--output=@var{filename}}.
7260 @code{@@option} is equivalent to @code{@@samp} in its effects.
7264 The option @@option@{-l@} produces a long listing.
7268 The option @option{-l} produces a long listing.
7271 In tables, putting options inside @code{@@code} produces a
7272 more pleasing effect.
7275 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
7276 @subsection @code{@@dfn}@{@var{term}@}
7279 Use the @code{@@dfn} command to identify the introductory or defining
7280 use of a technical term. Use the command only in passages whose
7281 purpose is to introduce a term which will be used again or which the
7282 reader ought to know. Mere passing mention of a term for the first
7283 time does not deserve @code{@@dfn}. The command generates italics in
7284 the printed manual, and double quotation marks in the Info file. For
7288 Getting rid of a file is called @@dfn@{deleting@} it.
7295 Getting rid of a file is called @dfn{deleting} it.
7298 As a general rule, a sentence containing the defining occurrence of a
7299 term should be a definition of the term. The sentence does not need
7300 to say explicitly that it is a definition, but it should contain the
7301 information of a definition---it should make the meaning clear.
7304 @subsection @code{@@cite}@{@var{reference}@}
7307 Use the @code{@@cite} command for the name of a book that lacks a
7308 companion Info file. The command produces italics in the printed
7309 manual, and quotation marks in the Info file.
7311 If a book is written in Texinfo, it is better to use a cross reference
7312 command since a reader can easily follow such a reference in Info.
7313 @xref{xref, , @code{@@xref}}.
7317 @c node ctrl, , cite, Indicating
7318 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
7319 @c subsection @code{@@ctrl}@{@var{ctrl-char}@}
7322 The @code{@@ctrl} command is seldom used. It describes an @sc{ascii}
7323 control character by inserting the actual character into the Info
7326 Usually, in Texinfo, you talk what you type as keyboard entry by
7327 describing it with @code{@@kbd}: thus, @samp{@@kbd@{C-a@}} for
7328 @kbd{C-a}. Use @code{@@kbd} in this way when talking about a control
7329 character that is typed on the keyboard by the user. When talking
7330 about a control character appearing in a file or a string, do not use
7331 @code{@@kbd} since the control character is not typed. Also, do not
7332 use @samp{C-} but spell out @code{control-}, as in @samp{control-a},
7333 to make it easier for a reader to understand.@refill
7335 @code{@@ctrl} is an idea from the beginnings of Texinfo which may not
7336 really fit in to the scheme of things. But there may be times when
7337 you want to use the command. The pattern is
7338 @code{@@ctrl@{@var{ch}@}}, where @var{ch} is an @sc{ascii} character
7339 whose control-equivalent is wanted. For example, to specify
7340 @samp{control-f}, you would enter@refill
7353 In the Info file, this generates the specified control character, output
7354 literally into the file. This is done so a user can copy the specified
7355 control character (along with whatever else he or she wants) into another
7356 Emacs buffer and use it. Since the `control-h',`control-i', and
7357 `control-j' characters are formatting characters, they should not be
7358 indicated with @code{@@ctrl}.@refill
7360 In a printed manual, @code{@@ctrl} generates text to describe or
7361 identify that control character: an uparrow followed by the character
7367 @subsection @code{@@abbr}@{@var{abbreviation}[, @var{meaning}]@}
7370 @cindex Abbreviations, tagging
7371 You can use the @code{@@abbr} command for general abbreviations. The
7372 abbreviation is given as the single argument in braces, as in
7373 @samp{@@abbr@{Comput.@}}. As a matter of style, or for particular
7374 abbreviations, you may prefer to omit periods, as in
7375 @samp{@@abbr@{Mr@} Stallman}.
7377 @code{@@abbr} accepts an optional second argument, intended to be used
7378 for the meaning of the abbreviation.
7380 If the abbreviation ends with a lowercase letter and a period, and is
7381 not at the end of a sentence, and has no second argument, remember to
7382 use the @code{@@.} command (@pxref{Not Ending a
7383 Sentence}) to get the correct spacing. However, you do not have to
7384 use @code{@@.} within the abbreviation itself; Texinfo automatically
7385 assumes periods within the abbreivation do not end a sentence.
7388 In @TeX{} and in the Info output, the first argument is printed as-is;
7389 if the second argument is present, it is printed in parentheses after
7390 the abbreviation. In HTML and XML, the @code{<abbr>} tag is
7391 used; in Docbook, the @code{<abbrev>} tag is used. For instance:
7394 @@abbr@{Comput. J., Computer Journal@}
7400 @abbr{Comput. J., Computer Journal}
7403 For abbreviations consisting of all capital letters, you may prefer to
7404 use the @code{@@acronym} command instead. See the next section for
7405 more on the usage of these two commands.
7409 @subsection @code{@@acronym}@{@var{acronym}[, @var{meaning}]@}
7412 @cindex NASA, as acronym
7413 @cindex Acronyms, tagging
7414 Use the @code{@@acronym} command for abbreviations written in all
7415 capital letters, such as `@acronym{NASA}'. The abbreviation is given as
7416 the single argument in braces, as in @samp{@@acronym@{NASA@}}. As
7417 a matter of style, or for particular acronyms, you may prefer to
7418 use periods, as in @samp{@@acronym@{N.A.S.A.@}}.
7420 @code{@@acronym} accepts an optional second argument, intended to be
7421 used for the meaning of the acronym.
7423 If the acronym is at the end of a sentence, and if there is no second
7424 argument, remember to use the @code{@@.} or similar command
7425 (@pxref{Ending a Sentence}) to get the correct spacing.
7427 @cindex <acronym> tag
7428 In @TeX{}, the acronym is printed in slightly smaller font. In the
7429 Info output, the argument is printed as-is. In either format, if the
7430 second argument is present, it is printed in parentheses after the
7431 acronym. In HTML, Docbook, and XML, the @code{<acronym>} tag is
7434 For instance (since GNU is a recursive acronym, we use
7435 @code{@@acronym} recursively):
7438 @@acronym@{GNU, @@acronym@{GNU@}'s Not Unix@}
7444 @acronym{GNU, @acronym{GNU}'s Not Unix}
7447 In some circumstances, it is conventional to print family names in all
7448 capitals. Don't use @code{@@acronym} for this, since a name is not an
7449 acronym. Use @code{@@sc} instead (@pxref{Smallcaps}).
7451 @code{@@abbr} and @code{@@acronym} are closely related commands: they
7452 both signal to the reader that a shortened form is being used, and
7453 possibly give a meaning. When choosing whether to use these two
7454 commands, please bear the following in mind.
7458 In standard English usage, acronyms are a subset of abbreviations:
7459 they include pronounceable words like `@acronym{NATO}', `radar', and
7460 `snafu', and some sources also include syllable acronyms like
7461 `Usenet', hybrids like `@acronym{SIGGRAPH}', and unpronounceable
7462 initialisms like `@acronym{FBI}'.
7465 In Texinfo, an acronym (but not an abbreviation) should consist only
7466 of capital letters and periods, no lowercase.
7469 In @TeX{}, an acronym (but not an abbreviation) is printed in a
7470 slightly smaller font.
7473 Some browsers place a dotted bottom border under abbreviations but not
7477 It's not essential to use these commands for all abbreviations. Text
7478 is perfectly readable without them, and for common abbreviations like
7479 `etc.@:', we consider them to be overkill.
7485 @subsection @code{@@indicateurl}@{@var{uniform-resource-locator}@}
7487 @cindex Uniform resource locator, indicating
7488 @cindex URL, indicating
7490 Use the @code{@@indicateurl} command to indicate a uniform resource
7491 locator on the World Wide Web. This is analogous to @code{@@file},
7492 @code{@@var}, etc., and is purely for markup purposes. It does not
7493 produce a link you can follow in HTML output (use the @code{@@uref}
7494 command for that, @pxref{uref,, @code{@@uref}}). It is useful for
7495 url's which do not actually exist. For example:
7498 For example, the url might be @@indicateurl@{http://example.org/path@}.
7501 @noindent which produces:
7504 For example, the url might be @indicateurl{http://example.org/path}.
7509 @subsection @code{@@email}@{@var{email-address}[, @var{displayed-text}]@}
7512 Use the @code{@@email} command to indicate an electronic mail address.
7513 It takes one mandatory argument, the address, and one optional argument, the
7514 text to display (the default is the address itself).
7517 In Info, the address is shown in angle brackets, preceded by the text
7518 to display if any. In @TeX{}, the angle brackets are omitted. In
7519 HTML output, @code{@@email} produces a @samp{mailto} link that usually
7520 brings up a mail composition window. For example:
7523 Send bug reports to @@email@{bug-texinfo@@@@gnu.org@},
7524 suggestions to the @@email@{bug-texinfo@@@@gnu.org, same place@}.
7528 Send bug reports to @email{bug-texinfo@@gnu.org},
7529 suggestions to the @email{bug-texinfo@@gnu.org, same place}.
7534 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
7535 @section Emphasizing Text
7536 @cindex Emphasizing text
7538 Usually, Texinfo changes the font to mark words in the text according to
7539 what category the words belong to; an example is the @code{@@code} command.
7540 Most often, this is the best way to mark words.
7541 However, sometimes you will want to emphasize text without indicating a
7542 category. Texinfo has two commands to do this. Also, Texinfo has
7543 several commands that specify the font in which @TeX{} will typeset
7544 text. These commands have no effect on Info and only one of them,
7545 the @code{@@r} command, has any regular use.@refill
7548 * emph & strong:: How to emphasize text in Texinfo.
7549 * Smallcaps:: How to use the small caps font.
7550 * Fonts:: Various font commands for printed output.
7554 @subsection @code{@@emph}@{@var{text}@} and @code{@@strong}@{@var{text}@}
7555 @cindex Emphasizing text, font for
7559 The @code{@@emph} and @code{@@strong} commands are for emphasis;
7560 @code{@@strong} is stronger. In printed output, @code{@@emph} produces
7561 @emph{italics} and @code{@@strong} produces @strong{bold}.
7567 @@strong@{Caution:@} @@samp@{rm * .[^.]*@}
7568 removes @@emph@{all@} files in the directory.
7573 produces the following in printed output and HTML:
7576 @strong{Caution}: @samp{rm * .[^.]*}
7577 removes @emph{all} files in the directory.
7581 and the following in Info:
7584 *Caution:* `rm * .[^.]*' removes _all_
7585 files in the directory.
7588 The @code{@@strong} command is seldom used except to mark what is, in
7589 effect, a typographical element, such as the word `Caution' in the
7592 In the Info output, @code{@@emph} surrounds the text with underscores
7593 (@samp{_}), and @code{@@strong} puts asterisks around the text.
7596 Do not use @code{@@strong} with the word @samp{Note}; Info will
7597 mistake the combination for a cross reference. (It's usually
7598 redundant, anyway.) Use a phrase such as @strong{Please notice} or
7599 @strong{Caution} instead, or the optional argument to
7600 @code{@@quotation}---@samp{Note} is allowable there.
7605 @subsection @code{@@sc}@{@var{text}@}: The Small Caps Font
7606 @cindex Small caps font
7607 @findex sc @r{(small caps font)}
7609 Use the @samp{@@sc} command to set text in @sc{a small caps font}
7610 (where possible). Write the text you want to be in small caps between
7611 braces in lower case, like this:
7614 Richard @@sc@{Stallman@} founded @@acronym@{GNU@}.
7621 Richard @sc{Stallman} founded @acronym{GNU}.
7624 As shown here, we recommend using @code{@@acronym} for actual
7625 acronyms (@pxref{acronym}), and reserving @code{@@sc} for special
7626 cases where you want small caps. The output is not the same
7627 (@code{@@acronym} prints in a smaller text font, not the small caps
7628 font), but more importantly it describes the actual text more
7631 Family names are one case where small capitals are sometimes desirable,
7635 @TeX{} typesets any uppercase letters between the braces of an
7636 @code{@@sc} command in full-size capitals; only lowercase letters are
7637 printed in the small caps font. In the Info output, the argument to
7638 @code{@@sc} is printed in all upper case. In HTML, the argument is
7639 uppercased and the output marked with the @code{<small>} tag to reduce
7642 Since it's redundant to mark all-uppercase text with @code{@@sc},
7643 @command{makeinfo} warns about such usage.
7645 We recommend using regular mixed case wherever possible.
7649 @subsection Fonts for Printing, Not Info
7650 @cindex Fonts for printing, not Info
7652 Texinfo provides a number of font commands that specify font changes
7653 in the printed manual and (where possible) in the HTML output, but
7654 have no effect in the Info file. All the commands apply to an
7655 argument that follows, surrounded by braces.
7659 @findex b @r{(bold font)}
7661 selects @b{bold} face;
7664 @findex i @r{(italic font)}
7666 selects an @i{italic} font;
7669 @findex r @r{(roman font)}
7671 @cindex Default font
7672 selects a @r{roman} font, which is the usual font in which text is
7673 printed. It may or may not be seriffed.
7676 @findex sansserif @r{(sans serif font)}
7677 @cindex Sans serif font
7678 selects a @sansserif{sans serif} font;
7681 @findex slanted @r{(slanted font)}
7682 @cindex Slanted font
7683 @cindex Oblique font
7684 rselects a @slanted{slanted} font;
7687 @findex t @r{(typewriter font)}
7688 @cindex Monospace font
7689 @cindex Fixed-width font
7690 @cindex Typewriter font
7691 selects the @t{fixed-width}, typewriter-style font used by @code{@@code};
7695 (The commands with longer names were invented much later than the
7696 others, when it did not seem desirable to use very short names for
7697 such an infrequently needed feature.)
7699 @cindex <lineannotation> Docbook tag
7700 Only the @code{@@r} command has much use: in example-like
7701 environments, you can use the @code{@@r} command to write comments in
7702 the standard roman font instead of the fixed-width font. This looks
7703 better in printed output, and produces a @code{<lineannotation>} tag
7711 (+ 2 2) ; @@r@{Add two plus two.@}
7720 (+ 2 2) ; @r{Add two plus two.}
7723 In general, you should avoid using the other font commands. Some of
7724 them are only useful when documenting functionality with specific font
7725 effects, such as in \TeX\ and related packages.
7728 @node Quotations and Examples
7729 @chapter Quotations and Examples
7731 Quotations and examples are blocks of text consisting of one or more
7732 whole paragraphs that are set off from the bulk of the text and
7733 treated differently. They are usually indented in the output.
7736 In Texinfo, you always begin a quotation or example by writing an
7737 @@-command at the beginning of a line by itself, and end it by writing
7738 an @code{@@end} command that is also at the beginning of a line by
7739 itself. For instance, you begin an example by writing @code{@@example}
7740 by itself at the beginning of a line and end the example by writing
7741 @code{@@end example} on a line by itself, at the beginning of that
7742 line, and with only one space between the @code{@@end} and the
7746 * Block Enclosing Commands:: Different constructs for different purposes.
7747 * quotation:: Writing a quotation.
7748 * example:: Writing an example in a fixed-width font.
7749 * verbatim:: Writing a verbatim example.
7750 * verbatiminclude:: Including a file verbatim.
7751 * lisp:: Illustrating Lisp code.
7752 * small:: Examples in a smaller font.
7753 * display:: Writing an example in the current font.
7754 * format:: Writing an example without narrowed margins.
7755 * exdent:: Undo indentation on a line.
7756 * flushleft & flushright:: Pushing text flush left or flush right.
7757 * noindent:: Preventing paragraph indentation.
7758 * indent:: Forcing paragraph indentation.
7759 * cartouche:: Drawing rounded rectangles around examples.
7763 @node Block Enclosing Commands
7764 @section Block Enclosing Commands
7766 Here are commands for quotations and examples, explained further in the
7771 Indicate text that is quoted. The text is filled, indented (from both
7772 margins), and printed in a roman font by default.
7775 Illustrate code, commands, and the like. The text is printed
7776 in a fixed-width font, and indented but not filled.
7779 Mark a piece of text that is to be printed verbatim; no character
7780 substitutions are made and all commands are ignored, until the next
7781 @code{@@end verbatim}. The text is printed in a fixed-width font,
7782 and not indented or filled. Extra spaces and blank lines are
7783 significant, and tabs are expanded.
7785 @item @@smallexample
7786 Same as @code{@@example}, except that in @TeX{} this command typesets
7787 text in a smaller font.
7790 Like @code{@@example}, but specifically for illustrating Lisp code. The
7791 text is printed in a fixed-width font, and indented but not filled.
7794 Is to @code{@@lisp} as @code{@@smallexample} is to @code{@@example}.
7797 Display illustrative text. The text is indented but not filled, and
7798 no font is selected (so, by default, the font is roman).@refill
7800 @item @@smalldisplay
7801 Is to @code{@@display} as @code{@@smallexample} is to @code{@@example}.
7804 Like @code{@@display} (the text is not filled and no font is selected),
7805 but the text is not indented.
7808 Is to @code{@@format} as @code{@@smallexample} is to @code{@@example}.
7811 The @code{@@exdent} command is used within the above constructs to
7812 undo the indentation of a line.
7814 The @code{@@flushleft} and @code{@@flushright} commands are used to line
7815 up the left or right margins of unfilled text.@refill
7817 The @code{@@noindent} command may be used after one of the above
7818 constructs to prevent the following text from being indented as a new
7821 You can use the @code{@@cartouche} environment around one of the above
7822 constructs to highlight the example or quotation by drawing a box with
7823 rounded corners around it. @xref{cartouche, , Drawing Cartouches Around
7828 @section @code{@@quotation}: Block quotations
7832 The text of a quotation is processed normally (regular font, text is
7833 filled) except that:
7837 the margins are closer to the center of the page, so the whole of the
7838 quotation is indented;
7841 and the first lines of paragraphs are indented no more than other lines.
7846 This is an example of text written between an @code{@@quotation}
7847 command and an @code{@@end quotation} command. An @code{@@quotation}
7848 command is most often used to indicate text that is excerpted from
7849 another (real or hypothetical) printed work.
7852 Write an @code{@@quotation} command as text on a line by itself. This
7853 line will disappear from the output. Mark the end of the quotation
7854 with a line beginning with and containing only @code{@@end quotation}.
7855 The @code{@@end quotation} line will likewise disappear from the
7858 @code{@@quotation} takes one optional argument, given on the remainder
7859 of the line. This text, if present, is included at the beginning of
7860 the quotation in bold or otherwise emphasized, and followed with a
7861 @samp{:}. For example:
7878 If the @code{@@quotation} argument is exactly one of these words:
7881 Caution Important Note Tip Warning
7884 @cindex <note> Docbook tag
7885 @cindex <blockquote> HTML tag
7886 @noindent then the Docbook output uses corresponding special tags
7887 (@code{<note>}, etc.) instead of the default @code{<blockquote>}.
7888 HTML output always uses @code{<blockquote>}.
7892 @section @code{@@example}: Example Text
7893 @cindex Examples, formatting them
7894 @cindex Formatting examples
7897 The @code{@@example} environment is used to indicate an example that
7898 is not part of the running text, such as computer input or output.
7899 Write an @code{@@example} command at the beginning of a line by
7900 itself. Mark the end of the example with an @code{@@end example}
7901 command, also written at the beginning of a line by itself.
7903 An @code{@@example} environment has the following characteristics:
7906 @item Each line in the input file is a line in the output; that is,
7907 the source text is not filled as it normally is.
7908 @item Extra spaces and blank lines are significant.
7909 @item The output is indented.
7910 @item The output uses a fixed-width font.
7911 @item Texinfo commands @emph{are} expanded; if you want the output to
7912 be the input verbatim, use the @code{@@verbatim} environment instead
7913 (@pxref{verbatim,,@code{@@verbatim}}).
7920 cp foo @@var@{dest1@}; \
7921 cp foo @@var@{dest2@}
7929 cp foo @var{dest1}; \
7933 The lines containing @code{@@example} and @code{@@end example} will
7934 disappear from the output. To make the output look good, you should
7935 put a blank line before the @code{@@example} and another blank line
7936 after the @code{@@end example}. Blank lines inside the beginning
7937 @code{@@example} and the ending @code{@@end example}, on the other
7938 hand, do appear in the output.
7941 Do not use tabs in the lines of an example! (Or anywhere else in
7942 Texinfo, except in verbatim environments.) @TeX{} treats tabs as
7943 single spaces, and that is not what they look like. In Emacs, you can
7944 use @kbd{M-x untabify} to convert tabs in a region to multiple spaces.
7947 Examples are often, logically speaking, ``in the middle'' of a
7948 paragraph, and the text that continues afterwards should not be
7949 indented, as in the example above. The @code{@@noindent} command
7950 prevents a piece of text from being indented as if it were a new
7951 paragraph (@pxref{noindent,,@code{@@noindent}}.
7953 If you want to embed code fragments within sentences, instead of
7954 displaying them, use the @code{@@code} command or its relatives
7955 (@pxref{code,,@code{@@code}}).
7957 If you wish to write a ``comment'' on a line of an example in the
7958 normal roman font, you can use the @code{@@r} command (@pxref{Fonts}).
7962 @section @code{@@verbatim}: Literal Text
7964 @cindex Verbatim environment
7966 Use the @code{@@verbatim} environment for printing of text that may
7967 contain special characters or commands that should not be interpreted,
7968 such as computer input or output (@code{@@example} interprets its text
7969 as regular Texinfo commands). This is especially useful for including
7970 automatically generated output in a Texinfo manual. Here is an example;
7971 the output you see is just the same as the input, with a line
7972 @code{@@verbatim} before and a line @code{@@end verbatim} after.
7975 This is an example of text written in a @verbatim
7976 block. No character substitutions are made. All commands
7977 are ignored, until `<at>end verbatim'.
7979 In the printed manual, the text is typeset in a
7980 fixed-width font, and not indented or filled. All
7981 spaces and blank lines are significant, including tabs.
7984 Write a @code{@@verbatim} command at the beginning of a line by itself.
7985 This line will disappear from the output. Mark the end of the verbatim
7986 block with a @code{@@end verbatim} command, also written at the
7987 beginning of a line by itself. The @code{@@end verbatim} will also
7988 disappear from the output.
7991 @c oops, got to trick this a bit: can't use @end verbatim inside @verbatim
7994 @exdent @t{@@verbatim}
7996 @exdent @key{TAB}@t{@@command with strange characters: @@'e}
7997 @exdent @t{expand@key{TAB}me}
7999 @exdent @t{@@end verbatim}
8007 @command with strange characters: @'e
8012 Since the lines containing @code{@@verbatim} and @code{@@end verbatim}
8013 produce no output, typically you should put a blank line before the
8014 @code{@@verbatim} and another blank line after the @code{@@end
8015 verbatim}. Blank lines between the beginning @code{@@verbatim} and
8016 the ending @code{@@end verbatim} will appear in the output.
8018 It is not reliable to use @code{@@verbatim} inside other Texinfo constructs.
8021 @node verbatiminclude
8022 @section @code{@@verbatiminclude} @var{file}: Include a File Verbatim
8023 @cindex Verbatim, include file
8024 @cindex Including a file verbatim
8025 @findex verbatiminclude
8027 You can include the exact contents of a file in the document with the
8028 @code{@@verbatiminclude} command:
8031 @@verbatiminclude @var{filename}
8034 The contents of @var{filename} is printed in a verbatim environment
8035 (@pxref{verbatim,,@code{@@verbatim}}). Generally, the file is printed
8036 exactly as it is, with all special characters and white space
8037 retained. No indentation is added; if you want indentation, enclose
8038 the @code{@@verbatiminclude} within @code{@@example}
8039 (@pxref{example,,@code{@@example}}).
8041 The name of the file is taken literally, with a single exception:
8042 @code{@@value@{@var{var}@}} references are expanded. This makes it
8043 possible to reliably include files in other directories in a
8044 distribution, for instance:
8047 @@include @@value@{top_srcdir@}/NEWS
8050 @noindent (You still have to get @code{top_srcdir} defined in the
8055 @section @code{@@lisp}: Marking a Lisp Example
8057 @cindex Lisp example
8059 The @code{@@lisp} command is used for Lisp code. It is synonymous
8060 with the @code{@@example} command.
8063 This is an example of text written between an
8064 @code{@@lisp} command and an @code{@@end lisp} command.
8067 Use @code{@@lisp} instead of @code{@@example} to preserve information
8068 regarding the nature of the example. This is useful, for example, if
8069 you write a function that evaluates only and all the Lisp code in a
8070 Texinfo file. Then you can use the Texinfo file as a Lisp
8071 library.@footnote{It would be straightforward to extend Texinfo to work
8072 in a similar fashion for C, Fortran, or other languages.}
8074 Mark the end of @code{@@lisp} with @code{@@end lisp} on a line by
8079 @section @code{@@small@dots{}} Block Commands
8080 @cindex Small examples
8081 @cindex Examples in smaller fonts
8082 @cindex Lisp examples in smaller fonts
8083 @findex smalldisplay
8084 @findex smallexample
8088 In addition to the regular @code{@@example} and @code{@@lisp} commands,
8089 Texinfo has ``small'' example-style commands. These are
8090 @code{@@smalldisplay}, @code{@@smallexample}, @code{@@smallformat}, and
8093 In Info, the @code{@@small@dots{}} commands are equivalent to their
8094 non-small companion commands.
8096 In @TeX{}, however, the @code{@@small@dots{}} commands typeset text in
8097 a smaller font than the non-small example commands. Consequently,
8098 many examples containing long lines fit on a page without needing to
8101 Mark the end of an @code{@@small@dots{}} block with a corresponding
8102 @code{@@end small@dots{}}. For example, pair @code{@@smallexample} with
8103 @code{@@end smallexample}.
8105 Here is an example of the font used by the @code{@@small@dots{}}
8106 commands (in Info, the output will be the same as usual):
8109 @dots{} to make sure that you have the freedom to
8110 distribute copies of free software (and charge for
8111 this service if you wish), that you receive source
8112 code or can get it if you want it, that you can
8113 change the software or use pieces of it in new free
8114 programs; and that you know you can do these things.
8117 The @code{@@small@dots{}} commands make it easier to prepare manuals
8118 without forcing you to edit examples by hand to fit them onto narrower
8121 As a general rule, a printed document looks much better if you use
8122 only one of (for instance) @code{@@example} or @code{@@smallexample}
8123 consistently within a chapter.
8127 @section @code{@@display} and @code{@@smalldisplay}
8128 @cindex Display formatting
8131 The @code{@@display} command begins a kind of example, where each line
8132 of input produces a line of output, and the output is indented. It is
8133 thus like the @code{@@example} command except that, in a printed
8134 manual, @code{@@display} does not select the fixed-width font. In
8135 fact, it does not specify the font at all, so that the text appears in
8136 the same font it would have appeared in without the @code{@@display}
8140 This is an example of text written between an @code{@@display} command
8141 and an @code{@@end display} command. The @code{@@display} command
8142 indents the text, but does not fill it.
8145 @findex smalldisplay
8146 Texinfo also provides a command @code{@@smalldisplay}, which is like
8147 @code{@@display} but uses a smaller font in @code{@@smallbook} format.
8150 The @code{@@table} command (@pxref{table}) does not work inside
8151 @code{@@display}. Since @code{@@display} is line-oriented, it doesn't
8152 make sense to use them together. If you want to indent a table, try
8153 @code{@@quotation} (@pxref{quotation}).
8157 @section @code{@@format} and @code{@@smallformat}
8160 The @code{@@format} command is similar to @code{@@example} except
8161 that, in the printed manual, @code{@@format} does not select the
8162 fixed-width font and does not narrow the margins.@refill
8165 This is an example of text written between an @code{@@format} command
8166 and an @code{@@end format} command. As you can see
8168 the @code{@@format} command does not fill the text.
8172 Texinfo also provides a command @code{@@smallformat}, which is like
8173 @code{@@format} but uses a smaller font in @code{@@smallbook} format.
8179 @section @code{@@exdent}: Undoing a Line's Indentation
8180 @cindex Indentation undoing
8183 The @code{@@exdent} command removes any indentation a line might have.
8184 The command is written at the beginning of a line and applies only to
8185 the text that follows the command that is on the same line. Do not use
8186 braces around the text. In a printed manual, the text on an
8187 @code{@@exdent} line is printed in the roman font.@refill
8189 @code{@@exdent} is usually used within examples. Thus,@refill
8194 This line follows an @@@@example command.
8195 @@exdent This line is exdented.
8196 This line follows the exdented line.
8197 The @@@@end example comes on the next line.
8207 This line follows an @@example command.
8208 @exdent This line is exdented.
8209 This line follows the exdented line.
8210 The @@end example comes on the next line.
8214 In practice, the @code{@@exdent} command is rarely used.
8215 Usually, you un-indent text by ending the example and
8216 returning the page to its normal width.@refill
8219 @node flushleft & flushright
8220 @section @code{@@flushleft} and @code{@@flushright}
8223 @cindex Ragged right
8226 The @code{@@flushleft} and @code{@@flushright} commands line up the
8227 ends of lines on the left and right margins of a page,
8228 but do not fill the text. The commands are written on lines of their
8229 own, without braces. The @code{@@flushleft} and @code{@@flushright}
8230 commands are ended by @code{@@end flushleft} and @code{@@end
8231 flushright} commands on lines of their own.@refill
8256 @code{@@flushright} produces the type of indentation often used in the
8257 return address of letters. For example,
8262 Here is an example of text written
8263 flushright. The @@code@{@@flushright@} command
8264 right justifies every line but leaves the
8274 Here is an example of text written
8275 flushright. The @code{@@flushright} command
8276 right justifies every line but leaves the
8282 @section @code{@@noindent}: Omitting Indentation
8283 @cindex Omitting indentation
8284 @cindex Suppressing indentation
8285 @cindex Indentation, omitting
8288 An example or other inclusion can break a paragraph into segments.
8289 Ordinarily, the formatters indent text that follows an example as a new
8290 paragraph. You can prevent this on a case-by-case basis by writing
8291 @code{@@noindent} at the beginning of a line, preceding the continuation
8292 text. You can also disable indentation for all paragraphs globally with
8293 @code{@@paragraphindent} (@pxref{paragraphindent, Paragraph Indenting}).
8295 It is best to write @code{@@noindent} on a line by itself, since in most
8296 environments, spaces following the command will not be ignored. It's ok
8297 to use it at the beginning of a line, with text following, outside of
8310 This line is not indented. As you can see, the
8311 beginning of the line is fully flush left with the line
8312 that follows after it. (This whole example is between
8313 @@code@{@@@@display@} and @@code@{@@@@end display@}.)
8326 This line is not indented. As you can see, the
8327 beginning of the line is fully flush left with the line
8328 that follows after it. (This whole example is between
8329 @code{@@display} and @code{@@end display}.)
8333 To adjust the number of blank lines properly in the Info file output,
8334 remember that the line containing @code{@@noindent} does not generate a
8335 blank line, and neither does the @code{@@end example} line.
8337 In the Texinfo source file for this manual, each line that says
8338 `produces' is preceded by @code{@@noindent}.
8340 Do not put braces after an @code{@@noindent} command; they are not
8341 necessary, since @code{@@noindent} is a command used outside of
8342 paragraphs (@pxref{Command Syntax}).
8346 @section @code{@@indent}: Forcing Indentation
8347 @cindex Forcing indentation
8348 @cindex Inserting indentation
8349 @cindex Indentation, forcing
8353 To complement the @code{@@noindent} command (see the previous
8354 section), Texinfo provides the @code{@@indent} command that forces a
8355 paragraph to be indented. This paragraph, for instance, is indented
8356 using an @code{@@indent} command. The first paragraph of a section is
8357 the most likely place to use @code{@@indent}, to override the normal
8358 behavior of no indentation there (@pxref{paragraphindent}).
8360 It is best to write @code{@@indent} on a line by itself, since in most
8361 environments, spaces following the command will not be ignored. The
8362 @code{@@indent} line will not generate a blank line in the Info output
8363 within an environment.
8365 However, it is ok to use it at the beginning of a line, with text
8366 following, outside of any environment.
8368 Do not put braces after an @code{@@indent} command; they are not
8369 necessary, since @code{@@indent} is a command used outside of
8370 paragraphs (@pxref{Command Syntax}).
8374 @section @code{@@cartouche}: Rounded Rectangles Around Examples
8376 @cindex Box with rounded corners
8377 @cindex Rounded rectangles, around examples
8379 In a printed manual, the @code{@@cartouche} command draws a box with
8380 rounded corners around its contents. In HTML, a normal rectangle is
8381 drawn (that's the best HTML can do). @code{@@cartouche} has no effect
8384 You can use this command to further highlight an example or quotation.
8385 For instance, you could write a manual in which one type of example is
8386 surrounded by a cartouche for emphasis.
8394 /usr/local/share/emacs
8400 surrounds the two-line example with a box with rounded corners, in the
8403 The output from the example looks like this (if you're reading this in
8404 Info, you'll see the @code{@@cartouche} had no effect):
8413 For proper output in HTML, it's necessary to put the
8414 @code{@@cartouche} around the @code{@@example}, and not the other way
8415 around. This limitation of @command{makeinfo} may be removed one day.
8417 @code{@@cartouche} also implies @code{@@group} (@pxref{group}).
8419 @node Lists and Tables
8420 @chapter Lists and Tables
8421 @cindex Making lists and tables
8422 @cindex Lists and tables, making
8423 @cindex Tables and lists, making
8425 Texinfo has several ways of making lists and tables. Lists can be
8426 bulleted or numbered; two-column tables can highlight the items in
8427 the first column; multi-column tables are also supported.
8430 * Introducing Lists:: Texinfo formats lists for you.
8431 * itemize:: How to construct a simple list.
8432 * enumerate:: How to construct a numbered list.
8433 * Two-column Tables:: How to construct a two-column table.
8434 * Multi-column Tables:: How to construct generalized tables.
8437 @node Introducing Lists
8438 @section Introducing Lists
8440 Texinfo automatically indents the text in lists or tables, and numbers
8441 an enumerated list. This last feature is useful if you modify the
8442 list, since you do not need to renumber it yourself.@refill
8444 Numbered lists and tables begin with the appropriate @@-command at the
8445 beginning of a line, and end with the corresponding @code{@@end}
8446 command on a line by itself. The table and itemized-list commands
8447 also require that you write formatting information on the same line as
8448 the beginning @@-command.@refill
8450 Begin an enumerated list, for example, with an @code{@@enumerate}
8451 command and end the list with an @code{@@end enumerate} command.
8452 Begin an itemized list with an @code{@@itemize} command, followed on
8453 the same line by a formatting command such as @code{@@bullet}, and end
8454 the list with an @code{@@end itemize} command.@refill
8457 Precede each element of a list with an @code{@@item} or @code{@@itemx}
8462 Here is an itemized list of the different kinds of table and lists:@refill
8466 Itemized lists with and without bullets.
8469 Enumerated lists, using numbers or letters.
8472 Two-column tables with highlighting.
8477 Here is an enumerated list with the same items:@refill
8481 Itemized lists with and without bullets.
8484 Enumerated lists, using numbers or letters.
8487 Two-column tables with highlighting.
8492 And here is a two-column table with the same items and their
8493 @w{@@-commands}:@refill
8497 Itemized lists with and without bullets.
8500 Enumerated lists, using numbers or letters.
8505 Two-column tables, optionally with indexing.
8510 @section @code{@@itemize}: Making an Itemized List
8514 The @code{@@itemize} command produces sequences of indented
8515 paragraphs, with a bullet or other mark inside the left margin
8516 at the beginning of each paragraph for which such a mark is desired.@refill
8518 @cindex @code{@@w}, for blank items
8519 Begin an itemized list by writing @code{@@itemize} at the beginning of
8520 a line. Follow the command, on the same line, with a character or a
8521 Texinfo command that generates a mark. Usually, you will write
8522 @code{@@bullet} after @code{@@itemize}, but you can use
8523 @code{@@minus}, or any command or character that results in a single
8524 character in the Info file. If you don't want any mark at all, use
8525 @code{@@w}. (When you write the mark command such as
8526 @code{@@bullet} after an @code{@@itemize} command, you may omit the
8527 @samp{@{@}}.) If you don't specify a mark command, the default is
8530 Write the text of the indented paragraphs themselves after the
8531 @code{@@itemize}, up to another line that says @code{@@end
8535 At the beginning of each paragraph for which a mark in the margin is
8536 desired, write a line that starts with @code{@@item}. It is ok to
8537 have text following the @code{@@item}.
8539 Usually, you should put a blank line before an @code{@@item}. This
8540 puts a blank line in the Info file. (@TeX{} inserts the proper
8541 interline whitespace in either case.) Except when the entries are
8542 very brief, these blank lines make the list look better.@refill
8544 Here is an example of the use of @code{@@itemize}, followed by the
8545 output it produces. @code{@@bullet} produces an @samp{*} in Info and a
8546 round dot in @TeX{}.
8575 Itemized lists may be embedded within other itemized lists. Here is a
8576 list marked with dashes embedded in a list marked with bullets:@refill
8621 @section @code{@@enumerate}: Making a Numbered or Lettered List
8625 @code{@@enumerate} is like @code{@@itemize} (@pxref{itemize,,
8626 @code{@@itemize}}), except that the labels on the items are
8627 successive integers or letters instead of bullets.
8629 Write the @code{@@enumerate} command at the beginning of a line. The
8630 command does not require an argument, but accepts either a number or a
8631 letter as an option. Without an argument, @code{@@enumerate} starts the
8632 list with the number @samp{1}. With a numeric argument, such as
8633 @samp{3}, the command starts the list with that number. With an upper
8634 or lower case letter, such as @samp{a} or @samp{A}, the command starts
8635 the list with that letter.
8637 Write the text of the enumerated list in the same way as an itemized
8638 list: write a line starting with @code{@@item} at the beginning of
8639 each paragraph that you want enumerated. It is ok to have text
8640 following the @code{@@item}.
8642 You should put a blank line between entries in the list.
8643 This generally makes it easier to read the Info file.
8646 Here is an example of @code{@@enumerate} without an argument:
8671 Here is an example with an argument of @kbd{3}:@refill
8677 Predisposing causes.
8680 Precipitating causes.
8683 Perpetuating causes.
8693 Predisposing causes.
8696 Precipitating causes.
8699 Perpetuating causes.
8702 Here is a brief summary of the alternatives. The summary is constructed
8703 using @code{@@enumerate} with an argument of @kbd{a}.@refill
8709 Without an argument, produce a numbered list, starting with the number
8713 @code{@@enumerate @var{positive-integer}}
8715 With a (positive) numeric argument, start a numbered list with that
8716 number. You can use this to continue a list that you interrupted with
8720 @code{@@enumerate @var{upper-case-letter}}
8722 With an upper case letter as argument, start a list
8723 in which each item is marked
8724 by a letter, beginning with that upper case letter.@refill
8727 @code{@@enumerate @var{lower-case-letter}}
8729 With a lower case letter as argument, start a list
8730 in which each item is marked by
8731 a letter, beginning with that lower case letter.@refill
8734 You can also nest enumerated lists, as in an outline.@refill
8736 @node Two-column Tables
8737 @section Making a Two-column Table
8738 @cindex Tables, making two-column
8741 @code{@@table} is similar to @code{@@itemize} (@pxref{itemize,,
8742 @code{@@itemize}}), but allows you to specify a name or heading line for
8743 each item. The @code{@@table} command is used to produce two-column
8744 tables, and is especially useful for glossaries, explanatory
8745 exhibits, and command-line option summaries.
8748 * table:: How to construct a two-column table.
8749 * ftable vtable:: Automatic indexing for two-column tables.
8750 * itemx:: How to put more entries in the first column.
8754 @subsection Using the @code{@@table} Command
8756 @cindex Definition lists, typesetting
8757 Use the @code{@@table} command to produce two-column tables. It is
8758 usually listed for ``definition lists'' of various sorts, where you
8759 have a list of terms and a brief text with each one.
8761 Write the @code{@@table} command at the beginning of a line, after a
8762 blank line, and follow it on the same line with an argument that is a
8763 Texinfo ``indicating'' command such as @code{@@code}, @code{@@samp},
8764 @code{@@var}, @code{@@option}, or @code{@@kbd} (@pxref{Indicating}).
8766 This command will be applied to the text that goes into the first
8767 column of each item and thus determines how it will be highlighted.
8768 For example, @code{@@table @@code} will cause the text in the first
8769 column to be output as if it @code{@@code} command.
8772 You may also use the @code{@@asis} command as an argument to
8773 @code{@@table}. @code{@@asis} is a command that does nothing; if you
8774 use this command after @code{@@table}, the first column entries are
8775 output without added highlighting (``as is'').
8777 The @code{@@table} command works with other commands besides those
8778 explicitly mentioned here. However, you can only use commands that
8779 normally take arguments in braces. (In this case, however, you use
8780 the command name without an argument, because the subsequent
8781 @code{@@item}'s will supply the argument.)
8784 Begin each table entry with an @code{@@item} command at the beginning
8785 of a line. Write the first column text on the same line as the
8786 @code{@@item} command. Write the second column text on the line
8787 following the @code{@@item} line and on subsequent lines. (You do not
8788 need to type anything for an empty second column entry.) You may
8789 write as many lines of supporting text as you wish, even several
8790 paragraphs. But only the text on the same line as the @code{@@item}
8791 will be placed in the first column (including any footnotes).
8793 Normally, you should put a blank line before an @code{@@item} line.
8794 This puts a blank line in the Info file. Except when the entries are
8795 very brief, a blank line looks better.
8797 End the table with a line consisting of @code{@@end table}, followed
8798 by a blank line. @TeX{} will always start a new paragraph after the
8799 table, so the blank line is needed for the Info output to be analogous.
8802 The following table, for example, highlights the text in the first
8803 column with an @code{@@samp} command:
8809 This is the text for
8813 Text for @@samp@{bar@}.
8823 This is the text for
8826 Text for @samp{bar}.
8829 If you want to list two or more named items with a single block of
8830 text, use the @code{@@itemx} command. (@xref{itemx,,@code{@@itemx}}.)
8834 @subsection @code{@@ftable} and @code{@@vtable}
8835 @cindex Tables with indexes
8836 @cindex Indexing table entries automatically
8840 The @code{@@ftable} and @code{@@vtable} commands are the same as the
8841 @code{@@table} command except that @code{@@ftable} automatically enters
8842 each of the items in the first column of the table into the index of
8843 functions and @code{@@vtable} automatically enters each of the items in
8844 the first column of the table into the index of variables. This
8845 simplifies the task of creating indices. Only the items on the same
8846 line as the @code{@@item} commands are indexed, and they are indexed in
8847 exactly the form that they appear on that line. @xref{Indices},
8848 for more information about indices.@refill
8850 Begin a two-column table using @code{@@ftable} or @code{@@vtable} by
8851 writing the @@-command at the beginning of a line, followed on the same
8852 line by an argument that is a Texinfo command such as @code{@@code},
8853 exactly as you would for an @code{@@table} command; and end the table
8854 with an @code{@@end ftable} or @code{@@end vtable} command on a line by
8857 See the example for @code{@@table} in the previous section.
8860 @subsection @code{@@itemx}
8861 @cindex Two named items for @code{@@table}
8864 Use the @code{@@itemx} command inside a table when you have two or more
8865 first column entries for the same item, each of which should appear on a
8868 Use @code{@@item} for the first entry, and @code{@@itemx} for all
8869 subsequent entries; @code{@@itemx} must always follow an @code{@@item}
8870 command, with no blank line intervening.
8872 The @code{@@itemx} command works exactly like @code{@@item} except
8873 that it does not generate extra vertical space above the first column
8874 text. If you have multiple consecutive @code{@@itemx} commands, do
8875 not insert any blank lines between them.
8884 These two functions accept a character or a string as
8885 argument, and return the corresponding upper case (lower
8886 case) character or string.
8897 These two functions accept a character or a string as
8898 argument, and return the corresponding upper case (lower
8899 case) character or string.@refill
8903 (Note also that this example illustrates multi-line supporting text in
8904 a two-column table.)@refill
8907 @node Multi-column Tables
8908 @section @code{@@multitable}: Multi-column Tables
8909 @cindex Tables, making multi-column
8912 @code{@@multitable} allows you to construct tables with any number of
8913 columns, with each column having any width you like.
8915 You define the column widths on the @code{@@multitable} line itself, and
8916 write each row of the actual table following an @code{@@item} command,
8917 with columns separated by an @code{@@tab} command. Finally, @code{@@end
8918 multitable} completes the table. Details in the sections below.
8921 * Multitable Column Widths:: Defining multitable column widths.
8922 * Multitable Rows:: Defining multitable rows, with examples.
8925 @node Multitable Column Widths
8926 @subsection Multitable Column Widths
8927 @cindex Multitable column widths
8928 @cindex Column widths, defining for multitables
8929 @cindex Widths, defining multitable column
8931 You can define the column widths for a multitable in two ways: as
8932 fractions of the line length; or with a prototype row. Mixing the two
8933 methods is not supported. In either case, the widths are defined
8934 entirely on the same line as the @code{@@multitable} command.
8938 @findex columnfractions
8939 @cindex Line length, column widths as fraction of
8940 To specify column widths as fractions of the line length, write
8941 @code{@@columnfractions} and the decimal numbers (presumably less than
8942 1; a leading zero is allowed and ignored) after the
8943 @code{@@multitable} command, as in:
8946 @@multitable @@columnfractions .33 .33 .33
8949 The fractions need not add up exactly to 1.0, as these do not. This
8950 allows you to produce tables that do not need the full line length.
8953 @cindex Prototype row, column widths defined by
8954 To specify a prototype row, write the longest entry for each column
8955 enclosed in braces after the @code{@@multitable} command. For example:
8958 @@multitable @{some text for column one@} @{for column two@}
8962 The first column will then have the width of the typeset `some text for
8963 column one', and the second column the width of `for column two'.
8965 The prototype entries need not appear in the table itself.
8967 Although we used simple text in this example, the prototype entries can
8968 contain Texinfo commands; markup commands such as @code{@@code} are
8969 particularly likely to be useful.
8974 @node Multitable Rows
8975 @subsection Multitable Rows
8976 @cindex Multitable rows
8977 @cindex Rows, of a multitable
8981 After the @code{@@multitable} command defining the column widths (see
8982 the previous section), you begin each row in the body of a multitable
8983 with @code{@@item}, and separate the column entries with @code{@@tab}.
8984 Line breaks are not special within the table body, and you may break
8985 input lines in your source file as necessary.
8988 @cindex Heading row, in table
8989 @cindex <thead> HTML tag
8990 You can also use @code{@@headitem} instead of @code{@@item} to produce
8991 a @dfn{heading row}. The @TeX{} output for such a row is in bold, and
8992 the HTML, XML, and Docbook output uses the @code{<thead>} tag.
8994 Here is a complete example of a multi-column table (the text is from
8995 @cite{The GNU Emacs Manual}, @pxref{Split Window,, Splitting Windows,
8996 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}):
8999 @@multitable @@columnfractions .15 .45 .4
9000 @@headitem Key @@tab Command @@tab Description
9002 @@tab @@code@{split-window-vertically@}
9003 @@tab Split the selected window into two windows,
9004 with one above the other.
9006 @@tab @@code@{split-window-horizontally@}
9007 @@tab Split the selected window into two windows
9008 positioned side by side.
9011 @@tab In the mode line or scroll bar of a window,
9018 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .45 .4
9019 @headitem Key @tab Command @tab Description
9021 @tab @code{split-window-vertically}
9022 @tab Split the selected window into two windows,
9023 with one above the other.
9025 @tab @code{split-window-horizontally}
9026 @tab Split the selected window into two windows
9027 positioned side by side.
9030 @tab In the mode line or scroll bar of a window,
9035 @node Special Displays
9036 @chapter Special Displays
9037 @cindex Special displays
9039 The commands in this chapter allow you to write text that is specially
9040 displayed (output format permitting), outside of the normal document
9043 One set of such commands is for creating ``floats'', that is, figures,
9044 tables, and the like, set off from the main text, possibly numbered,
9045 captioned, and/or referred to from elsewhere in the document. Images
9046 are often included in these displays.
9048 Another group of commands is for creating footnotes in Texinfo.
9051 * Floats:: Figures, tables, and the like.
9052 * Images:: Including graphics and images.
9053 * Footnotes:: Writing footnotes.
9059 @cindex Floats, in general
9061 A @dfn{float} is a display which is set off from the main text. It is
9062 typically labelled as being a ``Figure'', ``Table'', ``Example'', or
9065 @cindex Floating, not yet implemented
9066 A float is so-named because, in principle, it can be moved to the
9067 bottom or top of the current page, or to a following page, in the
9068 printed output. (Floating does not make sense in other output
9069 formats.) In the present version of Texinfo, however, this floating
9070 is unfortunately not yet implemented. Instead, the floating material
9071 is simply output at the current location, more or less as if it were
9072 an @code{@@group} (@pxref{group,,@code{@@group}}).
9075 * float:: Producing floating material.
9076 * caption shortcaption:: Specifying descriptions for floats.
9077 * listoffloats:: A table of contents for floats.
9082 @subsection @code{@@float} [@var{type}][,@var{label}]: Floating material
9084 @cindex Float environment
9086 To produce floating material, enclose the material you want to be
9087 displayed separate between @code{@@float} and @code{@@end float}
9088 commands, on lines by themselves.
9090 Floating material uses @code{@@image} to display an already-existing
9091 graphic (@pxref{Images}), or @code{@@multitable} to display a table
9092 (@pxref{Multi-column Tables}). However, the contents of the float can
9093 be anything. Here's an example with simple text:
9096 @@float Figure,fig:ex1
9097 This is an example float.
9101 @noindent And the output:
9103 @float Figure,fig:ex1
9104 This is an example float.
9107 As shown in the example, @code{@@float} takes two arguments (separated
9108 by a comma), @var{type} and @var{label}. Both are optional.
9112 Specifies the sort of float this is; typically a word such as
9113 ``Figure'', ``Table'', etc. If not given, and @var{label} is, any
9114 cross-referencing will simply use a bare number.
9117 Specifies a cross-reference label for this float. If given, this
9118 float is automatically given a number, and will appear in any
9119 @code{@@listofloats} output (@pxref{listoffloats}). Cross-references
9120 to @var{label} are allowed.
9122 @cindex Floats, making unnumbered
9123 @cindex Unnumbered float, creating
9124 On the other hand, if @var{label} is not given, then the float will
9125 not be numbered and consequently will not appear in the
9126 @code{@@listoffloats} output or be cross-referenceable.
9129 @noindent Normally, you specify both @var{type} and @var{label}, to get a
9130 labeled and numbered float.
9132 @cindex Floats, numbering of
9133 @cindex Numbering of floats
9134 In Texinfo, all floats are numbered the same way: with the chapter
9135 number (or appendix letter), a period, and the float number, which
9136 simply counts 1, 2, 3, @dots{}, and is reset at each chapter. Each
9137 float type is counted independently.
9139 Floats within an @code{@@unnumbered} are numbered, or outside of any
9140 chapter, are simply numbered consecutively from 1.
9142 These numbering conventions are not, at present, changeable.
9145 @node caption shortcaption
9146 @subsection @code{@@caption} & @code{@@shortcaption}
9148 @findex shortcaption
9149 @cindex Captions, for floats
9150 @cindex Short captions, for lists of floats
9152 You may write an @code{@@caption} anywhere within a @code{@@float}
9153 environment, to define a caption for the float. It is not allowed in
9154 any other context. @code{@@caption} takes a single argument, enclosed
9155 in braces. Here's an example:
9159 An example float, with caption.
9160 @@caption@{Caption for example float.@}
9164 @noindent The output is:
9167 An example float, with caption.
9168 @caption{Caption for example float.}
9171 @code{@@caption} can appear anywhere within the float; it is not
9172 processed until the @code{@@end float}. The caption text is usually a
9173 sentence or two, but may consist of several paragraphs if necessary.
9175 In the output, the caption always appears below the float; this is not
9176 currently changeable. It is preceded by the float type and/or number,
9177 as specified to the @code{@@float} command (see the previous section).
9179 The @code{@@shortcaption} command likewise may be used only within
9180 @code{@@float}, and takes a single argument in braces. The short
9181 caption text is used instead of the caption text in a list of floats
9182 (see the next section). Thus, you can write a long caption for the
9183 main document, and a short title to appear in the list of floats. For
9189 @@shortcaption@{Text for list of floats.@}
9193 The text for @code{@@caption} and @code{@@shortcaption} may not
9194 contain comments (@code{@@c}), verbatim text (@code{@@verb}),
9195 environments such as @code{@@example}, or other complex constructs.
9199 @subsection @code{@@listoffloats}: Tables of contents for floats
9200 @findex listoffloats
9201 @cindex List of floats
9202 @cindex Floats, list of
9203 @cindex Table of contents, for floats
9205 You can write a @code{@@listoffloats} command to generate a list of
9206 floats for a given float type (@pxref{float}), analogous to the
9207 document's overall table of contents. Typically, it is written in its
9208 own @code{@@unnumbered} node to provide a heading and structure,
9209 rather like @code{@@printindex} (@pxref{Printing Indices & Menus}).
9211 @code{@@listoffloats} takes one optional argument, the float type.
9215 @@node List of Figures
9216 @@unnumbered List of Figures
9217 @@listoffloats Figure
9220 @noindent And the output from @code{@@listoffloats}:
9223 @listoffloats Figure
9226 Without any argument, @code{@@listoffloats} generates a list of
9227 floats for which no float type was specified, i.e., no first argument
9228 to the @code{@@float} command (@pxref{float}).
9230 Each line in the list of floats contains the float type (if any),
9231 the float number, and the caption, if any---the @code{@@shortcaption}
9232 argument, if it was specified, else the @code{@@caption} argument.
9233 In Info, the result is a menu where each float can be selected. In
9234 HTML, each line is a link to the float. In printed output, the page
9237 Unnumbered floats (those without cross-reference labels) are omitted
9238 from the list of floats.
9242 @section Inserting Images
9244 @cindex Images, inserting
9245 @cindex Pictures, inserting
9248 You can insert an image given in an external file with the
9249 @code{@@image} command. Although images can be used anywhere,
9250 including the middle of a paragraph, we describe them in this chapter
9251 since they are most often part of a displayed figure or example.
9260 @subsection Image Syntax
9262 Here is the basic synopsis of the @code{@@image} command:
9265 @@image@{@var{filename}@r{[,} @var{width}@r{[,} @var{height}@r{[,} @var{alttext}@r{[, }@var{extension}@r{]]]]}@}
9268 @cindex Formats for images
9269 @cindex Image formats
9270 The @var{filename} argument is mandatory, and must not have an
9271 extension, because the different processors support different formats:
9275 @TeX{} reads the file @file{@var{filename}.eps} (Encapsulated PostScript
9278 @pindex pdftex@r{, and images}
9279 PDF@TeX{} reads @file{@var{filename}.pdf} (Adobe's Portable Document Format).
9281 @code{makeinfo} includes @file{@var{filename}.txt} verbatim for
9282 Info output (more or less as if it was an @code{@@example}).
9284 @code{makeinfo} uses the optional fifth argument @var{extension} to
9285 @code{@@image} for the filename extension, if it is specified. For example:
9287 @pindex XPM image format
9289 @@image@{foo,,,,.xpm@}
9293 will cause @code{makeinfo} to look for @file{foo.xpm} before any others.
9297 The @var{width} and @var{height} arguments are described in the next
9300 For @TeX{} output, if an image is the first thing in a paragraph, for
9301 example if you want two images side-by-side, you must precede it with
9302 @code{@@noindent} (@pxref{noindent,,@code{@@noindent}}). Otherwise it
9303 will be displayed on a line by itself. If you want it centered,
9304 use @code{@@center} (@pxref{titlefont center sp,,@code{@@titlefont
9307 @cindex Alt attribute for images
9308 @cindex Images, alternate text for
9309 When producing html, @code{makeinfo} sets the @dfn{alt attribute} for
9310 inline images to the optional @var{alttext} (fourth) argument to
9311 @code{@@image}, if supplied. If not supplied, @code{makeinfo} uses
9312 the full file name of the image being displayed. If you want an empty
9313 @code{alt} string, use @code{@@-}. The @var{alttext} is taken as
9314 Texinfo text, so special characters such as @samp{"} and @samp{<} and
9315 @samp{&} are escaped in the HTML and XML output.
9317 @cindex GIF images, unsupported due to patents
9318 @cindex PNG image format
9319 @cindex JPG image format
9320 If you do not supply the optional @var{extension} (fifth) argument,
9321 @code{makeinfo} first tries @file{@var{filename}.png}; if that does
9322 not exist, it tries @file{@var{filename}.jpg}. If that does not exist
9323 either, it complains. (We cannot support GIF format directly due to
9326 In Info output, @code{makeinfo} writes a reference to the binary image
9327 file (trying @var{filename} suffixed with @file{@var{extension}},
9328 @file{@var{.extension}}, @file{.png}, or @file{.jpg}, in that order)
9329 if one exists. It also literally includes the @file{.txt} file if one
9330 exists. This way, Info readers which can display images (such as the
9331 Emacs Info browser, running under X) can do so, whereas Info readers
9332 which can only use text (such as the standalone Info reader) can
9333 display the textual version.
9335 The implementation of this is to put the following construct into the
9339 ^@@^H[image src="@var{binaryfile}" text="@var{txtfile}"
9340 alt="@var{alttext} ... ^@@^H]
9343 @noindent where @samp{^@@} and @samp{^H} stand for the actual null and
9344 backspace control characters. If one of the files is not present, the
9345 corresponding argument is omitted.
9347 The reason for mentioning this here is that older Info browsers (this
9348 feature was introduced in Texinfo version 4.6) will display the above
9349 literally, which, although not pretty, should not be harmful.
9353 @subsection Image Scaling
9355 @cindex Images, scaling
9356 @cindex Scaling images
9357 @cindex Width of images
9358 @cindex Height of images
9359 @cindex Aspect ratio of images
9360 @cindex Distorting images
9361 The optional @var{width} and @var{height} arguments to the
9362 @code{@@image} command (see the previous section) specify the size to
9363 scale the image to. They are ignored for Info output. If neither is
9364 specified, the image is presented in its natural size (given in the
9365 file); if only one is specified, the other is scaled proportionately;
9366 and if both are specified, both are respected, thus possibly distorting
9367 the original image by changing its aspect ratio.
9369 @cindex Dimensions and image sizes
9370 The @var{width} and @var{height} may be specified using any valid @TeX{}
9375 @cindex Points (dimension)
9376 point (72.27pt = 1in)
9382 big point (72bp = 1in)
9388 centimeter (2.54cm = 1in)
9391 millimeter (10mm = 1cm)
9393 @cindex Did@^ot points
9394 did@^ot point (1157dd = 1238pt)
9399 @cindex Scaled points
9400 scaled point (65536sp = 1pt)
9404 For example, the following will scale a file @file{ridt.eps} to one
9405 inch vertically, with the width scaled proportionately:
9408 @@image@{ridt,,1in@}
9412 For @code{@@image} to work with @TeX{}, the file @file{epsf.tex} must be
9413 installed somewhere that @TeX{} can find it. (The standard location is
9414 @file{@var{texmf}/tex/generic/dvips/epsf.tex}, where @var{texmf} is a
9415 root of your @TeX{} directory tree.) This file is included in the
9416 Texinfo distribution and is also available from
9417 @uref{ftp://tug.org/tex/epsf.tex}, among other places.
9419 @code{@@image} can be used within a line as well as for displayed
9420 figures. Therefore, if you intend it to be displayed, be sure to leave
9421 a blank line before the command, or the output will run into the
9424 Image scaling is presently implemented only in @TeX{}, not in HTML or
9425 any other sort of output.
9433 A @dfn{footnote} is for a reference that documents or elucidates the
9434 primary text.@footnote{A footnote should complement or expand upon
9435 the primary text, but a reader should not need to read a footnote to
9436 understand the primary text. For a thorough discussion of footnotes,
9437 see @cite{The Chicago Manual of Style}, which is published by the
9438 University of Chicago Press.} Footnotes are distracting; use them
9439 sparingly, if at all. Standard bibliographical references are better
9440 placed in a bibliography at the end of a document than in footnotes
9444 * Footnote Commands:: How to write a footnote in Texinfo.
9445 * Footnote Styles:: Controlling how footnotes appear in Info.
9449 @node Footnote Commands
9450 @subsection Footnote Commands
9452 In Texinfo, footnotes are created with the @code{@@footnote} command.
9453 This command is followed immediately by a left brace, then by the text
9454 of the footnote, and then by a terminating right brace. Footnotes may
9455 be of any length (they will be broken across pages if necessary), but
9456 are usually short. The template is:
9459 ordinary text@@footnote@{@var{text of footnote}@}
9462 As shown here, the @code{@@footnote} command should come right after the
9463 text being footnoted, with no intervening space; otherwise, the footnote
9464 marker might end up starting a line.
9466 For example, this clause is followed by a sample footnote@footnote{Here
9467 is the sample footnote.}; in the Texinfo source, it looks like
9471 @dots{}a sample footnote@@footnote@{Here is the sample
9472 footnote.@}; in the Texinfo source@dots{}
9475 As you can see, the source includes two punctuation marks next to each
9476 other; in this case, @samp{.@};} is the sequence. This is normal (the
9477 first ends the footnote and the second belongs to the sentence being
9478 footnoted), so don't worry that it looks odd.
9480 In a printed manual or book, the reference mark for a footnote is a
9481 small, superscripted number; the text of the footnote appears at the
9482 bottom of the page, below a horizontal line.
9484 In Info, the reference mark for a footnote is a pair of parentheses
9485 with the footnote number between them, like this: @samp{(1)}. The
9486 reference mark is followed by a cross-reference link to the footnote's
9489 In the HTML output, footnote references are marked with a small,
9490 superscripted number which is rendered as a hypertext link to the
9493 By the way, footnotes in the argument of an @code{@@item} command for a
9494 @code{@@table} must be on the same line as the @code{@@item}
9495 (as usual). @xref{Two-column Tables}.
9498 @node Footnote Styles
9499 @subsection Footnote Styles
9501 Info has two footnote styles, which determine where the text of the
9502 footnote is located:
9505 @cindex @samp{@r{End}} node footnote style
9507 In the `End' node style, all the footnotes for a single node
9508 are placed at the end of that node. The footnotes are separated from
9509 the rest of the node by a line of dashes with the word
9510 @samp{Footnotes} within it. Each footnote begins with an
9511 @samp{(@var{n})} reference mark.
9515 Here is an example of a single footnote in the end of node style:@refill
9519 --------- Footnotes ---------
9521 (1) Here is a sample footnote.
9525 @cindex @samp{@r{Separate}} footnote style
9527 In the `Separate' node style, all the footnotes for a single
9528 node are placed in an automatically constructed node of
9529 their own. In this style, a ``footnote reference'' follows
9530 each @samp{(@var{n})} reference mark in the body of the
9531 node. The footnote reference is actually a cross reference
9532 which you use to reach the footnote node.
9534 The name of the node with the footnotes is constructed
9535 by appending @w{@samp{-Footnotes}} to the name of the node
9536 that contains the footnotes. (Consequently, the footnotes'
9537 node for the @file{Footnotes} node is
9538 @w{@file{Footnotes-Footnotes}}!) The footnotes' node has an
9539 `Up' node pointer that leads back to its parent node.
9542 Here is how the first footnote in this manual looks after being
9543 formatted for Info in the separate node style:
9547 File: texinfo.info Node: Overview-Footnotes, Up: Overview
9549 (1) The first syllable of "Texinfo" is pronounced like "speck", not
9555 Unless your document has long and important footnotes (as in, say,
9556 Gibbon's @cite{Decline and Fall @dots{}}), we recommend the @samp{end}
9557 style, as it is simpler for readers to follow.
9559 @findex footnotestyle
9560 Use the @code{@@footnotestyle} command to specify an Info file's
9561 footnote style. Write this command at the beginning of a line followed
9562 by an argument, either @samp{end} for the end node style or
9563 @samp{separate} for the separate node style.
9574 @@footnotestyle separate
9577 Write an @code{@@footnotestyle} command before or shortly after the
9578 end-of-header line at the beginning of a Texinfo file. (If you
9579 include the @code{@@footnotestyle} command between the start-of-header
9580 and end-of-header lines, the region formatting commands will format
9581 footnotes as specified.)@refill
9583 If you do not specify a footnote style, the formatting commands use
9584 their default style. Currently, @code{texinfo-format-buffer} and
9585 @code{texinfo-format-region} use the `separate' style and
9586 @code{makeinfo} uses the `end' style.
9593 Using Texinfo, you can generate indices without having to sort and
9594 collate entries manually. In an index, the entries are listed in
9595 alphabetical order, together with information on how to find the
9596 discussion of each entry. In a printed manual, this information
9597 consists of page numbers. In an Info file, this information is a menu
9598 entry leading to the first node referenced.
9600 Texinfo provides several predefined kinds of index: an index
9601 for functions, an index for variables, an index for concepts, and so
9602 on. You can combine indices or use them for other than their
9603 canonical purpose. Lastly, you can define your own new indices.
9605 @xref{Printing Indices & Menus}, for information on how to print
9609 * Index Entries:: Choose different words for index entries.
9610 * Predefined Indices:: Use different indices for different kinds
9612 * Indexing Commands:: How to make an index entry.
9613 * Combining Indices:: How to combine indices.
9614 * New Indices:: How to define your own indices.
9619 @section Making Index Entries
9620 @cindex Index entries, making
9621 @cindex Entries, making index
9623 When you are making index entries, it is good practice to think of the
9624 different ways people may look for something. Different people
9625 @emph{do not} think of the same words when they look something up. A
9626 helpful index will have items indexed under all the different words
9627 that people may use. For example, one reader may think it obvious that
9628 the two-letter names for indices should be listed under ``Indices,
9629 two-letter names'', since the word ``Index'' is the general concept.
9630 But another reader may remember the specific concept of two-letter
9631 names and search for the entry listed as ``Two letter names for
9632 indices''. A good index will have both entries and will help both
9635 Like typesetting, the construction of an index is a highly skilled,
9636 professional art, the subtleties of which are not appreciated until you
9637 need to do it yourself.@refill
9639 @xref{Printing Indices & Menus}, for information about printing an index
9640 at the end of a book or creating an index menu in an Info file.@refill
9643 @node Predefined Indices
9644 @section Predefined Indices
9646 Texinfo provides six predefined indices. Here are their nominal
9647 meanings, abbreviations, and the corresponding index entry commands:
9651 @cindex @code{cp} (concept) index
9652 (@code{@@cindex}) concept index, for general concepts.
9654 @cindex @code{fn} (function) index
9655 (@code{@@findex}) function index, for function and function-like
9656 names (such as entry points of libraries).
9658 @cindex @code{ky} (keystroke) index
9659 (@code{@@kindex}) keystroke index, for keyboard commands.
9661 @cindex @code{pg} (program) index
9662 (@code{@@pindex}) program index, for names of programs.
9664 @cindex @code{tp} (data type) index
9665 (@code{@@tindex}) data type index, for type names (such as structures
9666 defined in header files).
9668 @cindex @code{vr} (variable) index
9669 (@code{@@vindex}) variable index, for variable names (such as global
9670 variables of libraries).
9674 Not every manual needs all of these, and most manuals use only two or
9675 three at most. The present manual, for example, has two indices: a
9676 concept index and an @@-command index (that is actually the function
9677 index but is called a command index in the chapter heading).
9679 You are not required to use the predefined indices strictly for their
9680 canonical purposes. For example, suppose you wish to index some C
9681 preprocessor macros. You could put them in the function index along
9682 with actual functions, just by writing @code{@@findex} commands for
9683 them; then, when you print the ``Function Index'' as an unnumbered
9684 chapter, you could give it the title `Function and Macro Index' and
9685 all will be consistent for the reader.
9687 On the other hand, it is best not to stray too far from the meaning of
9688 the predefined indices. Otherwise, in the event that your text is
9689 combined with other text from other manuals, the index entries will
9690 not match up. Instead, define your own new index (@pxref{New
9693 We recommend having a single index in the final document whenever
9694 possible, however many source indices you use, since then readers have
9695 only one place to look. Two or more source indices can be combined
9696 into one output index using the @code{@@synindex} or
9697 @code{@@syncodeindex} commands (@pxref{Combining Indices}).
9700 @node Indexing Commands
9701 @section Defining the Entries of an Index
9702 @cindex Defining indexing entries
9703 @cindex Index entries
9704 @cindex Entries for an index
9705 @cindex Specifying index entries
9706 @cindex Creating index entries
9708 The data to make an index come from many individual indexing commands
9709 scattered throughout the Texinfo source file. Each command says to add
9710 one entry to a particular index; after formatting, the index will give
9711 the current page number or node name as the reference.@refill
9713 An index entry consists of an indexing command at the beginning of a
9714 line followed, on the rest of the line, by the entry.@refill
9716 For example, this section begins with the following five entries for
9717 the concept index:@refill
9720 @@cindex Defining indexing entries
9721 @@cindex Index entries, defining
9722 @@cindex Entries for an index
9723 @@cindex Specifying index entries
9724 @@cindex Creating index entries
9727 Each predefined index has its own indexing command---@code{@@cindex}
9728 for the concept index, @code{@@findex} for the function index, and so
9729 on, as listed in the previous section.
9731 @cindex Writing index entries
9732 @cindex Index entry writing
9733 Concept index entries consist of text. The best way to write an index
9734 is to choose entries that are terse yet clear. If you can do this,
9735 the index often looks better if the entries are not capitalized, but
9736 written just as they would appear in the middle of a sentence.
9737 (Capitalize proper names and acronyms that always call for upper case
9738 letters.) This is the case convention we use in most GNU manuals'
9741 If you don't see how to make an entry terse yet clear, make it longer
9742 and clear---not terse and confusing. If many of the entries are several
9743 words long, the index may look better if you use a different convention:
9744 to capitalize the first word of each entry. But do not capitalize a
9745 case-sensitive name such as a C or Lisp function name or a shell
9746 command; that would be a spelling error.
9748 Whichever case convention you use, please use it consistently!
9750 Entries in indices other than the concept index are symbol names in
9751 programming languages, or program names; these names are usually
9752 case-sensitive, so use upper and lower case as required for them.
9754 @cindex Index font types
9755 By default, entries for a concept index are printed in a small roman
9756 font and entries for the other indices are printed in a small
9757 @code{@@code} font. You may change the way part of an entry is
9758 printed with the usual Texinfo commands, such as @code{@@file} for
9759 file names (@pxref{Marking Text}), and @code{@@r} for the normal roman
9760 font (@pxref{Fonts}).
9763 Do not use a colon in an index entry. In Info, a colon separates the
9764 menu entry name from the node name, so a colon in the entry itself
9765 confuses Info. @xref{Menu Parts}, for more information about the
9766 structure of a menu entry.
9770 @node Combining Indices
9771 @section Combining Indices
9772 @cindex Combining indices
9773 @cindex Indices, combining them
9775 Sometimes you will want to combine two disparate indices such as
9776 functions and concepts, perhaps because you have few enough entries
9777 that a separate index would look silly.
9779 You could put functions into the concept index by writing
9780 @code{@@cindex} commands for them instead of @code{@@findex} commands,
9781 and produce a consistent manual by printing the concept index with the
9782 title `Function and Concept Index' and not printing the `Function
9783 Index' at all; but this is not a robust procedure. It works only if
9784 your document is never included as part of another document that is
9785 designed to have a separate function index; if your document were to
9786 be included with such a document, the functions from your document and
9787 those from the other would not end up together. Also, to make your
9788 function names appear in the right font in the concept index, you
9789 would need to enclose every one of them between the braces of
9793 * syncodeindex:: How to merge two indices, using @code{@@code}
9794 font for the merged-from index.
9795 * synindex:: How to merge two indices, using the
9796 default font of the merged-to index.
9800 @subsection @code{@@syncodeindex}
9801 @findex syncodeindex
9803 When you want to combine functions and concepts into one index, you
9804 should index the functions with @code{@@findex} and index the concepts
9805 with @code{@@cindex}, and use the @code{@@syncodeindex} command to
9806 redirect the function index entries into the concept index.@refill
9808 The @code{@@syncodeindex} command takes two arguments; they are the name
9809 of the index to redirect, and the name of the index to redirect it to.
9810 The template looks like this:@refill
9813 @@syncodeindex @var{from} @var{to}
9816 @cindex Predefined names for indices
9817 @cindex Two letter names for indices
9818 @cindex Indices, two letter names
9819 @cindex Names for indices
9820 For this purpose, the indices are given two-letter names:@refill
9837 Write an @code{@@syncodeindex} command before or shortly after the
9838 end-of-header line at the beginning of a Texinfo file. For example,
9839 to merge a function index with a concept index, write the
9843 @@syncodeindex fn cp
9847 This will cause all entries designated for the function index to merge
9848 in with the concept index instead.@refill
9850 To merge both a variables index and a function index into a concept
9851 index, write the following:@refill
9855 @@syncodeindex vr cp
9856 @@syncodeindex fn cp
9860 @cindex Fonts for indices
9861 The @code{@@syncodeindex} command puts all the entries from the `from'
9862 index (the redirected index) into the @code{@@code} font, overriding
9863 whatever default font is used by the index to which the entries are
9864 now directed. This way, if you direct function names from a function
9865 index into a concept index, all the function names are printed in the
9866 @code{@@code} font as you would expect.@refill
9869 @subsection @code{@@synindex}
9872 The @code{@@synindex} command is nearly the same as the
9873 @code{@@syncodeindex} command, except that it does not put the
9874 `from' index entries into the @code{@@code} font; rather it puts
9875 them in the roman font. Thus, you use @code{@@synindex} when you
9876 merge a concept index into a function index.@refill
9878 @xref{Printing Indices & Menus}, for information about printing an index
9879 at the end of a book or creating an index menu in an Info file.@refill
9883 @section Defining New Indices
9884 @cindex Defining new indices
9885 @cindex Indices, defining new
9886 @cindex New index defining
9888 @findex defcodeindex
9890 In addition to the predefined indices, you may use the
9891 @code{@@defindex} and @code{@@defcodeindex} commands to define new
9892 indices. These commands create new indexing @@-commands with which
9893 you mark index entries. The @code{@@defindex} command is used like
9897 @@defindex @var{name}
9900 The name of an index should be a two letter word, such as @samp{au}.
9907 This defines a new index, called the @samp{au} index. At the same
9908 time, it creates a new indexing command, @code{@@auindex}, that you
9909 can use to make index entries. Use this new indexing command just as
9910 you would use a predefined indexing command.
9912 For example, here is a section heading followed by a concept index
9913 entry and two @samp{au} index entries.
9916 @@section Cognitive Semantics
9917 @@cindex kinesthetic image schemas
9918 @@auindex Johnson, Mark
9919 @@auindex Lakoff, George
9923 (Evidently, @samp{au} serves here as an abbreviation for ``author''.)
9925 In general, Texinfo constructs the new indexing command by
9926 concatenating the name of the index with @samp{index}; thus, defining
9927 an @samp{xy} index leads to the automatic creation of an
9928 @code{@@xyindex} command.
9930 Use the @code{@@printindex} command to print the index, as you do with
9931 the predefined indices. For example:
9936 @@unnumbered Author Index
9942 The @code{@@defcodeindex} is like the @code{@@defindex} command,
9943 except that, in the printed output, it prints entries in an
9944 @code{@@code} font by default instead of a roman font.
9946 You should define new indices before the end-of-header line of a
9947 Texinfo file, and (of course) before any @code{@@synindex} or
9948 @code{@@syncodeindex} commands (@pxref{Texinfo File Header}).
9952 @chapter Special Insertions
9953 @cindex Inserting special characters and symbols
9954 @cindex Special insertions
9956 Texinfo provides several commands for inserting characters that have
9957 special meaning in Texinfo, such as braces, and for other graphic
9958 elements that do not correspond to simple characters you can type.
9964 @item @samp{@@} and braces and commas.
9965 @item Whitespace within and around a sentence.
9967 @item Dots and bullets.
9968 @item The @TeX{} logo and the copyright symbol.
9969 @item The pounds currency symbol.
9970 @item The minus sign.
9971 @item Mathematical expressions.
9972 @item Glyphs for evaluation, macros, errors, etc.
9979 * Atsign Braces Comma:: Inserting @@ and @{@} and ,.
9980 * Inserting Space:: How to insert the right amount of space
9982 * Inserting Accents:: How to insert accents and special characters.
9983 * Dots Bullets:: How to insert dots and bullets.
9984 * TeX and copyright:: How to insert the @TeX{} logo
9985 and the copyright symbol.
9986 * euro:: How to insert the Euro currency symbol.
9987 * pounds:: How to insert the pounds currency symbol.
9988 * minus:: How to insert a minus sign.
9989 * math:: How to format a mathematical expression.
9990 * Glyphs:: How to indicate results of evaluation,
9991 expansion of macros, errors, etc.
9995 @node Atsign Braces Comma
9996 @section Inserting @@ and @{@} and @comma{}
9997 @cindex Special characters, inserting
9998 @cindex Commands to insert special characters
10000 @samp{@@} and curly braces are special characters in Texinfo. To insert
10001 these characters so they appear in text, you must put an @samp{@@} in
10002 front of these characters to prevent Texinfo from misinterpreting
10005 The comma `,' is a special character only in one uncommon context:
10006 it separates arguments to commands that take multiple arguments.
10009 * Inserting an Atsign::
10010 * Inserting Braces::
10011 * Inserting a Comma::
10015 @node Inserting an Atsign
10016 @subsection Inserting `@@' with @code{@@@@}
10017 @findex @@ @r{(literal @samp{@@})}
10018 @cindex Inserting @@ @r{(literal @samp{@@})}
10020 @code{@@@@} stands for a single @samp{@@} in either printed or Info
10023 Do not put braces after an @code{@@@@} command.
10026 @node Inserting Braces
10027 @subsection Inserting `@{' and `@}' with @code{@@@{} and @code{@@@}}
10028 @cindex Braces, inserting
10029 @findex @{ @r{(literal @samp{@{})}
10030 @findex @} @r{(literal @samp{@}})}
10032 @code{@@@{} stands for a single @samp{@{} in either printed or Info
10035 @code{@@@}} stands for a single @samp{@}} in either printed or Info
10038 Do not put braces after either an @code{@@@{} or an @code{@@@}}
10042 @node Inserting a Comma
10043 @subsection Inserting `,' with @code{@@comma@{@}}
10044 @cindex Commas, inserting
10047 Ordinarily, a comma `,' is a normal character that can be simply typed
10048 in your input where you need it.
10050 However, Texinfo uses the comma as a special character in one uncommon
10051 context: some commands, such as @code{@@acronym} (@pxref{acronym}) and
10052 @code{@@xref} (@pxref{Cross References}), as well as user-defined
10053 macros (@pxref{Defining Macros}), can take more than one argument. In
10054 these cases, the comma character is used to separate arguments.
10056 Since a comma chacter would confuse Texinfo's parsing for these
10057 commands, you must use the command @samp{@comma{}} instead if you want
10058 to have an actual comma in the output. Here are some examples:
10061 @@acronym@{ABC, A Bizarre @@comma@{@}@}
10062 @@xref@{Comma,, The @@comma@{@} symbol@}
10063 @@mymac@{One argument@@comma@{@} containing a comma@}
10066 Although @comma{} can be used anywhere, there is no need for it
10067 anywhere except in this unusual case.
10070 @node Inserting Space
10071 @section Inserting Space
10073 @cindex Inserting space
10074 @cindex Spacing, inserting
10075 The following sections describe commands that control spacing of various
10076 kinds within and after sentences.
10079 * Not Ending a Sentence:: Sometimes a . doesn't end a sentence.
10080 * Ending a Sentence:: Sometimes it does.
10081 * Multiple Spaces:: Inserting multiple spaces.
10082 * dmn:: How to format a dimension.
10086 @node Not Ending a Sentence
10087 @subsection Not Ending a Sentence
10089 @cindex Not ending a sentence
10090 @cindex Sentence non-ending punctuation
10091 @cindex Periods, inserting
10092 Depending on whether a period or exclamation point or question mark is
10093 inside or at the end of a sentence, less or more space is inserted after
10094 a period in a typeset manual. Since it is not always possible
10095 to determine when a period ends a sentence and when it is used
10096 in an abbreviation, special commands are needed in some circumstances.
10097 Usually, Texinfo can guess how to handle periods, so you do not need to
10098 use the special commands; you just enter a period as you would if you
10099 were using a typewriter, which means you put two spaces after the
10100 period, question mark, or exclamation mark that ends a sentence.
10102 @findex <colon> @r{(suppress end-of-sentence space)}
10103 Use the @code{@@:}@: command after a period, question mark,
10104 exclamation mark, or colon that should not be followed by extra space.
10105 For example, use @code{@@:}@: after periods that end abbreviations
10106 which are not at the ends of sentences.
10111 The s.o.p.@@: has three parts @dots{}
10112 The s.o.p. has three parts @dots{}
10120 produces the following. If you look carefully at this printed output,
10121 you will see a little extraneous space after @samp{s.o.p.} in the second
10126 The s.o.p.@: has three parts @dots{}@*
10127 The s.o.p. has three parts @dots{}
10131 (Incidentally, @samp{s.o.p.} is an abbreviation for ``Standard Operating
10134 @code{@@:} has no effect on the Info and HTML output. In Docbook and
10135 XML, the previous punctuation character (.?!:) is output as an entity
10136 instead of as the normal character: @samp{. ? !
10137 :}. This gives further processors a chance to notice and not
10138 add the usual extra space.
10140 Do not put braces after @code{@@:} (or any non-alphabetic command).
10143 @node Ending a Sentence
10144 @subsection Ending a Sentence
10146 @cindex Ending a Sentence
10147 @cindex Sentence ending punctuation
10149 @findex . @r{(end of sentence)}
10150 @findex ! @r{(end of sentence)}
10151 @findex ? @r{(end of sentence)}
10152 Use @code{@@.}@: instead of a period, @code{@@!}@: instead of an
10153 exclamation point, and @code{@@?}@: instead of a question mark at the end
10154 of a sentence that ends with a capital letter. Otherwise, @TeX{}
10155 will think the letter is an abbreviation and will not insert the correct
10156 end-of-sentence spacing. Here is an example:
10159 Give it to M.I.B. and to M.E.W@@. Also, give it to R.J.C@@.
10160 Give it to M.I.B. and to M.E.W. Also, give it to R.J.C.
10168 produces the following. If you look carefully at this printed output,
10169 you will see a little more whitespace after the @samp{W} in the first
10174 Give it to M.I.B. and to M.E.W@. Also, give it to R.J.C@.@*
10175 Give it to M.I.B. and to M.E.W. Also, give it to R.J.C.
10178 In the Info file output, @code{@@.}@: is equivalent to a simple
10179 @samp{.}; likewise for @code{@@!}@: and @code{@@?}@:.
10181 The meanings of @code{@@:} and @code{@@.}@: in Texinfo are designed to
10182 work well with the Emacs sentence motion commands (@pxref{Sentences,,,
10183 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
10185 Do not put braces after any of these commands.
10188 @node Multiple Spaces
10189 @subsection Multiple Spaces
10191 @cindex Multiple spaces
10192 @cindex Whitespace, inserting
10193 @cindex Space, inserting horizontal
10198 Ordinarily, @TeX{} collapses multiple whitespace characters (space, tab,
10199 and newline) into a single space. Info output, on the other hand,
10200 preserves whitespace as you type it, except for changing a newline into
10201 a space; this is why it is important to put two spaces at the end of
10202 sentences in Texinfo documents.
10204 Occasionally, you may want to actually insert several consecutive
10205 spaces, either for purposes of example (what your program does with
10206 multiple spaces as input), or merely for purposes of appearance in
10207 headings or lists. Texinfo supports three commands:
10208 @code{@@@kbd{SPACE}}, @code{@@@kbd{TAB}}, and @code{@@@kbd{NL}}, all of
10209 which insert a single space into the output. (Here,
10210 @code{@@@kbd{SPACE}} represents an @samp{@@} character followed by a
10211 space, i.e., @samp{@@ }, and @kbd{TAB} and @kbd{NL} represent the tab
10212 character and end-of-line, i.e., when @samp{@@} is the last character on
10228 Other possible uses of @code{@@@kbd{SPACE}} have been subsumed by
10229 @code{@@multitable} (@pxref{Multi-column Tables}).
10231 Do not follow any of these commands with braces.
10233 To produce a non-breakable space, see @ref{tie, @code{@@tie}}.
10237 @subsection @code{@@dmn}@{@var{dimension}@}: Format a Dimension
10238 @cindex Thin space between number, dimension
10239 @cindex Dimension formatting
10240 @cindex Format a dimension
10243 At times, you may want to write @samp{12@dmn{pt}} or
10244 @samp{8.5@dmn{in}} with little or no space between the number and the
10245 abbreviation for the dimension. You can use the @code{@@dmn} command
10246 to do this. On seeing the command, @TeX{} inserts just enough space
10247 for proper typesetting; the Info formatting commands insert no space
10248 at all, since the Info file does not require it.
10250 To use the @code{@@dmn} command, write the number and then follow it
10251 immediately, with no intervening space, by @code{@@dmn}, and then by
10252 the dimension within braces. For example,
10255 A4 paper is 8.27@@dmn@{in@} wide.
10262 A4 paper is 8.27@dmn{in} wide.
10265 Not everyone uses this style. Some people prefer @w{@samp{8.27 in.@@:}}
10266 or @w{@samp{8.27 inches}} to @samp{8.27@@dmn@{in@}} in the Texinfo file.
10267 In these cases, however, the formatters may insert a line break between
10268 the number and the dimension, so use @code{@@w} (@pxref{w}). Also, if
10269 you write a period after an abbreviation within a sentence, you should
10270 write @samp{@@:} after the period to prevent @TeX{} from inserting extra
10271 whitespace, as shown here. @xref{Not Ending a Sentence}.
10274 @node Inserting Accents
10275 @section Inserting Accents
10277 @cindex Inserting accents
10278 @cindex Accents, inserting
10279 @cindex Floating accents, inserting
10281 Here is a table with the commands Texinfo provides for inserting
10282 floating accents. The commands with non-alphabetic names do not take
10283 braces around their argument (which is taken to be the next character).
10284 (Exception: @code{@@,} @emph{does} take braces around its argument.)
10285 This is so as to make the source as convenient to type and read as
10286 possible, since accented characters are very common in some languages.
10288 To get the true accented characters output in Info, and not just the
10289 ASCII transliterations, you can use the @option{--enable-encoding}
10290 option to @command{makeinfo} (@pxref{makeinfo options}).
10292 @findex " @r{(umlaut accent)}
10293 @cindex Umlaut accent
10294 @findex ' @r{(umlaut accent)}
10295 @cindex Acute accent
10296 @findex = @r{(macron accent)}
10297 @cindex Macron accent
10298 @findex ^ @r{(circumflex accent)}
10299 @cindex Circumflex accent
10300 @findex ` @r{(grave accent)}
10301 @cindex Grave accent
10302 @findex ~ @r{(tilde accent)}
10303 @cindex Tilde accent
10304 @findex , @r{(cedilla accent)}
10305 @cindex Cedilla accent
10308 @findex H @r{(Hungarian umlaut accent)}
10309 @cindex Hungarian umlaut accent
10311 @cindex Ring accent
10313 @cindex Tie-after accent
10314 @findex u @r{(breve accent)}
10315 @cindex Breve accent
10317 @cindex Underbar accent
10319 @cindex Underdot accent
10320 @findex v @r{(check accent)}
10321 @cindex Hacek accent
10322 @cindex Check accent
10323 @cindex Caron accent
10324 @multitable {@@questiondown@{@}} {Output} {hacek/check/caron accent}
10325 @item Command @tab Output @tab What
10326 @item @t{@@"o} @tab @"o @tab umlaut accent
10327 @item @t{@@'o} @tab @'o @tab acute accent
10328 @item @t{@@,@{c@}} @tab @,{c} @tab cedilla accent
10329 @item @t{@@=o} @tab @=o @tab macron/overbar accent
10330 @item @t{@@^o} @tab @^o @tab circumflex accent
10331 @item @t{@@`o} @tab @`o @tab grave accent
10332 @item @t{@@~o} @tab @~o @tab tilde accent
10333 @item @t{@@dotaccent@{o@}} @tab @dotaccent{o} @tab overdot accent
10334 @item @t{@@H@{o@}} @tab @H{o} @tab long Hungarian umlaut
10335 @item @t{@@ringaccent@{o@}} @tab @ringaccent{o} @tab ring accent
10336 @item @t{@@tieaccent@{oo@}} @tab @tieaccent{oo} @tab tie-after accent
10337 @item @t{@@u@{o@}} @tab @u{o} @tab breve accent
10338 @item @t{@@ubaraccent@{o@}} @tab @ubaraccent{o} @tab underbar accent
10339 @item @t{@@udotaccent@{o@}} @tab @udotaccent{o} @tab underdot accent
10340 @item @t{@@v@{o@}} @tab @v{o} @tab hacek/check/caron accent
10343 This table lists the Texinfo commands for inserting other characters
10344 commonly used in languages other than English.
10346 @findex questiondown
10347 @cindex @questiondown{}
10349 @cindex @exclamdown{}
10359 @cindex @dotless{i} (dotless i)
10360 @cindex @dotless{j} (dotless j)
10361 @cindex Dotless i, j
10374 @cindex Romance ordinals
10375 @cindex Ordinals, Romance
10376 @cindex Feminine ordinal
10379 @cindex Masculine ordinal
10387 @multitable {x@@questiondown@{@}} {oe OE} {es-zet or sharp S}
10388 @item @t{@@exclamdown@{@}} @tab @exclamdown{} @tab upside-down !
10389 @item @t{@@questiondown@{@}} @tab @questiondown{} @tab upside-down ?
10390 @item @t{@@aa@{@} @@AA@{@}} @tab @aa{} @AA{} @tab a,A with circle
10391 @item @t{@@ae@{@} @@AE@{@}} @tab @ae{} @AE{} @tab ae,AE ligatures
10392 @item @t{@@dotless@{i@}} @tab @dotless{i} @tab dotless i
10393 @item @t{@@dotless@{j@}} @tab @dotless{j} @tab dotless j
10394 @item @t{@@l@{@} @@L@{@}} @tab @l{} @L{} @tab suppressed-L,l
10395 @item @t{@@o@{@} @@O@{@}} @tab @o{} @O{} @tab O,o with slash
10396 @item @t{@@oe@{@} @@OE@{@}} @tab @oe{} @OE{} @tab oe,OE ligatures
10397 @item @t{@@ordf@{@} @@ordm@{@}} @tab @ordf{} @ordm{} @tab Spanish ordinals
10398 @item @t{@@ss@{@}} @tab @ss{} @tab es-zet or sharp S
10403 @section Inserting Ellipsis and Bullets
10404 @cindex Dots, inserting
10405 @cindex Bullets, inserting
10406 @cindex Ellipsis, inserting
10407 @cindex Inserting ellipsis
10408 @cindex Inserting dots
10409 @cindex Special typesetting commands
10410 @cindex Typesetting commands for dots, etc.
10412 An @dfn{ellipsis} (a line of dots) is not typeset as a string of
10413 periods, so a special command is used for ellipsis in Texinfo. The
10414 @code{@@bullet} command is special, too. Each of these commands is
10415 followed by a pair of braces, @samp{@{@}}, without any whitespace
10416 between the name of the command and the braces. (You need to use braces
10417 with these commands because you can use them next to other text; without
10418 the braces, the formatters would be confused. @xref{Command Syntax, ,
10419 @@-Command Syntax}, for further information.)@refill
10422 * dots:: How to insert dots @dots{}
10423 * bullet:: How to insert a bullet.
10428 @subsection @code{@@dots}@{@} (@dots{}) and @code{@@enddots}@{@} (@enddots{})
10431 @cindex Inserting dots
10432 @cindex Dots, inserting
10434 Use the @code{@@dots@{@}} command to generate an ellipsis, which is
10435 three dots in a row, appropriately spaced @dots{} like so. Do
10436 not simply write three periods in the input file; that would work for
10437 the Info file output, but would produce the wrong amount of space
10438 between the periods in the printed manual.
10440 Similarly, the @code{@@enddots@{@}} command generates an
10441 end-of-sentence ellipsis, which has different spacing afterwards,
10442 @enddots{} Look closely to see the difference.
10445 Here is an ellipsis: @dots{}
10446 Here are three periods in a row: ...
10448 In printed output, the three periods in a row are closer together than
10449 the dots in the ellipsis.
10454 @subsection @code{@@bullet}@{@} (@bullet{})
10457 Use the @code{@@bullet@{@}} command to generate a large round dot, or
10458 the closest possible thing to one. In Info, an asterisk is used.@refill
10460 Here is a bullet: @bullet{}
10462 When you use @code{@@bullet} in @code{@@itemize}, you do not need to
10463 type the braces, because @code{@@itemize} supplies them.
10464 (@xref{itemize, , @code{@@itemize}}.)@refill
10467 @node TeX and copyright
10468 @section Inserting @TeX{} and Legal Symbols: @copyright{}, @registeredsymbol{}
10470 The logo `@TeX{}' is typeset in a special fashion and it needs an
10471 @@-command. The copyright and registered symbols, `@copyright{}' and
10472 `@registeredsymbol{}', is also special. Each of these commands is
10473 followed by a pair of braces, @samp{@{@}}, without any whitespace
10474 between the name of the command and the braces.
10477 * tex:: The @TeX{} logos.
10478 * copyright symbol:: The copyright symbol (c in a circle).
10479 * registered symbol:: The registered symbol (R in a circle).
10484 @subsection @code{@@TeX}@{@} (@TeX{}) and @code{@@LaTeX}@{@} (@LaTeX{})
10488 Use the @code{@@TeX@{@}} command to generate `@TeX{}'. In a printed
10489 manual, this is a special logo that is different from three ordinary
10490 letters. In Info, it just looks like @samp{TeX}.
10492 Similarly, use the @code{@@LaTeX@{@}} command to generate `@LaTeX{}',
10493 which is even more special in printed manuals (and different from the
10494 incorrect @code{La@@TeX@{@}}. In Info, the result is just
10495 @samp{LaTeX}. (@LaTeX{} is another macro package built on top of
10496 @TeX{}, very loosely analogous to Texinfo in that it emphasizes
10497 logical structure, but much (much) larger.)
10499 The spelling of these commands are unusual among Texinfo commands in
10500 that they use both uppercase and lowercase letters.
10503 @node copyright symbol
10504 @subsection @code{@@copyright@{@}} (@copyright{})
10507 Use the @code{@@copyright@{@}} command to generate the copyright
10508 symbol, `@copyright{}'. Where possible, this is a @samp{c}
10509 inside a circle; in Info, this is @samp{(C)}.
10512 @node registered symbol
10513 @subsection @code{@@registeredsymbol@{@}} (@registeredsymbol{})
10514 @findex registeredsymbol
10516 Use the @code{@@registeredsymbol@{@}} command to generate the
10517 registered symbol, `@registeredsymbol{}'. Where possible, this is an
10518 @samp{R} inside a circle; in Info, this is @samp{(R)}.
10522 @section @code{@@euro}@{@} (@euro{}): Euro currency symbol
10525 Use the @code{@@euro@{@}} command to generate `@euro{}'. Where
10526 possible, this is the symbol for the Euro currency, invented as part
10527 of the European economic unification relatively recently. In plain
10528 Info, it is the word @samp{Euro }. (The space is included in the text
10529 transliteration since typically there would be no space after the
10530 symbol, so it would be inappropriate to have a space in the source document.)
10532 Texinfo cannot magically synthesize support for the Euro symbol where
10533 the underlying system (fonts, software, whatever) does not support
10534 it. Therefore, in many cases it is preferable to use the word
10535 ``Euro''. (In banking circles, the abbreviation for the Euro is EUR.)
10537 @cindex ISO 8859-15
10539 In order to get the Euro symbol in encoded Info output, for example,
10540 it is necessary to specify @code{@@documentencoding ISO-8859-15}.
10541 (@xref{documentencoding,,@code{@@documentencoding}}.) The Euro symbol
10542 is in ISO 8859-15 (aka Latin@tie{}9), and is @emph{not} in the more
10543 widely-used and supported ISO 8859-1 (Latin@tie{}1).
10547 @section @code{@@pounds}@{@} (@pounds{}): Pounds Sterling
10550 Use the @code{@@pounds@{@}} command to generate `@pounds{}'. Where
10551 possible, this is the symbol for the currency pounds sterling. In
10552 Info, it is a @samp{#}.
10556 @section @code{@@minus}@{@} (@minus{}): Inserting a Minus Sign
10559 @cindex Em dash, compared to minus sign
10560 @cindex Hyphen, compared to minus
10561 Use the @code{@@minus@{@}} command to generate a minus sign. In a
10562 fixed-width font, this is a single hyphen, but in a proportional font,
10563 the symbol is the customary length for a minus sign---a little longer
10564 than a hyphen, shorter than an em-dash:
10567 @samp{@minus{}} is a minus sign generated with @samp{@@minus@{@}},
10569 `-' is a hyphen generated with the character @samp{-},
10571 `---' is an em-dash for text.
10575 In the fixed-width font used by Info, @code{@@minus@{@}} is the same
10578 You should not use @code{@@minus@{@}} inside @code{@@code} or
10579 @code{@@example} because the width distinction is not made in the
10580 fixed-width font they use.
10582 When you use @code{@@minus} to specify the mark beginning each entry in
10583 an itemized list, you do not need to type the braces
10584 (@pxref{itemize, , @code{@@itemize}}).
10588 @section @code{@@math}: Inserting Mathematical Expressions
10590 @cindex Mathematical expressions
10591 @cindex Formulas, mathematical
10593 You can write a short mathematical expression with the @code{@@math}
10594 command. Write the mathematical expression between braces, like this:
10597 @@math@{(a + b)(a + b) = a^2 + 2ab + b^2@}
10601 @noindent This produces the following in @TeX{}:
10604 @math{(a + b)(a + b) = a^2 + 2ab + b^2}
10607 @noindent and the following in other formats:
10610 @noindent This produces the following in Info and HTML:
10614 (a + b)(a + b) = a^2 + 2ab + b^2
10617 Thus, the @code{@@math} command has no effect on the Info and HTML
10618 output; @command{makeinfo} just reproduces the input, it does not try
10619 to interpret the mathematics in any way.
10621 @code{@@math} implies @code{@@tex}. This not only makes it possible to
10622 write superscripts and subscripts (as in the above example), but also
10623 allows you to use any of the plain @TeX{} math control sequences. It's
10624 conventional to use @samp{\} instead of @samp{@@} for these commands.
10627 @@math@{\sin 2\pi \equiv \cos 3\pi@}
10631 @noindent which looks like this in @TeX{}:
10633 @math{\sin 2\pi \equiv \cos 3\pi}
10638 @noindent which looks like the input in Info and HTML:
10640 \sin 2\pi \equiv \cos 3\pi
10643 @findex \ @r{(literal \ in @code{@@math})}
10644 Since @samp{\} is an escape character inside @code{@@math}, you can use
10645 @code{@@\} to get a literal backslash (@code{\\} will work in @TeX{},
10646 but you'll get the literal @samp{\\} in Info). @code{@@\} is not
10647 defined outside of @code{@@math}, since a @samp{\} ordinarily produces a
10651 @cindex Displayed equations
10652 @cindex Equations, displayed
10653 For displayed equations, you must at present use @TeX{} directly
10654 (@pxref{Raw Formatter Commands}).
10658 @section Glyphs for Examples
10660 @cindex Examples, glyphs for
10662 In Texinfo, code is often illustrated in examples that are delimited
10663 by @code{@@example} and @code{@@end example}, or by @code{@@lisp} and
10664 @code{@@end lisp}. In such examples, you can indicate the results of
10665 evaluation or an expansion using @samp{@result{}} or
10666 @samp{@expansion{}}. Likewise, there are commands to insert glyphs
10668 printed output, error messages, equivalence of expressions, and the
10669 location of point.@refill
10671 The glyph-insertion commands do not need to be used within an example, but
10672 most often they are. Every glyph-insertion command is followed by a pair of
10673 left- and right-hand braces.@refill
10677 * result:: How to show the result of expression.
10678 * expansion:: How to indicate an expansion.
10679 * Print Glyph:: How to indicate printed output.
10680 * Error Glyph:: How to indicate an error message.
10681 * Equivalence:: How to indicate equivalence.
10682 * Point Glyph:: How to indicate the location of point.
10686 @node Glyphs Summary
10687 @subsection Glyphs Summary
10689 Here are the different glyph commands:@refill
10693 @code{@@result@{@}} points to the result of an expression.@refill
10696 @code{@@expansion@{@}} shows the results of a macro expansion.@refill
10699 @code{@@print@{@}} indicates printed output.@refill
10702 @code{@@error@{@}} indicates that the following text is an error
10706 @code{@@equiv@{@}} indicates the exact equivalence of two forms.@refill
10709 @code{@@point@{@}} shows the location of point.@refill
10723 @subsection @code{@@result@{@}} (@result{}): Indicating Evaluation
10724 @cindex Result of an expression
10725 @cindex Indicating evaluation
10726 @cindex Evaluation glyph
10727 @cindex Value of an expression, indicating
10730 Use the @code{@@result@{@}} command to indicate the result of
10731 evaluating an expression.@refill
10734 The @code{@@result@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@result{}} in
10735 the printed output and as @samp{=>} in other formats.
10738 The @code{@@result@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@result{}} in
10739 Info and HTML and as a true double stemmed arrow in the printed output.
10742 Thus, the following,
10750 may be read as ``@code{(cdr '(1 2 3))} evaluates to @code{(2 3)}''.
10754 @subsection @code{@@expansion@{@}} (@expansion{}): Indicating an Expansion
10755 @cindex Expansion, indicating
10756 @cindex Macro expansion, indicating
10759 When an expression is a macro call, it expands into a new expression.
10760 You can indicate the result of the expansion with the
10761 @code{@@expansion@{@}} command.@refill
10764 The @code{@@expansion@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@expansion{}}
10765 in the printed output. and as @samp{==>} in other formats.
10768 The @code{@@expansion@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@expansion{}}
10769 in Info and HTML, and as a long arrow with a flat base in the printed
10774 For example, the following
10780 @@expansion@{@} (car (cdr (cdr '(a b c))))
10792 @expansion{} (car (cdr (cdr '(a b c))))
10798 which may be read as:
10801 @code{(third '(a b c))} expands to @code{(car (cdr (cdr '(a b c))))};
10802 the result of evaluating the expression is @code{c}.
10806 Often, as in this case, an example looks better if the
10807 @code{@@expansion@{@}} and @code{@@result@{@}} commands are indented.
10811 @subsection @code{@@print@{@}} (@print{}): Indicating Printed Output
10812 @cindex Printed output, indicating
10815 Sometimes an expression will print output during its execution. You
10816 can indicate the printed output with the @code{@@print@{@}} command.@refill
10819 The @code{@@print@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{-|} in Info and
10820 HTML and as @samp{@print{}} in the printed output.
10823 The @code{@@print@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@print{}} in Info
10824 and HTML and (similarly) as a horizontal dash butting against a
10825 vertical bar in the printed output.
10828 In the following example, the printed text is indicated with
10829 @samp{@print{}}, and the value of the expression follows on the
10834 (progn (print 'foo) (print 'bar))
10842 In a Texinfo source file, this example is written as follows:
10847 (progn (print 'foo) (print 'bar))
10857 @subsection @code{@@error@{@}} (@error{}): Indicating an Error Message
10858 @cindex Error message, indicating
10861 A piece of code may cause an error when you evaluate it. You can
10862 designate the error message with the @code{@@error@{@}} command.@refill
10865 The @code{@@error@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{error-->} in Info
10866 and HTML and as @samp{@error{}} in the printed output.
10869 The @code{@@error@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@error{}} in Info
10870 and HTML and as the word `error' in a box in the printed output.
10879 @@error@{@} Wrong type argument: integer-or-marker-p, x
10888 @error{} Wrong type argument: integer-or-marker-p, x
10892 This indicates that the following error message is printed
10893 when you evaluate the expression:
10896 Wrong type argument: integer-or-marker-p, x
10899 @samp{@error{}} itself is not part of the error message.
10903 @subsection @code{@@equiv@{@}} (@equiv{}): Indicating Equivalence
10904 @cindex Equivalence, indicating
10907 Sometimes two expressions produce identical results. You can indicate the
10908 exact equivalence of two forms with the @code{@@equiv@{@}} command.@refill
10911 The @code{@@equiv@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{==} in Info and
10912 HTML and as @samp{@equiv{}} in the printed output.
10915 The @code{@@equiv@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@equiv{}} in Info
10916 and HTML and as a standard mathematical equivalence sign (three
10917 parallel horizontal lines) in the printed output.
10924 (make-sparse-keymap) @@equiv@{@} (list 'keymap)
10932 (make-sparse-keymap) @equiv{} (list 'keymap)
10936 This indicates that evaluating @code{(make-sparse-keymap)} produces
10937 identical results to evaluating @code{(list 'keymap)}.
10941 @subsection @code{@@point@{@}} (@point{}): Indicating Point in a Buffer
10942 @cindex Point, indicating in a buffer
10945 Sometimes you need to show an example of text in an Emacs buffer. In
10946 such examples, the convention is to include the entire contents of the
10947 buffer in question between two lines of dashes containing the buffer
10950 You can use the @samp{@@point@{@}} command to show the location of point
10951 in the text in the buffer. (The symbol for point, of course, is not
10952 part of the text in the buffer; it indicates the place @emph{between}
10953 two characters where point is located.)@refill
10956 The @code{@@point@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{-!-} in Info and
10957 HTML and as @samp{@point{}} in the printed output.
10960 The @code{@@point@{@}} command is displayed as @samp{@point{}} in Info
10961 and HTML and as a small five pointed star in the printed
10965 The following example shows the contents of buffer @file{foo} before
10966 and after evaluating a Lisp command to insert the word @code{changed}.@refill
10970 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
10971 This is the @point{}contents of foo.
10972 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
10979 (insert "changed ")
10981 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
10982 This is the changed @point{}contents of foo.
10983 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
10988 In a Texinfo source file, the example is written like this:@refill
10992 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
10993 This is the @@point@{@}contents of foo.
10994 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
10996 (insert "changed ")
10998 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
10999 This is the changed @@point@{@}contents of foo.
11000 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
11006 @chapter Forcing and Preventing Breaks
11007 @cindex Forcing line and page breaks
11008 @cindex Making line and page breaks
11009 @cindex Preventing line and page breaks
11011 @cindex Line breaks
11012 Usually, a Texinfo file is processed both by @TeX{} and by one of the
11013 Info formatting commands. Line, paragraph, or page breaks sometimes
11014 occur in the `wrong' place in one or other form of output. You must
11015 ensure that text looks right both in the printed manual and in the
11018 @cindex White space, excessive
11019 @cindex Page breaks
11020 For example, in a printed manual, page breaks may occur awkwardly in
11021 the middle of an example; to prevent this, you can hold text together
11022 using a grouping command that keeps the text from being split across
11023 two pages. Conversely, you may want to force a page break where none
11024 would occur normally. Fortunately, problems like these do not often
11025 arise. When they do, use the break, break prevention, or pagination
11029 * Break Commands:: Summary of break-related commands.
11030 * Line Breaks:: Forcing line breaks.
11031 * - and hyphenation:: Helping @TeX{} with hyphenation points.
11032 * w:: Preventing unwanted line breaks in text.
11033 * tie:: Inserting an unbreakable but varying space.
11034 * sp:: Inserting blank lines.
11035 * page:: Forcing the start of a new page.
11036 * group:: Preventing unwanted page breaks.
11037 * need:: Another way to prevent unwanted page breaks.
11041 @node Break Commands
11042 @section Break Commands
11044 The break commands create or allow line and paragraph breaks:
11048 Force a line break.
11051 Skip @var{n} blank lines.
11054 Insert a discretionary hyphen.
11056 @item @@hyphenation@{@var{hy-phen-a-ted words}@}
11057 Define hyphen points in @var{hy-phen-a-ted words}.
11060 These commands hold text together on a single line:
11063 @item @@w@{@var{text}@}
11064 Prevent @var{text} from being split and hyphenated across two lines.
11066 Insert a normal interword space at which a line break may not occur.
11072 The pagination commands apply only to printed output, since Info
11073 files do not have pages.
11077 Start a new page in the printed manual.
11080 Hold text together that must appear on one printed page.
11082 @item @@need @var{mils}
11083 Start a new printed page if not enough space on this one.
11088 @section @code{@@*} and @code{@@/}: Generate and Allow Line Breaks
11089 @findex * @r{(force line break)}
11090 @findex / @r{(allow line break)}
11091 @cindex Line breaks
11092 @cindex Breaks in a line
11093 @cindex Force line break
11094 @cindex Allow line break
11096 The @code{@@*} command forces a line break in both the printed manual and
11097 in Info. The @code{@@/} command allows a line break (printed manual only).
11099 Here is an example with @code{@@*}:
11102 This line @@* is broken @@*in two places.
11115 The @code{@@/} command can be useful within a url
11116 (@pxref{uref,,@code{@@uref}}), which tend to be long and are otherwise
11117 unbreakable. For example:
11120 The official Texinfo home page is on the GNU web site:
11121 @@uref@{http://www.gnu.org/@@/software/@@/gnu/@@/texinfo@}.
11127 The official Texinfo home page is on the GNU web site:
11128 @uref{http://www.gnu.org/@/software/@/gnu/@/texinfo}.
11131 @noindent Without the @code{@@/} commands, @TeX{} would have nowhere to
11132 break the line. @code{@@/} has no effect in the online output.
11135 @node - and hyphenation
11136 @section @code{@@-} and @code{@@hyphenation}: Helping @TeX{} Hyphenate
11138 @findex - @r{(discretionary hyphen)}
11139 @findex hyphenation
11140 @cindex Hyphenation, helping @TeX{} do
11141 @cindex Fine-tuning, and hyphenation
11143 Although @TeX{}'s hyphenation algorithm is generally pretty good, it
11144 does miss useful hyphenation points from time to time. (Or, far more
11145 rarely, insert an incorrect hyphenation.) So, for documents with an
11146 unusual vocabulary or when fine-tuning for a printed edition, you may
11147 wish to help @TeX{} out. Texinfo supports two commands for this:
11151 Insert a discretionary hyphen, i.e., a place where @TeX{} can (but does
11152 not have to) hyphenate. This is especially useful when you notice an
11153 overfull hbox is due to @TeX{} missing a hyphenation (@pxref{Overfull
11154 hboxes}). @TeX{} will not insert any hyphenation points itself into a
11155 word containing @code{@@-}.
11157 @item @@hyphenation@{@var{hy-phen-a-ted words}@}
11158 Tell @TeX{} how to hyphenate @var{hy-phen-a-ted words}. As shown, you
11159 put a @samp{-} at each hyphenation point. For example:
11161 @@hyphenation@{man-u-script man-u-scripts@}
11163 @noindent @TeX{} only uses the specified hyphenation points when the
11164 words match exactly, so give all necessary variants.
11167 Info output is not hyphenated, so these commands have no effect there.
11171 @section @code{@@w}@{@var{text}@}: Prevent Line Breaks
11172 @findex w @r{(prevent line break)}
11173 @cindex Line breaks, preventing
11175 @code{@@w@{@var{text}@}} outputs @var{text} and prohibits line breaks
11176 within @var{text}, for both @TeX{} and @command{makeinfo}.
11178 @cindex Non-breakable space, fixed
11179 @cindex Unbreakable space, fixed
11180 Thus, you can use @code{@@w} to produce a non-breakable space, fixed at
11181 the width of a normal interword space:
11184 @@w@{ @} @@w@{ @} @@w@{ @} indentation.
11187 @noindent produces:
11190 @w{ } @w{ } @w{ } indentation.
11193 The space from @code{@@w@{@w{ }@}}, as well as being non-breakable,
11194 also will not stretch or shrink. Sometimes that is what you want, for
11195 instance if you're doing indenting manual. However, usually you want
11196 a normal interword space that does stretch and shrink (in the printed
11197 output); see the @code{@@tie} command in the next section.
11199 @cindex Hyphenation, preventing
11200 You can also use the @code{@@w} command to prevent @TeX{} from
11201 automatically hyphenating a long name or phrase that happens to fall
11202 near the end of a line. @command{makeinfo} does not ever hyphenate
11205 @cindex Keyword expansion, preventing
11206 @cindex Version control keywords, preventing expansion of
11207 @cindex $Id expansion, preventing
11208 You can also use @code{@@w} to avoid unwanted keyword expansion in
11209 source control systems. For example, to literally write @t{@w{$}Id$}
11210 in your document, use @code{@@w@{$@}Id$}.
11214 @section @code{@@tie@{@}}: Inserting an Unbreakable Space
11215 @findex tie @r{(unbreakable interword space)}
11217 @cindex Non-breakable space, variable
11218 @cindex Unbreakable space, variable
11220 The @code{@@tie@{@}} command produces a normal interword space at which
11221 a line break may not occur. Always write it with following (empty)
11222 braces, as usual for commands used within a paragraph. Here's an
11226 @@TeX@{@} was written by Donald E.@@tie@{@}Knuth.
11229 @noindent produces:
11232 @TeX{} was written by Donald E.@tie{}Knuth.
11235 There are two important differences between @code{@@tie@{@}} and
11236 @code{@@w@{@w{ }@}}:
11240 The space produced by @code{@@tie@{@}} will stretch and shrink slightly
11241 along with the normal interword spaces in the paragraph; the space
11242 produced by @code{@@w@{@w{ }@}} will not vary.
11245 @code{@@tie@{@}} allows hyphenation of the surrounding words, while
11246 @code{@@w@{@w{ }@}} inhibits hyphenation of those words (for @TeX{}nical
11247 reasons, namely that it produces an @samp{\hbox}).
11253 @section @code{@@sp} @var{n}: Insert Blank Lines
11254 @findex sp @r{(line spacing)}
11255 @cindex Space, inserting vertical
11256 @cindex Blank lines
11257 @cindex Line spacing
11259 A line beginning with and containing only @code{@@sp @var{n}}
11260 generates @var{n} blank lines of space in both the printed manual and
11261 the Info file. @code{@@sp} also forces a paragraph break. For
11269 generates two blank lines.
11271 The @code{@@sp} command is most often used in the title page.@refill
11274 @c node br, page, sp, Breaks
11275 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
11276 @c section @code{@@br}: Generate Paragraph Breaks
11277 @findex br @r{(paragraph breaks)}
11278 @cindex Paragraph breaks
11279 @cindex Breaks in a paragraph
11281 The @code{@@br} command forces a paragraph break. It inserts a blank
11282 line. You can use the command within or at the end of a line. If
11283 used within a line, the @code{@@br@{@}} command must be followed by
11284 left and right braces (as shown here) to mark the end of the
11292 This line @@br@{@}contains and is ended by paragraph breaks@@br
11293 and is followed by another line.
11304 contains and is ended by paragraph breaks
11306 and is followed by another line.
11310 The @code{@@br} command is seldom used.
11315 @section @code{@@page}: Start a New Page
11316 @cindex Page breaks
11319 A line containing only @code{@@page} starts a new page in a printed
11320 manual. The command has no effect on Info files since they are not
11321 paginated. An @code{@@page} command is often used in the @code{@@titlepage}
11322 section of a Texinfo file to start the copyright page.
11326 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
11327 @section @code{@@group}: Prevent Page Breaks
11328 @cindex Group (hold text together vertically)
11329 @cindex Holding text together vertically
11330 @cindex Vertically holding text together
11333 The @code{@@group} command (on a line by itself) is used inside an
11334 @code{@@example} or similar construct to begin an unsplittable vertical
11335 group, which will appear entirely on one page in the printed output.
11336 The group is terminated by a line containing only @code{@@end group}.
11337 These two lines produce no output of their own, and in the Info file
11338 output they have no effect at all.@refill
11340 @c Once said that these environments
11341 @c turn off vertical spacing between ``paragraphs''.
11342 @c Also, quotation used to work, but doesn't in texinfo-2.72
11343 Although @code{@@group} would make sense conceptually in a wide
11344 variety of contexts, its current implementation works reliably only
11345 within @code{@@example} and variants, and within @code{@@display},
11346 @code{@@format}, @code{@@flushleft} and @code{@@flushright}.
11347 @xref{Quotations and Examples}. (What all these commands have in
11348 common is that each line of input produces a line of output.) In
11349 other contexts, @code{@@group} can cause anomalous vertical
11353 This formatting requirement means that you should write:
11366 with the @code{@@group} and @code{@@end group} commands inside the
11367 @code{@@example} and @code{@@end example} commands.
11369 The @code{@@group} command is most often used to hold an example
11370 together on one page. In this Texinfo manual, more than 100 examples
11371 contain text that is enclosed between @code{@@group} and @code{@@end
11374 If you forget to end a group, you may get strange and unfathomable
11375 error messages when you run @TeX{}. This is because @TeX{} keeps
11376 trying to put the rest of the Texinfo file onto the one page and does
11377 not start to generate error messages until it has processed
11378 considerable text. It is a good rule of thumb to look for a missing
11379 @code{@@end group} if you get incomprehensible error messages in
11383 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
11384 @section @code{@@need @var{mils}}: Prevent Page Breaks
11385 @cindex Need space at page bottom
11388 A line containing only @code{@@need @var{n}} starts
11389 a new page in a printed manual if fewer than @var{n} mils (thousandths
11390 of an inch) remain on the current page. Do not use
11391 braces around the argument @var{n}. The @code{@@need} command has no
11392 effect on Info files since they are not paginated.@refill
11395 This paragraph is preceded by an @code{@@need} command that tells
11396 @TeX{} to start a new page if fewer than 800 mils (eight-tenths
11397 inch) remain on the page. It looks like this:@refill
11402 This paragraph is preceded by @dots{}
11406 The @code{@@need} command is useful for preventing orphans (single
11407 lines at the bottoms of printed pages).@refill
11410 @node Definition Commands
11411 @chapter Definition Commands
11412 @cindex Definition commands
11414 The @code{@@deffn} command and the other @dfn{definition commands}
11415 enable you to describe functions, variables, macros, commands, user
11416 options, special forms and other such artifacts in a uniform
11419 In the Info file, a definition causes the entity
11420 category---`Function', `Variable', or whatever---to appear at the
11421 beginning of the first line of the definition, followed by the
11422 entity's name and arguments. In the printed manual, the command
11423 causes @TeX{} to print the entity's name and its arguments on the left
11424 margin and print the category next to the right margin. In both
11425 output formats, the body of the definition is indented. Also, the
11426 name of the entity is entered into the appropriate index:
11427 @code{@@deffn} enters the name into the index of functions,
11428 @code{@@defvr} enters it into the index of variables, and so
11429 on (@pxref{Predefined Indices}).
11431 A manual need not and should not contain more than one definition for
11432 a given name. An appendix containing a summary should use
11433 @code{@@table} rather than the definition commands.@refill
11436 * Def Cmd Template:: Writing descriptions using definition commands.
11437 * Def Cmd Continuation Lines:: Continuing the heading over source lines.
11438 * Optional Arguments:: Handling optional and repeated arguments.
11439 * deffnx:: Group two or more `first' lines.
11440 * Def Cmds in Detail:: Reference for all the definition commands.
11441 * Def Cmd Conventions:: Conventions for writing definitions.
11442 * Sample Function Definition:: An example.
11446 @node Def Cmd Template
11447 @section The Template for a Definition
11448 @cindex Definition template
11449 @cindex Template for a definition
11451 The @code{@@deffn} command is used for definitions of entities that
11452 resemble functions. To write a definition using the @code{@@deffn}
11453 command, write the @code{@@deffn} command at the beginning of a line
11454 and follow it on the same line by the category of the entity, the name
11455 of the entity itself, and its arguments (if any). Then write the body
11456 of the definition on succeeding lines. (You may embed examples in the
11457 body.) Finally, end the definition with an @code{@@end deffn} command
11458 written on a line of its own.
11460 The other definition commands follow the same format: a line with the
11461 @code{@@def@dots{}} command and whatever arguments are appropriate for
11462 that command; the body of the definition; and a corresponding
11465 The template for a definition looks like this:
11469 @@deffn @var{category} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11470 @var{body-of-definition}
11481 @@deffn Command forward-word count
11482 This command moves point forward @@var@{count@} words
11483 (or backward if @@var@{count@} is negative). @dots{}
11492 @deffn Command forward-word count
11493 This function moves point forward @var{count} words
11494 (or backward if @var{count} is negative). @dots{}
11498 Capitalize the category name like a title. If the name of the
11499 category contains spaces, as in the phrase `Interactive Command',
11500 enclose it in braces. For example:
11504 @@deffn @{Interactive Command@} isearch-forward
11511 Otherwise, the second word will be mistaken for the name of the
11512 entity. As a general rule, when any of the arguments in the heading
11513 line @emph{except} the last one are more than one word, you need to
11514 enclose them in braces.
11516 Some of the definition commands are more general than others. The
11517 @code{@@deffn} command, for example, is the general definition command
11518 for functions and the like---for entities that may take arguments.
11519 When you use this command, you specify the category to which the
11520 entity belongs. Three predefined, specialized variations
11521 (@code{@@defun}, @code{@@defmac}, and @code{@@defspec}) specify the
11522 category for you: ``Function'', ``Macro'', and ``Special Form''
11523 respectively. (In Lisp, a special form is an entity much like a
11524 function.) Similarly, the general @code{@@defvr} command is
11525 accompanied by several specialized variations for describing
11526 particular kinds of variables.
11528 @xref{Sample Function Definition}, for a detailed example of a
11529 function definition, including the use of @code{@@example} inside the
11532 @cindex Macros in definition commands
11533 Unfortunately, due to implementation difficulties, macros are not expanded
11534 in @code{@@deffn} and all the other definition commands.
11537 @node Def Cmd Continuation Lines
11538 @section Definition Command Continuation Lines
11539 @cindex Continuation lines in definition commands
11540 @cindex Definition command headings, continuing
11541 @cindex @samp{@@} as continuation in definition commands
11543 The heading line of a definition command can get very long.
11544 Therefore, Texinfo has a special syntax allowing them to be continued
11545 over multiple lines of the source file: a lone @samp{@@} at the end of
11546 each line to be continued. Here's an example:
11551 This is the basic continued defun.
11555 @noindent produces:
11559 This is the basic continued defun.
11563 As you can see, the continued lines are combined, as if they had been
11564 typed on one source line.
11566 Although this example only shows a one-line continuation,
11567 continuations may extend over any number of lines; simply put an
11568 @code{@@} at the end of each line to be continued.
11570 The @code{@@} character does not have to be the last character on the
11571 physical line: whitespace is allowed (and ignored) afterwards.
11573 @cindex Whitespace, collapsed around continuations
11574 @cindex Collapsing whitespace around continuations
11575 In general, any number of spaces or tabs around the @code{@@}
11576 continuation character, both on the line with the @code{@@} and on the
11577 continued line, are collapsed into a single space. There is one
11578 exception: the Texinfo processors will not fully collapse whitespace
11579 around a continuation inside braces. For example:
11582 @@deffn @{Category @@
11586 @noindent The output (not shown) has excess space between `Category'
11587 and `Name'. In this case, simply elide any unwanted whitespace in
11588 your input, or put the continuation @code{@@} outside braces.
11590 @code{@@} does not (currently) function as a continuation character in
11591 @emph{any} other context. Ordinarily, @samp{@@} followed by a
11592 whitespace character (space, tab, newline) produces a normal interword
11593 space (@pxref{Multiple Spaces}).
11596 @node Optional Arguments
11597 @section Optional and Repeated Arguments
11598 @cindex Optional and repeated arguments
11599 @cindex Repeated and optional arguments
11600 @cindex Arguments, repeated and optional
11601 @cindex Syntax, optional & repeated arguments
11602 @cindex Meta-syntactic chars for arguments
11604 Some entities take optional or repeated arguments, which may be
11605 specified by a distinctive glyph that uses square brackets and
11606 ellipses. For @w{example}, a special form often breaks its argument list
11607 into separate arguments in more complicated ways than a
11608 straightforward function.
11610 @c This is consistent with Emacs Lisp Reference manual
11611 An argument enclosed within square brackets is optional.
11612 Thus, [@var{optional-arg}] means that @var{optional-arg} is optional.
11613 An argument followed by an ellipsis is optional
11614 and may be repeated more than once.
11615 @c This is consistent with Emacs Lisp Reference manual
11616 Thus, @var{repeated-args}@samp{@dots{}} stands for zero or more
11617 arguments. Parentheses are used when several arguments are grouped
11618 into additional levels of list structure in Lisp.
11620 Here is the @code{@@defspec} line of an example of an imaginary
11624 @defspec foobar (@var{var} [@var{from} @var{to} [@var{inc}]]) @var{body}@dots{}
11632 In this example, the arguments @var{from} and @var{to} are optional,
11633 but must both be present or both absent. If they are present,
11634 @var{inc} may optionally be specified as well. These arguments are
11635 grouped with the argument @var{var} into a list, to distinguish them
11636 from @var{body}, which includes all remaining elements of the
11639 In a Texinfo source file, this @code{@@defspec} line is written like
11640 this (except it would not be split over two lines, as it is in this
11645 @@defspec foobar (@@var@{var@} [@@var@{from@} @@var@{to@}
11646 [@@var@{inc@}]]) @@var@{body@}@@dots@{@}
11651 The function is listed in the Command and Variable Index under
11652 @samp{foobar}.@refill
11656 @section Two or More `First' Lines
11657 @cindex Two `First' Lines for @code{@@deffn}
11658 @cindex Grouping two definitions together
11659 @cindex Definitions grouped together
11662 To create two or more `first' or header lines for a definition, follow
11663 the first @code{@@deffn} line by a line beginning with @code{@@deffnx}.
11664 The @code{@@deffnx} command works exactly like @code{@@deffn}
11665 except that it does not generate extra vertical white space between it
11666 and the preceding line.@refill
11673 @@deffn @{Interactive Command@} isearch-forward
11674 @@deffnx @{Interactive Command@} isearch-backward
11675 These two search commands are similar except @dots{}
11683 @deffn {Interactive Command} isearch-forward
11684 @deffnx {Interactive Command} isearch-backward
11685 These two search commands are similar except @dots{}
11688 Each definition command has an `x' form: @code{@@defunx},
11689 @code{@@defvrx}, @code{@@deftypefunx}, etc.
11691 The `x' forms work similarly to @code{@@itemx} (@pxref{itemx}).
11694 @node Def Cmds in Detail
11695 @section The Definition Commands
11697 Texinfo provides more than a dozen definition commands, all of which
11698 are described in this section.@refill
11700 The definition commands automatically enter the name of the entity in
11701 the appropriate index: for example, @code{@@deffn}, @code{@@defun},
11702 and @code{@@defmac} enter function names in the index of functions;
11703 @code{@@defvr} and @code{@@defvar} enter variable names in the index
11704 of variables.@refill
11706 Although the examples that follow mostly illustrate Lisp, the commands
11707 can be used for other programming languages.@refill
11710 * Functions Commands:: Commands for functions and similar entities.
11711 * Variables Commands:: Commands for variables and similar entities.
11712 * Typed Functions:: Commands for functions in typed languages.
11713 * Typed Variables:: Commands for variables in typed languages.
11714 * Data Types:: The definition command for data types.
11715 * Abstract Objects:: Commands for object-oriented programming.
11718 @node Functions Commands
11719 @subsection Functions and Similar Entities
11721 This section describes the commands for describing functions and similar
11726 @item @@deffn @var{category} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11727 The @code{@@deffn} command is the general definition command for
11728 functions, interactive commands, and similar entities that may take
11729 arguments. You must choose a term to describe the category of entity
11730 being defined; for example, ``Function'' could be used if the entity is
11731 a function. The @code{@@deffn} command is written at the beginning of a
11732 line and is followed on the same line by the category of entity being
11733 described, the name of this particular entity, and its arguments, if
11734 any. Terminate the definition with @code{@@end deffn} on a line of its
11738 For example, here is a definition:
11742 @@deffn Command forward-char nchars
11743 Move point forward @@var@{nchars@} characters.
11749 This shows a rather terse definition for a ``command'' named
11750 @code{forward-char} with one argument, @var{nchars}.
11752 @code{@@deffn} and prints argument names such as @var{nchars} in slanted
11753 type in the printed output, because we think of these names as
11754 metasyntactic variables---they stand for the actual argument values.
11755 Within the text of the description, however, write an argument name
11756 explicitly with @code{@@var} to refer to the value of the argument.
11757 In the example above, we used @samp{@@var@{nchars@}} in this way.
11759 In the unusual case when an argument name contains @samp{--}, or
11760 another character sequence which is treated specially
11761 (@pxref{Conventions}), use @code{@@var} around the argument. This
11762 causes the name to be printed in slanted typewriter, instead of the
11763 regular slanted font, exactly as input.
11764 @c except for ?` and !`, but we won't explain that.
11766 The template for @code{@@deffn} is:
11770 @@deffn @var{category} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11771 @var{body-of-definition}
11777 @item @@defun @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11778 The @code{@@defun} command is the definition command for functions.
11779 @code{@@defun} is equivalent to @samp{@@deffn Function @dots{}}.
11780 Terminate the definition with @code{@@end defun} on a line of its own.
11781 Thus, the template is:
11785 @@defun @var{function-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11786 @var{body-of-definition}
11792 @item @@defmac @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11793 The @code{@@defmac} command is the definition command for macros.
11794 @code{@@defmac} is equivalent to @samp{@@deffn Macro @dots{}} and
11795 works like @code{@@defun}.
11798 @item @@defspec @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11799 The @code{@@defspec} command is the definition command for special
11800 forms. (In Lisp, a special form is an entity much like a function,
11801 @pxref{Special Forms,,, elisp, GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.)
11802 @code{@@defspec} is equivalent to @samp{@@deffn @{Special Form@}
11803 @dots{}} and works like @code{@@defun}.
11806 All these commands create entries in the index of functions.
11809 @node Variables Commands
11810 @subsection Variables and Similar Entities
11812 Here are the commands for defining variables and similar
11817 @item @@defvr @var{category} @var{name}
11818 The @code{@@defvr} command is a general definition command for
11819 something like a variable---an entity that records a value. You must
11820 choose a term to describe the category of entity being defined; for
11821 example, ``Variable'' could be used if the entity is a variable.
11822 Write the @code{@@defvr} command at the beginning of a line and
11823 follow it on the same line by the category of the entity and the
11824 name of the entity.
11826 Capitalize the category name like a title. If the name of the category
11827 contains spaces, as in the name ``User Option'', enclose it in braces.
11828 Otherwise, the second word will be mistaken for the name of the entity.
11833 @@defvr @{User Option@} fill-column
11834 This buffer-local variable specifies
11835 the maximum width of filled lines.
11841 Terminate the definition with @code{@@end defvr} on a line of its
11848 @@defvr @var{category} @var{name}
11849 @var{body-of-definition}
11854 @code{@@defvr} creates an entry in the index of variables for @var{name}.
11857 @item @@defvar @var{name}
11858 The @code{@@defvar} command is the definition command for variables.
11859 @code{@@defvar} is equivalent to @samp{@@defvr Variable
11877 @@defvar @var{name}
11878 @var{body-of-definition}
11883 @code{@@defvar} creates an entry in the index of variables for
11887 @item @@defopt @var{name}
11888 @cindex User options, marking
11889 The @code{@@defopt} command is the definition command for @dfn{user
11890 options}, i.e., variables intended for users to change according to
11891 taste; Emacs has many such (@pxref{Variables,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
11892 Manual}). @code{@@defopt} is equivalent to @samp{@@defvr @{User
11893 Option@} @dots{}} and works like @code{@@defvar}. It creates an entry
11894 in the index of variables.
11898 @node Typed Functions
11899 @subsection Functions in Typed Languages
11901 The @code{@@deftypefn} command and its variations are for describing
11902 functions in languages in which you must declare types of variables and
11903 functions, such as C and C++.
11907 @item @@deftypefn @var{category} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
11908 The @code{@@deftypefn} command is the general definition command for
11909 functions and similar entities that may take arguments and that are
11910 typed. The @code{@@deftypefn} command is written at the beginning of
11911 a line and is followed on the same line by the category of entity
11912 being described, the type of the returned value, the name of this
11913 particular entity, and its arguments, if any.@refill
11921 @@deftypefn @{Library Function@} int foobar
11922 (int @@var@{foo@}, float @@var@{bar@})
11930 (where the text before the ``@dots{}'', shown above as two lines, would
11931 actually be a single line in a real Texinfo file) produces the following
11936 -- Library Function: int foobar (int FOO, float BAR)
11942 In a printed manual, it produces:
11945 @deftypefn {Library Function} int foobar (int @var{foo}, float @var{bar})
11951 This means that @code{foobar} is a ``library function'' that returns an
11952 @code{int}, and its arguments are @var{foo} (an @code{int}) and
11953 @var{bar} (a @code{float}).@refill
11955 Since in typed languages, the actual names of the arguments are
11956 typically scattered among data type names and keywords, Texinfo cannot
11957 find them without help. You can either (a)@tie{}write everything
11958 as straight text, and it will be printed in slanted type; (b)@tie{}use
11959 @code{@@var} for the variable names, which will uppercase the
11960 variable names in Info and use the slanted typewriter font in printed
11961 output; (c)@tie{}use @code{@@var} for the variable names and
11962 @code{@@code} for the type names and keywords, which will be dutifully
11965 The template for @code{@@deftypefn} is:@refill
11969 @@deftypefn @var{category} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments} @dots{}
11970 @var{body-of-description}
11976 Note that if the @var{category} or @var{data type} is more than one
11977 word then it must be enclosed in braces to make it a single argument.@refill
11979 If you are describing a procedure in a language that has packages,
11980 such as Ada, you might consider using @code{@@deftypefn} in a manner
11981 somewhat contrary to the convention described in the preceding
11982 paragraphs. For example:
11986 @@deftypefn stacks private push @@
11987 (@@var@{s@}:in out stack; @@
11988 @@var@{n@}:in integer)
11995 (The @code{@@deftypefn} arguments are shown using continuations
11996 (@pxref{Def Cmd Continuation Lines}), but could be on a single line in
11997 a real Texinfo file.)
11999 In this instance, the procedure is classified as belonging to the
12000 package @code{stacks} rather than classified as a `procedure' and its
12001 data type is described as @code{private}. (The name of the procedure
12002 is @code{push}, and its arguments are @var{s} and @var{n}.)@refill
12004 @code{@@deftypefn} creates an entry in the index of functions for
12007 @item @@deftypefun @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
12009 The @code{@@deftypefun} command is the specialized definition command
12010 for functions in typed languages. The command is equivalent to
12011 @samp{@@deftypefn Function @dots{}}. The template is:
12015 @@deftypefun @var{type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
12016 @var{body-of-description}
12021 @code{@@deftypefun} creates an entry in the index of functions for
12027 @node Typed Variables
12028 @subsection Variables in Typed Languages
12030 Variables in typed languages are handled in a manner similar to
12031 functions in typed languages. @xref{Typed Functions}. The general
12032 definition command @code{@@deftypevr} corresponds to
12033 @code{@@deftypefn} and the specialized definition command
12034 @code{@@deftypevar} corresponds to @code{@@deftypefun}.@refill
12038 @item @@deftypevr @var{category} @var{data-type} @var{name}
12039 The @code{@@deftypevr} command is the general definition command for
12040 something like a variable in a typed language---an entity that records
12041 a value. You must choose a term to describe the category of the
12042 entity being defined; for example, ``Variable'' could be used if the
12043 entity is a variable.@refill
12045 The @code{@@deftypevr} command is written at the beginning of a line
12046 and is followed on the same line by the category of the entity
12047 being described, the data type, and the name of this particular
12056 @@deftypevr @{Global Flag@} int enable
12063 produces the following in Info:
12067 -- Global Flag: int enable
12074 and the following in a printed manual:
12077 @deftypevr {Global Flag} int enable
12087 @@deftypevr @var{category} @var{data-type} @var{name}
12088 @var{body-of-description}
12093 @item @@deftypevar @var{data-type} @var{name}
12094 The @code{@@deftypevar} command is the specialized definition command
12095 for variables in typed languages. @code{@@deftypevar} is equivalent
12096 to @samp{@@deftypevr Variable @dots{}}. The template is:
12100 @@deftypevar @var{data-type} @var{name}
12101 @var{body-of-description}
12107 These commands create entries in the index of variables.
12110 @subsection Data Types
12112 Here is the command for data types:@refill
12116 @item @@deftp @var{category} @var{name} @var{attributes}@dots{}
12117 The @code{@@deftp} command is the generic definition command for data
12118 types. The command is written at the beginning of a line and is
12119 followed on the same line by the category, by the name of the type
12120 (which is a word like @code{int} or @code{float}), and then by names of
12121 attributes of objects of that type. Thus, you could use this command
12122 for describing @code{int} or @code{float}, in which case you could use
12123 @code{data type} as the category. (A data type is a category of
12124 certain objects for purposes of deciding which operations can be
12125 performed on them.)@refill
12127 In Lisp, for example, @dfn{pair} names a particular data
12128 type, and an object of that type has two slots called the
12129 @sc{car} and the @sc{cdr}. Here is how you would write the first line
12130 of a definition of @code{pair}.@refill
12134 @@deftp @{Data type@} pair car cdr
12145 @@deftp @var{category} @var{name-of-type} @var{attributes}@dots{}
12146 @var{body-of-definition}
12151 @code{@@deftp} creates an entry in the index of data types.
12155 @node Abstract Objects
12156 @subsection Object-Oriented Programming
12158 @cindex Object-oriented programming
12160 Here are the commands for formatting descriptions about abstract
12161 objects, such as are used in object-oriented programming. A class is
12162 a defined type of abstract object. An instance of a class is a
12163 particular object that has the type of the class. An instance
12164 variable is a variable that belongs to the class but for which each
12165 instance has its own value.
12168 * Variables: Object-Oriented Variables.
12169 * Methods: Object-Oriented Methods.
12173 @node Object-Oriented Variables
12174 @subsubsection Object-Oriented Variables
12176 @cindex Variables, object-oriented
12178 These commands allow you to define different sorts of variables in
12179 object-oriented programming languages.
12182 @item @@defcv @var{category} @var{class} @var{name}
12184 The @code{@@defcv} command is the general definition command for
12185 variables associated with classes in object-oriented programming. The
12186 @code{@@defcv} command is followed by three arguments: the category of
12187 thing being defined, the class to which it belongs, and its
12188 name. For instance:
12192 @@defcv @{Class Option@} Window border-pattern
12198 @noindent produces:
12199 @defcv {Class Option} Window border-pattern
12203 @code{@@defcv} creates an entry in the index of variables.
12205 @item @@deftypecv @var{category} @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name}
12207 The @code{@@deftypecv} command is the definition command for typed
12208 class variables in object-oriented programming. It is analogous to
12209 @code{@@defcv} with the addition of the @var{data-type} parameter to
12210 specify the type of the instance variable. Ordinarily, the data type
12211 is a programming language construct that should be marked with
12212 @code{@@code}. For instance:
12216 @@deftypecv @{Class Option@} Window @@code@{int@} border-pattern
12222 @noindent produces:
12224 @deftypecv {Class Option} Window @code{int} border-pattern
12228 @code{@@deftypecv} creates an entry in the index of variables.
12230 @item @@defivar @var{class} @var{name}
12232 The @code{@@defivar} command is the definition command for instance
12233 variables in object-oriented programming. @code{@@defivar} is
12234 equivalent to @samp{@@defcv @{Instance Variable@} @dots{}}. For
12239 @@defivar Window border-pattern
12245 @noindent produces:
12247 @defivar Window border-pattern
12251 @code{@@defivar} creates an entry in the index of variables.
12253 @item @@deftypeivar @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name}
12254 @findex deftypeivar
12255 The @code{@@deftypeivar} command is the definition command for typed
12256 instance variables in object-oriented programming. It is analogous to
12257 @code{@@defivar} with the addition of the @var{data-type} parameter to
12258 specify the type of the instance variable. Ordinarily, the data type
12259 is a programming language construct that should be marked with
12260 @code{@@code}. For instance:
12264 @@deftypeivar Window @@code@{int@} border-pattern
12270 @noindent produces:
12272 @deftypeivar Window @code{int} border-pattern
12276 @code{@@deftypeivar} creates an entry in the index of variables.
12280 @node Object-Oriented Methods
12281 @subsubsection Object-Oriented Methods
12283 @cindex Methods, object-oriented
12285 These commands allow you to define different sorts of function-like
12286 entities resembling methods in object-oriented programming languages.
12287 These entities take arguments, as functions do, but are associated with
12288 particular classes of objects.
12293 @item @@defop @var{category} @var{class} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
12294 The @code{@@defop} command is the general definition command for these
12295 method-like entities.
12297 For example, some systems have constructs called @dfn{wrappers} that
12298 are associated with classes as methods are, but that act more like
12299 macros than like functions. You could use @code{@@defop Wrapper} to
12300 describe one of these.@refill
12302 Sometimes it is useful to distinguish methods and @dfn{operations}.
12303 You can think of an operation as the specification for a method.
12304 Thus, a window system might specify that all window classes have a
12305 method named @code{expose}; we would say that this window system
12306 defines an @code{expose} operation on windows in general. Typically,
12307 the operation has a name and also specifies the pattern of arguments;
12308 all methods that implement the operation must accept the same
12309 arguments, since applications that use the operation do so without
12310 knowing which method will implement it.@refill
12312 Often it makes more sense to document operations than methods. For
12313 example, window application developers need to know about the
12314 @code{expose} operation, but need not be concerned with whether a
12315 given class of windows has its own method to implement this operation.
12316 To describe this operation, you would write:@refill
12319 @@defop Operation windows expose
12322 The @code{@@defop} command is written at the beginning of a line and
12323 is followed on the same line by the overall name of the category of
12324 operation, the name of the class of the operation, the name of the
12325 operation, and its arguments, if any.@refill
12330 @@defop @var{category} @var{class} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
12331 @var{body-of-definition}
12336 @code{@@defop} creates an entry, such as `@code{expose} on
12337 @code{windows}', in the index of functions.@refill
12340 @item @@deftypeop @var{category} @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
12341 The @code{@@deftypeop} command is the definition command for typed
12342 operations in object-oriented programming. It is similar to
12343 @code{@@defop} with the addition of the @var{data-type} parameter to
12344 specify the return type of the method. @code{@@deftypeop} creates an
12345 entry in the index of functions.
12347 @item @@defmethod @var{class} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
12349 The @code{@@defmethod} command is the definition command for methods
12350 in object-oriented programming. A method is a kind of function that
12351 implements an operation for a particular class of objects and its
12354 @c ADR: Who cares?!?
12355 @c KB: Oh, I don't know, I think this info is crucial!
12356 In the Lisp Machine, methods actually were functions, but
12357 they were usually defined with @code{defmethod}.
12360 @code{@@defmethod} is equivalent to @samp{@@defop Method @dots{}}.
12361 The command is written at the beginning of a line and is followed by
12362 the name of the class of the method, the name of the method, and its
12363 arguments, if any.@refill
12369 @@defmethod @code{bar-class} bar-method argument
12376 illustrates the definition for a method called @code{bar-method} of
12377 the class @code{bar-class}. The method takes an argument.
12379 @code{@@defmethod} creates an entry in the index of functions.
12381 @item @@deftypemethod @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
12383 The @code{@@deftypemethod} command is the definition command for methods
12384 in object-oriented typed languages, such as C++ and Java. It is similar
12385 to the @code{@@defmethod} command with the addition of the
12386 @var{data-type} parameter to specify the return type of the method.
12387 @code{@@deftypemethod} creates an entry in the index of functions.
12392 @node Def Cmd Conventions
12393 @section Conventions for Writing Definitions
12394 @cindex Definition conventions
12395 @cindex Conventions for writing definitions
12397 When you write a definition using @code{@@deffn}, @code{@@defun}, or
12398 one of the other definition commands, please take care to use
12399 arguments that indicate the meaning, as with the @var{count} argument
12400 to the @code{forward-word} function. Also, if the name of an argument
12401 contains the name of a type, such as @var{integer}, take care that the
12402 argument actually is of that type.@refill
12405 @node Sample Function Definition
12406 @section A Sample Function Definition
12407 @cindex Function definitions
12408 @cindex Command definitions
12409 @cindex Macro definitions
12410 @cindex Sample function definition
12412 A function definition uses the @code{@@defun} and @code{@@end defun}
12413 commands. The name of the function follows immediately after the
12414 @code{@@defun} command and it is followed, on the same line, by the
12415 parameter list.@refill
12417 Here is a definition from @ref{Calling Functions,,, elisp, The GNU Emacs
12418 Lisp Reference Manual}.
12421 @defun apply function &rest arguments
12422 @code{apply} calls @var{function} with @var{arguments}, just
12423 like @code{funcall} but with one difference: the last of
12424 @var{arguments} is a list of arguments to give to
12425 @var{function}, rather than a single argument. We also say
12426 that this list is @dfn{appended} to the other arguments.
12428 @code{apply} returns the result of calling @var{function}.
12429 As with @code{funcall}, @var{function} must either be a Lisp
12430 function or a primitive function; special forms and macros
12431 do not make sense in @code{apply}.
12437 @error{} Wrong type argument: listp, z
12438 (apply '+ 1 2 '(3 4))
12440 (apply '+ '(1 2 3 4))
12443 (apply 'append '((a b c) nil (x y z) nil))
12444 @result{} (a b c x y z)
12447 An interesting example of using @code{apply} is found in the description
12448 of @code{mapcar}.@refill
12453 In the Texinfo source file, this example looks like this:
12457 @@defun apply function &rest arguments
12458 @@code@{apply@} calls @@var@{function@} with
12459 @@var@{arguments@}, just like @@code@{funcall@} but with one
12460 difference: the last of @@var@{arguments@} is a list of
12461 arguments to give to @@var@{function@}, rather than a single
12462 argument. We also say that this list is @@dfn@{appended@}
12463 to the other arguments.
12467 @@code@{apply@} returns the result of calling
12468 @@var@{function@}. As with @@code@{funcall@},
12469 @@var@{function@} must either be a Lisp function or a
12470 primitive function; special forms and macros do not make
12471 sense in @@code@{apply@}.
12479 @@error@{@} Wrong type argument: listp, z
12480 (apply '+ 1 2 '(3 4))
12482 (apply '+ '(1 2 3 4))
12485 (apply 'append '((a b c) nil (x y z) nil))
12486 @@result@{@} (a b c x y z)
12491 An interesting example of using @@code@{apply@} is found
12492 in the description of @@code@{mapcar@}.
12498 In this manual, this function is listed in the Command and Variable
12499 Index under @code{apply}.@refill
12501 Ordinary variables and user options are described using a format like
12502 that for functions except that variables do not take arguments.
12506 @chapter Conditionally Visible Text
12507 @cindex Conditionally visible text
12508 @cindex Text, conditionally visible
12509 @cindex Visibility of conditional text
12510 @cindex If text conditionally visible
12512 The @dfn{conditional commands} allow you to use different text for
12513 different output formats, or for general conditions that you define.
12514 For example, you can use them to specify different text for the
12515 printed manual and the Info output.
12517 The conditional commands comprise the following categories.
12521 Commands specific to an output format (Info, @TeX{}, HTML, @dots{}).
12524 Commands specific to any output format @emph{other} than a given
12525 one (not Info, not @TeX{}, @dots{}).
12528 `Raw' formatter text for any output format, passed straight
12529 through with no interpretation of @@-commands.
12532 Format-independent variable substitutions, and testing if a variable
12538 * Conditional Commands:: Text for a given format.
12539 * Conditional Not Commands:: Text for any format other than a given one.
12540 * Raw Formatter Commands:: Using raw formatter commands.
12541 * set clear value:: Variable tests and substitutions.
12542 * Conditional Nesting:: Using conditionals inside conditionals.
12546 @node Conditional Commands
12547 @section Conditional Commands
12549 Texinfo has an @code{@@if@var{format}} environment for each output
12550 format, to allow conditional inclusion of text for a particular output
12554 @code{@@ifinfo} begins segments of text that should be ignored by
12555 @TeX{} when it typesets the printed manual, and by @command{makeinfo}
12556 when not producing Info output. The segment of text appears only in
12557 the Info file and, for historical compatibility, the plain text
12562 @findex ifplaintext
12565 The environments for the other formats are analogous:
12568 @item @@ifdocbook @dots{} @@end ifdocbook
12569 Text to appear only in the Docbook output.
12571 @item @@ifhtml @dots{} @@end ifhtml
12572 Text to appear only in the HTML output.
12574 @item @@ifplaintext @dots{} @@end ifplaintext
12575 Text to appear only in the plain text output.
12577 @item @@iftex @dots{} @@end iftex
12578 Text to appear only in the printed manual.
12580 @item @@ifxml @dots{} @@end ifxml
12581 Text to appear only in the XML output.
12584 The @code{@@if@dots{}} and @code{@@end if@dots{}} commands must appear
12585 on lines by themselves in your source file.
12587 Here is an example showing all these conditionals:
12591 This text will appear only in the printed manual.
12594 However, this text will appear only in Info and plain text.
12597 And this text will only appear in HTML.
12600 Whereas this text will only appear in plain text.
12603 Notwithstanding that this will only appear in XML.
12606 Nevertheless, this will only appear in Docbook.
12611 The preceding example produces the following line:
12614 This text will appear only in the printed manual.
12617 However, this text will appear only in Info and plain text.
12620 And this text will only appear in HTML.
12623 Whereas this text will only appear in plain text.
12626 Notwithstanding that this will only appear in XML.
12629 Nevertheless, this will only appear in Docbook.
12633 Notice that you only see one of the input lines, depending on which
12634 version of the manual you are reading.
12637 @node Conditional Not Commands
12638 @section Conditional Not Commands
12639 @findex ifnotdocbook
12642 @findex ifnotplaintext
12646 You can specify text to be included in any output format @emph{other}
12647 than a given one with the @code{@@ifnot@dots{}} environments:
12650 @@ifnotdocbook @dots{} @@end ifnotdocbook
12651 @@ifnothtml @dots{} @@end ifnothtml
12652 @@ifnotinfo @dots{} @@end ifnotinfo
12653 @@ifnotplaintext @dots{} @@end ifnotplaintext
12654 @@ifnottex @dots{} @@end ifnottex
12655 @@ifnotxml @dots{} @@end ifnotxml
12659 The @code{@@ifnot@dots{}} command and the @code{@@end} command must
12660 appear on lines by themselves in your actual source file.
12662 If the output file is being made in the given format, the
12663 region is @emph{ignored}. Otherwise, it is included.
12665 There is one exception (for historical compatibility):
12666 @code{@@ifnotinfo} text is omitted for both Info and plain text
12667 output, not just Info. To specify text which appears only in Info and
12668 not in plain text, use @code{@@ifnotplaintext}, like this:
12673 This will be in Info, but not plain text.
12674 @@end ifnotplaintext
12678 The regions delimited by these commands are ordinary Texinfo source as
12679 with @code{@@iftex}, not raw formatter source as with @code{@@tex}
12680 (@pxref{Raw Formatter Commands}).
12683 @node Raw Formatter Commands
12684 @section Raw Formatter Commands
12685 @cindex Raw formatter commands
12686 @cindex @TeX{} commands, using ordinary
12687 @cindex Ordinary @TeX{} commands, using
12688 @cindex Commands using raw @TeX{}
12689 @cindex Docbook, including raw
12690 @cindex HTML, including raw
12691 @cindex XML, including raw
12692 @cindex Plain @TeX{}
12694 Inside a region delineated by @code{@@iftex} and @code{@@end iftex},
12695 you can embed some raw @TeX{} commands. The Texinfo processors will
12696 ignore such a region unless @TeX{} output is being produced. You can
12697 write the @TeX{} commands as you would write them in a normal @TeX{}
12698 file, except that you must replace the @samp{\} used by @TeX{} with an
12699 @samp{@@}. For example, in the @code{@@titlepage} section of a
12700 Texinfo file, you can use the @TeX{} command @code{@@vskip} to format
12701 the copyright page. (The @code{@@titlepage} command causes Info to
12702 ignore the region automatically, as it does with the @code{@@iftex}
12705 However, most features of plain @TeX{} will not work within
12706 @code{@@iftex}, as they are overridden by Texinfo features. The
12707 purpose of @code{@@iftex} is to provide conditional processing for the
12708 Texinfo source, not provide access to underlying formatting features.
12711 You can enter plain @TeX{} completely, and use @samp{\} in the @TeX{}
12712 commands, by delineating a region with the @code{@@tex} and @code{@@end
12713 tex} commands. All plain @TeX{} commands and category codes are
12714 restored within an @code{@@tex} region. The sole exception is that the
12715 @code{@@} character still introduces a command, so that @code{@@end tex}
12716 can be recognized properly. As with @code{@@iftex}, Texinfo
12717 processors will ignore such a region unless @TeX{} output is being produced.
12719 @findex \gdef @r{within @code{@@tex}}
12720 In complex cases, you may wish to define new @TeX{} macros within
12721 @code{@@tex}. You must use @code{\gdef} to do this, not @code{\def},
12722 because @code{@@tex} regions are processed in a @TeX{} group.
12724 @cindex Mathematical expressions
12725 As an example, here is a mathematical expression written in plain @TeX{}:
12729 $$ \chi^2 = \sum_@{i=1@}^N
12730 \left (y_i - (a + b x_i)
12731 \over \sigma_i\right)^2 $$
12736 The output of this example will appear only in a printed manual. If
12737 you are reading this in Info, you will not see the equation that appears
12738 in the printed manual.
12740 In a printed manual, the above expression looks like
12745 $$ \chi^2 = \sum_{i=1}^N
12746 \left(y_i - (a + b x_i)
12747 \over \sigma_i\right)^2 $$
12752 Analogously, you can use @code{@@ifhtml @dots{} @@end ifhtml} to delimit
12753 a region to be included in HTML output only, and @code{@@html @dots{}
12754 @@end html} for a region of raw HTML.
12758 Likewise, you can use @code{@@ifxml @dots{} @@end ifxml} to delimit
12759 a region to be included in XML output only, and @code{@@xml @dots{}
12760 @@end xml} for a region of raw XML.
12764 Again likewise, you can use @code{@@ifdocbook @dots{} @@end ifdocbook}
12765 to delimit a region to be included in Docbook output only, and
12766 @code{@@docbook @dots{} @@end docbook} for a region of raw Docbook.
12768 In all cases, the exception to the raw processing is that @code{@@} is
12769 still an escape character, so the @code{@@end} command can be
12773 @node set clear value
12774 @section @code{@@set}, @code{@@clear}, and @code{@@value}
12776 You can direct the Texinfo formatting commands to format or ignore parts
12777 of a Texinfo file with the @code{@@set}, @code{@@clear}, @code{@@ifset},
12778 and @code{@@ifclear} commands.
12780 Here are brief descriptions of these commands, see the following
12781 sections for more details:
12784 @item @@set @var{flag} [@var{value}]
12785 Set the variable @var{flag}, to the optional @var{value} if specifed.
12787 @item @@clear @var{flag}
12788 Undefine the variable @var{flag}, whether or not it was previously defined.
12790 @item @@ifset @var{flag}
12791 If @var{flag} is set, text through the next @code{@@end ifset} command
12792 is formatted. If @var{flag} is clear, text through the following
12793 @code{@@end ifset} command is ignored.
12795 @item @@ifclear @var{flag}
12796 If @var{flag} is set, text through the next @code{@@end ifclear} command
12797 is ignored. If @var{flag} is clear, text through the following
12798 @code{@@end ifclear} command is formatted.
12802 * set value:: Expand a flag variable to a string.
12803 * ifset ifclear:: Format a region if a flag is set.
12804 * value Example:: An easy way to update edition information.
12809 @subsection @code{@@set} and @code{@@value}
12812 You use the @code{@@set} command to specify a value for a flag, which
12813 is later expanded by the @code{@@value} command.
12815 A @dfn{flag} (aka @dfn{variable}) is an identifier. It is best to use
12816 only letters and numerals in a flag name, not @samp{-} or
12817 @samp{_}---they will work in some contexts, but not all, due to
12818 limitations in @TeX{}.
12820 The value is the remainder of the input line, and can contain anything.
12822 Write the @code{@@set} command like this:
12825 @@set foo This is a string.
12829 This sets the value of the flag @code{foo} to ``This is a string.''.
12831 The Texinfo formatters then replace an @code{@@value@{@var{flag}@}}
12832 command with the string to which @var{flag} is set. Thus, when
12833 @code{foo} is set as shown above, the Texinfo formatters convert this:
12838 @exdent @r{to this:}
12843 You can write an @code{@@value} command within a paragraph; but you
12844 must write an @code{@@set} command on a line of its own.
12846 If you write the @code{@@set} command like this:
12853 without specifying a string, the value of @code{foo} is the empty string.
12855 If you clear a previously set flag with @code{@@clear @var{flag}}, a
12856 subsequent @code{@@value@{flag@}} command will report an error.
12858 For example, if you set @code{foo} as follows:
12861 @@set howmuch very, very, very
12865 then the formatters transform
12869 It is a @@value@{howmuch@} wet day.
12871 It is a very, very, very wet day.
12882 then the formatters transform
12886 It is a @@value@{howmuch@} wet day.
12888 It is a @{No value for "howmuch"@} wet day.
12893 @node ifset ifclear
12894 @subsection @code{@@ifset} and @code{@@ifclear}
12897 When a @var{flag} is set, the Texinfo formatting commands format text
12898 between subsequent pairs of @code{@@ifset @var{flag}} and @code{@@end
12899 ifset} commands. When the @var{flag} is cleared, the Texinfo formatting
12900 commands do @emph{not} format the text. @code{@@ifclear} operates
12903 Write the conditionally formatted text between @code{@@ifset @var{flag}}
12904 and @code{@@end ifset} commands, like this:
12909 @var{conditional-text}
12914 For example, you can create one document that has two variants, such as
12915 a manual for a `large' and `small' model:
12919 You can use this machine to dig up shrubs
12920 without hurting them.
12925 It can also dig up fully grown trees.
12928 Remember to replant promptly @dots{}
12932 In the example, the formatting commands will format the text between
12933 @code{@@ifset large} and @code{@@end ifset} because the @code{large}
12936 When @var{flag} is cleared, the Texinfo formatting commands do
12937 @emph{not} format the text between @code{@@ifset @var{flag}} and
12938 @code{@@end ifset}; that text is ignored and does not appear in either
12939 printed or Info output.
12941 For example, if you clear the flag of the preceding example by writing
12942 an @code{@@clear large} command after the @code{@@set large} command
12943 (but before the conditional text), then the Texinfo formatting commands
12944 ignore the text between the @code{@@ifset large} and @code{@@end ifset}
12945 commands. In the formatted output, that text does not appear; in both
12946 printed and Info output, you see only the lines that say, ``You can use
12947 this machine to dig up shrubs without hurting them. Remember to replant
12948 promptly @dots{}''.
12951 If a flag is cleared with an @code{@@clear @var{flag}} command, then
12952 the formatting commands format text between subsequent pairs of
12953 @code{@@ifclear} and @code{@@end ifclear} commands. But if the flag
12954 is set with @code{@@set @var{flag}}, then the formatting commands do
12955 @emph{not} format text between an @code{@@ifclear} and an @code{@@end
12956 ifclear} command; rather, they ignore that text. An @code{@@ifclear}
12957 command looks like this:
12960 @@ifclear @var{flag}
12964 @node value Example
12965 @subsection @code{@@value} Example
12967 You can use the @code{@@value} command to minimize the number of
12968 places you need to change when you record an update to a manual.
12969 @xref{GNU Sample Texts}, for the full text of an example of using this
12970 to work with Automake distributions.
12972 This example is adapted from @ref{Top,, Overview, make, The GNU Make
12981 @@set EDITION 0.35 Beta
12982 @@set VERSION 3.63 Beta
12983 @@set UPDATED 14 August 1992
12984 @@set UPDATE-MONTH August 1992
12989 Write text for the @code{@@copying} section (@pxref{copying}):
12994 This is Edition @@value@{EDITION@},
12995 last updated @@value@{UPDATED@},
12996 of @@cite@{The GNU Make Manual@},
12997 for @@code@{make@}, version @@value@{VERSION@}.
13001 Permission is granted @dots{}
13007 Write text for the title page, for people reading the printed manual:
13013 @@subtitle A Program for Directing Recompilation
13014 @@subtitle Edition @@value@{EDITION@}, @dots{}
13015 @@subtitle @@value@{UPDATE-MONTH@}
13024 (On a printed cover, a date listing the month and the year looks less
13025 fussy than a date listing the day as well as the month and year.)
13028 Write text for the Top node, for people reading the Info file:
13042 After you format the manual, the @code{@@value} constructs have been
13043 expanded, so the output contains text like this:
13047 This is Edition 0.35 Beta, last updated 14 August 1992,
13048 of `The GNU Make Manual', for `make', Version 3.63 Beta.
13053 When you update the manual, you change only the values of the flags; you
13054 do not need to edit the three sections.
13057 @node Conditional Nesting
13058 @section Conditional Nesting
13059 @cindex Conditionals, nested
13060 @cindex Nesting conditionals
13062 Conditionals can be nested; however, the details are a little tricky.
13063 The difficulty comes with failing conditionals, such as
13064 @code{@@ifhtml} when HTML is not being produced, where the included
13065 text is to be ignored. However, it is not to be @emph{completely}
13066 ignored, since it is useful to have one @code{@@ifset} inside another,
13067 for example---that is a way to include text only if two conditions are
13068 met. Here's an example:
13073 Both somevar and anothervar are set.
13075 @@ifclear anothervar
13076 Somevar is set, anothervar is not.
13081 Technically, Texinfo requires that for a failing conditional, the
13082 ignored text must be properly nested with respect to that failing
13083 conditional. Unfortunately, it's not always feasible to check that
13084 @emph{all} conditionals are properly nested, because then the
13085 processors could have to fully interpret the ignored text, which
13086 defeats the purpose of the command. Here's an example illustrating
13092 @@ifclear ok - ok, ignored
13093 @@end junky - ok, ignored
13095 @@c WRONG - missing @@end ifset.
13098 Finally, as mentioned above, all conditional commands must be on lines
13099 by themselves, with no text (even spaces) before or after. Otherwise,
13100 the processors cannot reliably determine which commands to consider
13101 for nesting purposes.
13104 @node Internationalization
13105 @chapter Internationalization
13107 @cindex Internationalization
13108 Texinfo has some support for writing in languages other than English,
13109 although this area still needs considerable work.
13111 For a list of the various accented and special characters Texinfo
13112 supports, see @ref{Inserting Accents}.
13115 * documentlanguage:: Declaring the current language.
13116 * documentencoding:: Declaring the input encoding.
13120 @node documentlanguage
13121 @section @code{@@documentlanguage @var{cc}}: Set the Document Language
13123 @findex documentlanguage
13124 @cindex Language, declaring
13125 @cindex Document language, declaring
13127 The @code{@@documentlanguage} command declares the current document
13128 language. Write it on a line by itself, with a two-letter ISO-639
13129 language code following (list is included below). If you have a
13130 multilingual document, the intent is to be able to use this command
13131 multiple times, to declare each language change. If the command is not
13132 used at all, the default is @code{en} for English.
13134 @cindex @file{txi-@var{cc}.tex}
13135 At present, this command is ignored in Info and HTML output. For
13136 @TeX{}, it causes the file @file{txi-@var{cc}.tex} to be read (if it
13137 exists). Such a file appropriately redefines the various English words
13138 used in @TeX{} output, such as `Chapter', `See', and so on.
13140 @cindex Hyphenation patterns, language-dependent
13141 It would be good if this command also changed @TeX{}'s ideas of the
13142 current hyphenation patterns (via the @TeX{} primitive
13143 @code{\language}), but this is unfortunately not currently implemented.
13145 @cindex ISO 639 codes
13146 @cindex Language codes
13147 Hereare the valid language codes, from ISO-639.
13149 @multitable @columnfractions .07 .26 .07 .26 .07 .26
13151 @code{aa} @tab Afar @tab
13152 @code{ab} @tab Abkhazian @tab
13153 @code{af} @tab Afrikaans
13155 @code{am} @tab Amharic @tab
13156 @code{ar} @tab Arabic @tab
13157 @code{as} @tab Assamese
13159 @code{ay} @tab Aymara @tab
13160 @code{az} @tab Azerbaijani @tab
13161 @code{ba} @tab Bashkir
13163 @code{be} @tab Byelorussian @tab
13164 @code{bg} @tab Bulgarian @tab
13165 @code{bh} @tab Bihari
13167 @code{bi} @tab Bislama @tab
13168 @code{bn} @tab Bengali; Bangla @tab
13169 @code{bo} @tab Tibetan
13171 @code{br} @tab Breton @tab
13172 @code{ca} @tab Catalan @tab
13173 @code{co} @tab Corsican
13175 @code{cs} @tab Czech @tab
13176 @code{cy} @tab Welsh @tab
13177 @code{da} @tab Danish
13179 @code{de} @tab German @tab
13180 @code{dz} @tab Bhutani @tab
13181 @code{el} @tab Greek
13183 @code{en} @tab English @tab
13184 @code{eo} @tab Esperanto @tab
13185 @code{es} @tab Spanish
13187 @code{et} @tab Estonian @tab
13188 @code{eu} @tab Basque @tab
13189 @code{fa} @tab Persian
13191 @code{fi} @tab Finnish @tab
13192 @code{fj} @tab Fiji @tab
13193 @code{fo} @tab Faroese
13195 @code{fr} @tab French @tab
13196 @code{fy} @tab Frisian @tab
13197 @code{ga} @tab Irish
13199 @code{gd} @tab Scots Gaelic @tab
13200 @code{gl} @tab Galician @tab
13201 @code{gn} @tab Guarani
13203 @code{gu} @tab Gujarati @tab
13204 @code{ha} @tab Hausa @tab
13205 @code{he} @tab Hebrew
13207 @code{hi} @tab Hindi @tab
13208 @code{hr} @tab Croatian @tab
13209 @code{hu} @tab Hungarian
13211 @code{hy} @tab Armenian @tab
13212 @code{ia} @tab Interlingua @tab
13213 @code{id} @tab Indonesian
13215 @code{ie} @tab Interlingue @tab
13216 @code{ik} @tab Inupiak @tab
13217 @code{is} @tab Icelandic
13219 @code{it} @tab Italian @tab
13220 @code{iu} @tab Inuktitut @tab
13221 @code{ja} @tab Japanese
13223 @code{jw} @tab Javanese @tab
13224 @code{ka} @tab Georgian @tab
13225 @code{kk} @tab Kazakh
13227 @code{kl} @tab Greenlandic @tab
13228 @code{km} @tab Cambodian @tab
13229 @code{kn} @tab Kannada
13231 @code{ks} @tab Kashmiri @tab
13232 @code{ko} @tab Korean @tab
13233 @code{ku} @tab Kurdish
13235 @code{ky} @tab Kirghiz @tab
13236 @code{la} @tab Latin @tab
13237 @code{ln} @tab Lingala
13239 @code{lt} @tab Lithuanian @tab
13240 @code{lo} @tab Laothian @tab
13241 @code{lv} @tab Latvian, Lettish
13243 @code{mg} @tab Malagasy @tab
13244 @code{mi} @tab Maori @tab
13245 @code{mk} @tab Macedonian
13247 @code{ml} @tab Malayalam @tab
13248 @code{mn} @tab Mongolian @tab
13249 @code{mo} @tab Moldavian
13251 @code{mr} @tab Marathi @tab
13252 @code{ms} @tab Malay @tab
13253 @code{mt} @tab Maltese
13255 @code{my} @tab Burmese @tab
13256 @code{na} @tab Nauru @tab
13257 @code{ne} @tab Nepali
13259 @code{nl} @tab Dutch @tab
13260 @code{no} @tab Norwegian @tab
13261 @code{oc} @tab Occitan
13263 @code{om} @tab (Afan) Oromo @tab
13264 @code{or} @tab Oriya @tab
13265 @code{pa} @tab Punjabi
13267 @code{pl} @tab Polish @tab
13268 @code{ps} @tab Pashto, Pushto @tab
13269 @code{pt} @tab Portuguese
13271 @code{qu} @tab Quechua @tab
13272 @code{rm} @tab Rhaeto-Romance @tab
13273 @code{rn} @tab Kirundi
13275 @code{ro} @tab Romanian @tab
13276 @code{ru} @tab Russian @tab
13277 @code{rw} @tab Kinyarwanda
13279 @code{sa} @tab Sanskrit @tab
13280 @code{sd} @tab Sindhi @tab
13281 @code{sg} @tab Sangro
13283 @code{sh} @tab Serbo-Croatian @tab
13284 @code{si} @tab Sinhalese @tab
13285 @code{sk} @tab Slovak
13287 @code{sl} @tab Slovenian @tab
13288 @code{sm} @tab Samoan @tab
13289 @code{sn} @tab Shona
13291 @code{so} @tab Somali @tab
13292 @code{sq} @tab Albanian @tab
13293 @code{sr} @tab Serbian
13295 @code{ss} @tab Siswati @tab
13296 @code{st} @tab Sesotho @tab
13297 @code{su} @tab Sundanese
13299 @code{sv} @tab Swedish @tab
13300 @code{sw} @tab Swahili @tab
13301 @code{ta} @tab Tamil
13303 @code{te} @tab Telugu @tab
13304 @code{tg} @tab Tajik @tab
13305 @code{th} @tab Thai
13307 @code{ti} @tab Tigrinya @tab
13308 @code{tk} @tab Turkmen @tab
13309 @code{tl} @tab Tagalog
13311 @code{tn} @tab Setswana @tab
13312 @code{to} @tab Tonga @tab
13313 @code{tr} @tab Turkish
13315 @code{ts} @tab Tsonga @tab
13316 @code{tt} @tab Tatar @tab
13319 @code{ug} @tab Uighur @tab
13320 @code{uk} @tab Ukrainian @tab
13321 @code{ur} @tab Urdu
13323 @code{uz} @tab Uzbek @tab
13324 @code{vi} @tab Vietnamese @tab
13325 @code{vo} @tab Volapuk
13327 @code{wo} @tab Wolof @tab
13328 @code{xh} @tab Xhosa @tab
13329 @code{yi} @tab Yiddish
13331 @code{yo} @tab Yoruba @tab
13332 @code{za} @tab Zhuang @tab
13333 @code{zh} @tab Chinese
13335 @code{zu} @tab Zulu
13339 @node documentencoding
13340 @section @code{@@documentencoding @var{enc}}: Set Input Encoding
13342 @findex documentencoding
13343 @cindex Encoding, declaring
13344 @cindex Input encoding, declaring
13345 @cindex Character set, declaring
13346 @cindex Document input encoding
13348 The @code{@@documentencoding} command declares the input document
13349 encoding. Write it on a line by itself, with a valid encoding
13350 specification following.
13352 At present, Texinfo supports only these encodings:
13356 This has no particular effect, but it's included for completeness.
13361 These specify the standard encodings for Western European (the first
13362 two) and Eastern European languages (the third), respectively. ISO
13363 8859-15 replaces some little-used characters from 8859-1 (e.g.,
13364 precomposed fractions) with more commonly needed ones, such as the
13367 A full description of the encodings is beyond our scope here;
13368 one useful reference is @uref{http://czyborra.com/charsets/iso8859.html}.
13371 Specifying an encoding @var{enc} has the following effects:
13373 @opindex --enable-encoding
13374 @cindex Local Variables: section, for encoding
13375 @cindex Info output, and encoding
13376 In Info output, if the option @option{--enable-encoding} is given
13377 to @command{makeinfo}, a so-called `Local Variables' section
13378 (@pxref{File Variables,,,emacs,The GNU Emacs Manual}) is output
13379 including @var{enc}. This allows Info readers to set the encoding
13388 @cindex HTML output, and encodings
13389 @cindex @code{http-equiv}, and charset specification
13390 @cindex @code{<meta>} HTML tag, and charset specification
13391 In HTML output, a @samp{<meta>} tag is output, in the @samp{<head>}
13392 section of the HTML, that specifies @var{enc}. Web servers and
13393 browsers cooperate to use this information so the correct encoding is
13394 used to display the page, if supported by the system.
13397 <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;
13398 charset=@var{enc}">
13401 In all other cases, it is recognized but ignored.
13404 @node Defining New Texinfo Commands
13405 @chapter Defining New Texinfo Commands
13407 @cindex Defining new Texinfo commands
13408 @cindex New Texinfo commands, defining
13409 @cindex Texinfo commands, defining new
13410 @cindex User-defined Texinfo commands
13412 Texinfo provides several ways to define new commands:
13416 A Texinfo @dfn{macro} allows you to define a new Texinfo command as any
13417 sequence of text and/or existing commands (including other macros). The
13418 macro can have any number of @dfn{parameters}---text you supply each
13419 time you use the macro.
13421 Incidentally, these macros have nothing to do with the @code{@@defmac}
13422 command, which is for documenting macros in the subject of the manual
13423 (@pxref{Def Cmd Template}).
13426 @samp{@@alias} is a convenient way to define a new name for an existing
13430 @samp{@@definfoenclose} allows you to define new commands with
13431 customized output in the Info file.
13436 * Defining Macros:: Defining and undefining new commands.
13437 * Invoking Macros:: Using a macro, once you've defined it.
13438 * Macro Details:: Limitations of Texinfo macros.
13439 * alias:: Command aliases.
13440 * definfoenclose:: Customized highlighting.
13444 @node Defining Macros
13445 @section Defining Macros
13446 @cindex Defining macros
13447 @cindex Macro definitions
13450 You use the Texinfo @code{@@macro} command to define a macro, like this:
13453 @@macro @var{macroname}@{@var{param1}, @var{param2}, @dots{}@}
13454 @var{text} @dots{} \@var{param1}\ @dots{}
13458 The @dfn{parameters} @var{param1}, @var{param2}, @dots{} correspond to
13459 arguments supplied when the macro is subsequently used in the document
13460 (described in the next section).
13462 @cindex Macro names, valid characters in
13463 @cindex Names of macros, valid characters of
13464 For a macro to work consistently with @TeX{}, @var{macroname} must
13465 consist entirely of letters: no digits, hyphens, underscores, or other
13466 special characters. So, we recommend using only letters. However,
13467 @command{makeinfo} will accept anything except @samp{@{@}_^=};
13468 @samp{_} and @samp{^} are excluded so that macros can be called in
13469 @code{@@math} mode without a following space
13470 (@pxref{math,,@code{@@math}}).
13472 If a macro needs no parameters, you can define it either with an empty
13473 list (@samp{@@macro foo @{@}}) or with no braces at all (@samp{@@macro
13476 @cindex Body of a macro
13477 @cindex Mutually recursive macros
13478 @cindex Recursion, mutual
13479 The definition or @dfn{body} of the macro can contain most Texinfo
13480 commands, including previously-defined macros. Not-yet-defined macro
13481 invocations are not allowed; thus, it is not possible to have mutually
13482 recursive Texinfo macros. Also, a macro definition that defines another
13483 macro does not work in @TeX{} due to limitations in the design of
13486 @cindex Parameters to macros
13487 In the macro body, instances of a parameter name surrounded by
13488 backslashes, as in @samp{\@var{param1}\} in the example above, are
13489 replaced by the corresponding argument from the macro invocation. You
13490 can use parameter names any number of times in the body, including zero.
13492 @cindex Backslash in macros
13493 To get a single @samp{\} in the macro expansion, use @samp{\\}. Any
13494 other use of @samp{\} in the body yields a warning.
13496 @cindex Spaces in macros
13497 @cindex Whitespace in macros
13498 The newlines after the @code{@@macro} line and before the @code{@@end
13499 macro} line are ignored, that is, not included in the macro body. All
13500 other whitespace is treated according to the usual Texinfo rules.
13502 @cindex Recursive macro invocations
13504 To allow a macro to be used recursively, that is, in an argument to a
13505 call to itself, you must define it with @samp{@@rmacro}, like this:
13508 @@rmacro rmac @{arg@}
13512 @@rmac@{1@@rmac@{text@}2@}
13515 This produces the output `a1atextb2b'. With @samp{@@macro} instead of
13516 @samp{@@rmacro}, an error message is given.
13519 @cindex Macros, undefining
13520 @cindex Undefining macros
13521 You can undefine a macro @var{foo} with @code{@@unmacro @var{foo}}.
13522 It is not an error to undefine a macro that is already undefined.
13530 @node Invoking Macros
13531 @section Invoking Macros
13532 @cindex Invoking macros
13533 @cindex Expanding macros
13534 @cindex Running macros
13535 @cindex Macro invocation
13537 After a macro is defined (see the previous section), you can use
13538 (@dfn{invoke}) it in your document like this:
13541 @@@var{macroname} @{@var{arg1}, @var{arg2}, @dots{}@}
13544 @noindent and the result will be just as if you typed the body of
13545 @var{macroname} at that spot. For example:
13548 @@macro foo @{p, q@}
13549 Together: \p\ & \q\.
13554 @noindent produces:
13560 @cindex Backslash, and macros
13561 Thus, the arguments and parameters are separated by commas and delimited
13562 by braces; any whitespace after (but not before) a comma is ignored.
13563 The braces are required in the invocation (but not the definition), even
13564 when the macro takes no arguments, consistent with all other Texinfo
13565 commands. For example:
13568 @@macro argless @{@}
13574 @noindent produces:
13580 @cindex Comma, in macro arguments
13581 @cindex Braces, in macro arguments
13582 To insert a comma, brace, or backslash in an argument, prepend a
13586 @@@var{macname} @{\\\@{\@}\,@}
13590 which will pass the (almost certainly error-producing) argument
13591 @samp{\@{@},} to @var{macname}. However, commas in parameters, even
13592 if escaped by a backslash, might cause trouble in @TeX{}.
13594 If the macro is defined to take a single argument, and is invoked
13595 without any braces, the entire rest of the line after the macro name is
13596 supplied as the argument. For example:
13605 @noindent produces:
13607 @c Sorry for cheating, but let's not require macros to process the manual.
13612 If the macro is defined to take a single argument, and is invoked with
13613 braces, the braced text is passed as the argument, regardless of
13614 commas. For example:
13623 @noindent produces:
13630 @node Macro Details
13631 @section Macro Details and Caveats
13632 @cindex Macro details
13633 @cindex Details of macro usage
13634 @cindex Caveats for macro usage
13636 Due to unavoidable limitations, certain macro-related constructs cause
13637 problems with @TeX{}. If you get macro-related errors when producing
13638 the printed version of a manual, try expanding the macros with
13639 @command{makeinfo} by invoking @command{texi2dvi} with the @samp{-E}
13640 option (@pxref{Format with texi2dvi}).
13644 As mentioned earlier, macro names must consist entirely of letters.
13647 It is not advisable to redefine any @TeX{} primitive, plain, or
13648 Texinfo command name as a macro. Unfortunately this is a very large
13649 set of names, and the possible resulting errors are unpredictable.
13652 All macros are expanded inside at least one @TeX{} group. This means
13653 that @code{@@set} and other such commands have no effect inside a
13657 Commas in macro arguments, even if escaped by a backslash, don't
13661 Macro arguments cannot cross lines.
13664 It is (usually) best to avoid comments inside macro definitions, but
13668 Macros containing a command which must be on a line by itself, such as
13669 a conditional, cannot be invoked in the middle of a line. In general,
13670 the interaction of newlines in the macro definitions and invocations
13671 depends on the precise commands and context. You may be able to work
13672 around some problems with judicious use of @code{@@c}. Suppose you
13673 define a macro that is always intended to be used on a line by itself:
13686 Without the @code{@@c}, there will be an unwanted blank line between
13687 the @samp{@@cindex whatever} and the @samp{bar} (one newline comes
13688 from the macro definition, one from after the invocation), causing a
13691 On the other hand, you wouldn't want the @code{@@c} if the macro was
13692 sometimes invoked in the middle of a line (the text after the
13693 invocation would be treated as a comment).
13696 In general, you can't arbitrarily substitute a macro call for Texinfo
13697 command arguments, even when the text is the same. It might work with
13698 some commands, it fails with others. Best not to do it at all. For
13699 instance, this fails:
13705 @@headings @@offmacro
13709 You would expect this to be equivalent to @code{@@headings off}, but
13710 for @TeX{}nical reasons, it fails with a mysterious error message
13711 (@code{Paragraph ended before @@headings was complete}).
13714 Macros cannot define macros in the natural way. To do this, you must
13715 use conditionals and raw @TeX{}. For example:
13719 @@macro ctor @{name, arg@}
13721 something involving \arg\ somehow
13726 \gdef\ctor#1@{\ctorx#1,@}
13727 \gdef\ctorx#1,#2,@{\def#1@{something involving #2 somehow@}@}
13733 The @command{makeinfo} implementation also has limitations:
13737 @code{@@verbatim} and macros do not mix; for instance, you can't start
13738 a verbatim block inside a macro and end it outside.
13739 (@xref{verbatim}.) Starting any environment inside a macro and ending
13740 it outside may or may not work, for that matter.
13743 Macros that completely define macros are ok, but it's not possible to
13744 have incorrectly nested macro definitions. That is, @code{@@macro}
13745 and @code{@@end macro} (likewise for @code{@@rmacro}) must be
13746 correctly paired. For example, you cannot start a macro definition
13747 within a macro, and then end the nested definition outside the macro.
13750 @code{@@rmacro} is a kludge.
13754 One more limitation is common to both implementations: white space is
13755 ignored at the beginnings of lines.
13757 Future major revisions of Texinfo may ease some of these limitations
13758 (by introducing a new macro syntax).
13762 @section @samp{@@alias @var{new}=@var{existing}}
13763 @cindex Aliases, command
13764 @cindex Command aliases
13767 The @samp{@@alias} command defines a new command to be just like an
13768 existing one. This is useful for defining additional markup names, thus
13769 preserving semantic information in the input even though the output
13770 result may be the same.
13772 Write the @samp{@@alias} command on a line by itself, followed by the
13773 new command name, an equals sign, and the existing command name.
13774 Whitespace around the equals sign is ignored. Thus:
13776 @@alias @var{new} = @var{existing}
13779 For example, if your document contains citations for both books and
13780 some other media (movies, for example), you might like to define a
13781 macro @code{@@moviecite@{@}} that does the same thing as an ordinary
13782 @code{@@cite@{@}} but conveys the extra semantic information as well.
13783 You'd do this as follows:
13786 @@alias moviecite = cite
13789 Macros do not always have the same effect as aliases, due to vagaries
13790 of argument parsing. Also, aliases are much simpler to define than
13791 macros. So the command is not redundant. (It was also heavily used
13792 in the Jargon File!)
13794 Aliases must not be recursive, directly or indirectly.
13796 It is not advisable to redefine any @TeX{} primitive, plain, or
13797 Texinfo command name as an alias. Unfortunately this is a very large
13798 set of names, and the possible resulting errors are completely random.
13801 @node definfoenclose
13802 @section @samp{definfoenclose}: Customized Highlighting
13803 @cindex Highlighting, customized
13804 @cindex Customized highlighting
13805 @findex definfoenclose
13807 A @code{@@definfoenclose} command may be used to define a highlighting
13808 command for Info, but not for @TeX{}. A command defined using
13809 @code{@@definfoenclose} marks text by enclosing it in strings that
13810 precede and follow the text. You can use this to get closer control of
13813 Presumably, if you define a command with @code{@@definfoenclose} for Info,
13814 you will create a corresponding command for @TeX{}, either in
13815 @file{texinfo.tex}, @file{texinfo.cnf}, or within an @samp{@@iftex} in
13818 Write a @code{@@definfoenclose} command on a line and follow it with
13819 three arguments separated by commas. The first argument to
13820 @code{@@definfoenclose} is the @@-command name (without the @code{@@});
13821 the second argument is the Info start delimiter string; and the third
13822 argument is the Info end delimiter string. The latter two arguments
13823 enclose the highlighted text in the Info file. A delimiter string may
13824 contain spaces. Neither the start nor end delimiter is required. If
13825 you do not want a start delimiter but do want an end delimiter, you must
13826 follow the command name with two commas in a row; otherwise, the Info
13827 formatting commands will naturally misinterpret the end delimiter string
13828 you intended as the start delimiter string.
13830 If you do a @code{@@definfoenclose} on the name of a pre-defined macro
13831 (such as @code{@@emph}, @code{@@strong}, @code{@@t}, or @code{@@i}), the
13832 enclosure definition will override the built-in definition.
13834 An enclosure command defined this way takes one argument in braces; this
13835 is intended for new markup commands (@pxref{Marking Text}).
13838 For example, you can write:
13841 @@definfoenclose phoo,//,\\
13845 near the beginning of a Texinfo file to define @code{@@phoo} as an Info
13846 formatting command that inserts `//' before and `\\' after the argument
13847 to @code{@@phoo}. You can then write @code{@@phoo@{bar@}} wherever you
13848 want `//bar\\' highlighted in Info.
13850 Also, for @TeX{} formatting, you could write
13854 @@global@@let@@phoo=@@i
13859 to define @code{@@phoo} as a command that causes @TeX{} to typeset the
13860 argument to @code{@@phoo} in italics.
13862 Each definition applies to its own formatter: one for @TeX{}, the other
13863 for @code{texinfo-format-buffer} or @code{texinfo-format-region}. The
13864 @code{@@definfoenclose} command need not be within @samp{@@ifinfo}, but
13865 the raw @TeX{} commands do need to be in @samp{@@iftex}.
13868 Here is another example: write
13871 @@definfoenclose headword, , :
13875 near the beginning of the file, to define @code{@@headword} as an Info
13876 formatting command that inserts nothing before and a colon after the
13877 argument to @code{@@headword}.
13879 @samp{@@definfoenclose} definitions must not be recursive, directly or
13884 @chapter Formatting and Printing Hardcopy
13885 @cindex Format and print hardcopy
13886 @cindex Printing hardcopy
13887 @cindex Hardcopy, printing it
13888 @cindex Making a printed manual
13889 @cindex Sorting indices
13890 @cindex Indices, sorting
13891 @cindex @TeX{} index sorting
13894 There are three major shell commands for making a printed manual from a
13895 Texinfo file: one for converting the Texinfo file into a file that will be
13896 printed, a second for sorting indices, and a third for printing the
13897 formatted document. When you use the shell commands, you can either
13898 work directly in the operating system shell or work within a shell
13901 If you are using GNU Emacs, you can use commands provided by Texinfo
13902 mode instead of shell commands. In addition to the three commands to
13903 format a file, sort the indices, and print the result, Texinfo mode
13904 offers key bindings for commands to recenter the output buffer, show the
13905 print queue, and delete a job from the print queue.
13908 * Use TeX:: Use @TeX{} to format for hardcopy.
13909 * Format with tex/texindex:: How to format with explicit shell commands.
13910 * Format with texi2dvi:: A simpler way to format.
13911 * Print with lpr:: How to print.
13912 * Within Emacs:: How to format and print from an Emacs shell.
13913 * Texinfo Mode Printing:: How to format and print in Texinfo mode.
13914 * Compile-Command:: How to print using Emacs's compile command.
13915 * Requirements Summary:: @TeX{} formatting requirements summary.
13916 * Preparing for TeX:: What to do before you use @TeX{}.
13917 * Overfull hboxes:: What are and what to do with overfull hboxes.
13918 * smallbook:: How to print small format books and manuals.
13919 * A4 Paper:: How to print on A4 or A5 paper.
13920 * pagesizes:: How to print with customized page sizes.
13921 * Cropmarks and Magnification:: How to print marks to indicate the size
13922 of pages and how to print scaled up output.
13923 * PDF Output:: Portable Document Format output.
13924 * Obtaining TeX:: How to Obtain @TeX{}.
13928 @section Use @TeX{}
13930 The typesetting program called @TeX{} is used for formatting a Texinfo
13931 file. @TeX{} is a very powerful typesetting program and, if used correctly,
13932 does an exceptionally good job. (@xref{Obtaining TeX, , How to Obtain
13933 @TeX{}}, for information on how to obtain @TeX{}.)
13935 The standalone @code{makeinfo} program and Emacs functions
13936 @code{texinfo-format-region} and @code{texinfo-format-buffer} commands
13937 read the very same @@-commands in the Texinfo file as does @TeX{}, but
13938 process them differently to make an Info file (@pxref{Creating an Info
13942 @node Format with tex/texindex
13943 @section Format with @code{tex} and @code{texindex}
13944 @cindex Shell formatting with @code{tex} and @code{texindex}
13945 @cindex Formatting with @code{tex} and @code{texindex}
13948 You can format the Texinfo file with the shell command @code{tex}
13949 followed by the name of the Texinfo file. For example:
13955 @noindent @TeX{} will produce a @dfn{DVI file} as well as several auxiliary
13956 files containing information for indices, cross references, etc. The
13957 DVI file (for @dfn{DeVice Independent} file) can be printed on virtually
13958 any device (see the following sections).
13961 The @code{tex} formatting command itself does not sort the indices; it
13962 writes an output file of unsorted index data. To generate a printed
13963 index after running the @command{tex} command, you first need a sorted
13964 index to work from. The @command{texindex} command sorts indices.
13965 (The source file @file{texindex.c} comes as part of the standard
13966 Texinfo distribution, among other places.) (@command{texi2dvi} runs
13967 @command{tex} and @command{texindex} as necessary.)
13969 @cindex Names of index files
13970 @cindex Index file names
13971 The @code{tex} formatting command outputs unsorted index files under
13972 names that obey a standard convention: the name of your main input file
13973 with any @samp{.tex} (or similar, @pxref{tex invocation,,, web2c,
13974 Web2c}) extension removed, followed by the two letter names of indices.
13975 For example, the raw index output files for the input file
13976 @file{foo.texinfo} would be @file{foo.cp}, @file{foo.vr}, @file{foo.fn},
13977 @file{foo.tp}, @file{foo.pg} and @file{foo.ky}. Those are exactly the
13978 arguments to give to @code{texindex}.
13983 Instead of specifying all the unsorted index file names explicitly, you
13984 can use @samp{??} as shell wildcards and give the command in this
13992 This command will run @code{texindex} on all the unsorted index files,
13993 including any that you have defined yourself using @code{@@defindex}
13994 or @code{@@defcodeindex}. (You may execute @samp{texindex foo.??}
13995 even if there are similarly named files with two letter extensions
13996 that are not index files, such as @samp{foo.el}. The @code{texindex}
13997 command reports but otherwise ignores such files.)
13999 For each file specified, @code{texindex} generates a sorted index file
14000 whose name is made by appending @samp{s} to the input file name. The
14001 @code{@@printindex} command looks for a file with that name
14002 (@pxref{Printing Indices & Menus}). @code{texindex} does not alter the
14003 raw index output file.
14005 After you have sorted the indices, you need to rerun @code{tex} on the
14006 Texinfo file. This regenerates the DVI file, this time with
14007 up-to-date index entries.
14009 Finally, you may need to run @code{tex} one more time, to get the page
14010 numbers in the cross-references correct.
14012 To summarize, this is a five step process:
14016 Run @code{tex} on your Texinfo file. This generates a DVI file (with
14017 undefined cross-references and no indices), and the raw index files
14018 (with two letter extensions).
14021 Run @code{texindex} on the raw index files. This creates the
14022 corresponding sorted index files (with three letter extensions).
14025 Run @code{tex} again on your Texinfo file. This regenerates the DVI
14026 file, this time with indices and defined cross-references, but with page
14027 numbers for the cross-references from last time, generally incorrect.
14030 Sort the indices again, with @code{texindex}.
14033 Run @code{tex} one last time. This time the correct page numbers are
14034 written for the cross-references.
14038 Alternatively, it's a one-step process: run @code{texi2dvi}
14039 (@pxref{Format with texi2dvi}).
14041 You need not run @code{texindex} each time after you run @code{tex}. If
14042 you do not, on the next run, the @code{tex} formatting command will use
14043 whatever sorted index files happen to exist from the previous use of
14044 @code{texindex}. This is usually ok while you are debugging.
14046 @cindex Auxiliary files, avoiding
14048 @cindex Pointer validation, suppressing
14049 @cindex Chapters, formatting one at a time
14050 Sometimes you may wish to print a document while you know it is
14051 incomplete, or to print just one chapter of a document. In that case,
14052 the usual auxiliary files that @TeX{} creates and warnings @TeX{} gives
14053 when cross-references are not satisfied are just nuisances. You can
14054 avoid them with the @code{@@novalidate} command, which you must give
14055 @emph{before} the @code{@@setfilename} command
14056 (@pxref{setfilename,,@code{@@setfilename}}). Thus, the beginning of
14057 your file would look approximately like this:
14062 @@setfilename myfile.info
14066 @noindent @code{@@novalidate} also turns off validation in
14067 @code{makeinfo}, just like its @code{--no-validate} option
14068 (@pxref{Pointer Validation}).
14071 @node Format with texi2dvi
14072 @section Format with @code{texi2dvi}
14073 @pindex texi2dvi @r{(shell script)}
14075 The @code{texi2dvi} command automatically runs both @TeX{} and
14076 @command{texindex} as many times as necessary to produce a DVI file
14077 with sorted indices and all cross-references resolved. It is
14078 therefore simpler than manually executing the
14079 @code{tex}---@code{texindex}---@code{tex}---@code{tex} sequence
14080 described in the previous section.
14082 To run @code{texi2dvi} on an input file @file{foo.texi}, do this (where
14083 @samp{prompt$ } is your shell prompt):
14086 prompt$ @kbd{texi2dvi foo.texi}
14089 As shown in this example, the input filenames to @code{texi2dvi} must
14090 include any extension (@samp{.texi}, @samp{.texinfo}, etc.). Under
14091 MS-DOS and perhaps in other circumstances, you may need to run @samp{sh
14092 texi2dvi foo.texi} instead of relying on the operating system to invoke
14093 the shell on the @samp{texi2dvi} script.
14095 Perhaps the most useful option to @code{texi2dvi} is
14096 @samp{--command=@var{cmd}}. This inserts @var{cmd} on a line by itself
14097 after the @code{@@setfilename} in a temporary copy of the input file
14098 before running @TeX{}. With this, you can specify different printing
14099 formats, such as @code{@@smallbook} (@pxref{smallbook}),
14100 @code{@@afourpaper} (@pxref{A4 Paper}), or @code{@@pagesizes}
14101 (@pxref{pagesizes}), without actually changing the document source.
14102 (You can also do this on a site-wide basis with @file{texinfo.cnf};
14103 @pxref{Preparing for TeX,,Preparing for @TeX{}}).
14105 With the @option{--pdf} option, @command{texi2dvi} produces PDF output
14106 instead of DVI (@pxref{PDF Output}), by running @command{pdftex}
14107 instead of @command{tex}. Alternatively, the command
14108 @command{texi2pdf} is an abbreviation for running @samp{texi2dvi --pdf}.
14110 @cindex @LaTeX{}, processing with @command{texi2dvi}
14111 @command{texi2dvi} can also be used to process @LaTeX{} files; simply
14112 run @samp{texi2dvi filename.ext}.
14114 @command{texi2dvi} will use @command{etex} (or @command{pdfetex}) if
14115 they are available; these extended versions of @TeX{} are not
14116 required, and the DVI (or PDF) output is identical, but they simplify
14117 the @TeX{} programming in some cases, and provide additional tracing
14118 information when debugging @file{texinfo.tex}.
14120 For a list of other options, run @samp{texi2dvi --help}.
14123 @node Print with lpr
14124 @section Shell Print Using @code{lpr -d}
14125 @pindex lpr @r{(DVI print command)}
14127 The precise command to print a DVI file depends on your system
14128 installation. Two common ones are @samp{dvips foo.dvi -o} and @samp{lpr
14131 For example, the following commands will (perhaps) suffice to sort the
14132 indices, format, and print the @cite{Bison Manual}:
14144 (Remember that the shell commands may be different at your site; but
14145 these are commonly used versions.)
14147 Using the @code{texi2dvi} shell script (see the previous section):
14151 texi2dvi bison.texinfo
14153 # or perhaps dvips bison.dvi -o
14157 @cindex Shell printing, on MS-DOS/MS-Windows
14158 @cindex Printing DVI files, on MS-DOS/MS-Windows
14159 @pindex lpr@r{-d, replacements on MS-DOS/MS-Windows}
14160 @code{lpr} is a standard program on Unix systems, but it is usually
14161 absent on MS-DOS/MS-Windows. Some network packages come with a
14162 program named @code{lpr}, but these are usually limited to sending files
14163 to a print server over the network, and generally don't support the
14164 @samp{-d} option. If you are unfortunate enough to work on one of these
14165 systems, you have several alternative ways of printing DVI files:
14168 @item Find and install a Unix-like @code{lpr} program, or its clone.
14169 If you can do that, you will be able to print DVI files just like
14172 @item Send the DVI files to a network printer queue for DVI files.
14173 Some network printers have special queues for printing DVI files. You
14174 should be able to set up your network software to send files to that
14175 queue. In some cases, the version of @code{lpr} which comes with your
14176 network software will have a special option to send a file to specific
14180 lpr -Qdvi -hprint.server.domain bison.dvi
14183 @item Convert the DVI file to a Postscript or PCL file and send it to your
14184 local printer. @xref{Invoking Dvips,,, dvips, Dvips}, and the man
14185 pages for @code{dvilj}, for detailed description of these tools. Once
14186 the DVI file is converted to the format your local printer understands
14187 directly, just send it to the appropriate port, usually @samp{PRN}.
14192 @section From an Emacs Shell
14193 @cindex Print, format from Emacs shell
14194 @cindex Format, print from Emacs shell
14195 @cindex Shell, format, print from
14196 @cindex Emacs shell, format, print from
14197 @cindex GNU Emacs shell, format, print from
14199 You can give formatting and printing commands from a shell within GNU
14200 Emacs. To create a shell within Emacs, type @kbd{M-x shell}. In this
14201 shell, you can format and print the document. @xref{Hardcopy, , Format
14202 and Print Hardcopy}, for details.
14204 You can switch to and from the shell buffer while @code{tex} is
14205 running and do other editing. If you are formatting a long document
14206 on a slow machine, this can be very convenient.@refill
14208 You can also use @code{texi2dvi} from an Emacs shell. For example,
14209 here is how to use @code{texi2dvi} to format and print @cite{Using and
14210 Porting GNU CC} from a shell within Emacs:
14214 texi2dvi gcc.texinfo
14219 See the next section for more information about formatting
14220 and printing in Texinfo mode.
14223 @node Texinfo Mode Printing
14224 @section Formatting and Printing in Texinfo Mode
14225 @cindex Region printing in Texinfo mode
14226 @cindex Format and print in Texinfo mode
14227 @cindex Print and format in Texinfo mode
14229 Texinfo mode provides several predefined key commands for @TeX{}
14230 formatting and printing. These include commands for sorting indices,
14231 looking at the printer queue, killing the formatting job, and
14232 recentering the display of the buffer in which the operations
14237 @itemx M-x texinfo-tex-buffer
14238 Run @code{texi2dvi} on the current buffer.@refill
14241 @itemx M-x texinfo-tex-region
14242 Run @TeX{} on the current region.@refill
14245 @itemx M-x texinfo-texindex
14246 Sort the indices of a Texinfo file formatted with
14247 @code{texinfo-tex-region}.@refill
14250 @itemx M-x texinfo-tex-print
14251 Print a DVI file that was made with @code{texinfo-tex-region} or
14252 @code{texinfo-tex-buffer}.@refill
14255 @itemx M-x tex-show-print-queue
14256 Show the print queue.@refill
14259 @itemx M-x texinfo-delete-from-print-queue
14260 Delete a job from the print queue; you will be prompted for the job
14261 number shown by a preceding @kbd{C-c C-t C-q} command
14262 (@code{texinfo-show-tex-print-queue}).@refill
14265 @itemx M-x tex-kill-job
14266 Kill the currently running @TeX{} job started by either
14267 @code{texinfo-tex-region} or @code{texinfo-tex-buffer}, or any other
14268 process running in the Texinfo shell buffer.@refill
14271 @itemx M-x texinfo-quit-job
14272 Quit a @TeX{} formatting job that has stopped because of an error by
14273 sending an @key{x} to it. When you do this, @TeX{} preserves a record
14274 of what it did in a @file{.log} file.@refill
14277 @itemx M-x tex-recenter-output-buffer
14278 Redisplay the shell buffer in which the @TeX{} printing and formatting
14279 commands are run to show its most recent output.@refill
14283 Thus, the usual sequence of commands for formatting a buffer is as
14284 follows (with comments to the right):@refill
14288 C-c C-t C-b @r{Run @code{texi2dvi} on the buffer.}
14289 C-c C-t C-p @r{Print the DVI file.}
14290 C-c C-t C-q @r{Display the printer queue.}
14294 The Texinfo mode @TeX{} formatting commands start a subshell in Emacs
14295 called the @file{*tex-shell*}. The @code{texinfo-tex-command},
14296 @code{texinfo-texindex-command}, and @code{tex-dvi-print-command}
14297 commands are all run in this shell.
14299 You can watch the commands operate in the @samp{*tex-shell*} buffer,
14300 and you can switch to and from and use the @samp{*tex-shell*} buffer
14301 as you would any other shell buffer.@refill
14304 The formatting and print commands depend on the values of several variables.
14305 The default values are:@refill
14309 @r{Variable} @r{Default value}
14311 texinfo-texi2dvi-command "texi2dvi"
14312 texinfo-tex-command "tex"
14313 texinfo-texindex-command "texindex"
14314 texinfo-delete-from-print-queue-command "lprm"
14315 texinfo-tex-trailer "@@bye"
14316 tex-start-of-header "%**start"
14317 tex-end-of-header "%**end"
14318 tex-dvi-print-command "lpr -d"
14319 tex-show-queue-command "lpq"
14323 You can change the values of these variables with the @kbd{M-x
14324 set-variable} command (@pxref{Examining, , Examining and Setting
14325 Variables, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}), or with your @file{.emacs}
14326 initialization file (@pxref{Init File, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs
14329 @cindex Customize Emacs package (@t{Development/Docs/Texinfo})
14330 Beginning with version 20, GNU Emacs offers a user-friendly interface,
14331 called @dfn{Customize}, for changing values of user-definable variables.
14332 @xref{Easy Customization, , Easy Customization Interface, emacs, The GNU
14333 Emacs Manual}, for more details about this. The Texinfo variables can
14334 be found in the @samp{Development/Docs/Texinfo} group, once you invoke
14335 the @kbd{M-x customize} command.
14338 @node Compile-Command
14339 @section Using the Local Variables List
14340 @cindex Local variables
14341 @cindex Compile command for formatting
14342 @cindex Format with the compile command
14344 Yet another way to apply the @TeX{} formatting command to a Texinfo file
14345 is to put that command in a @dfn{local variables list} at the end of the
14346 Texinfo file. You can then specify the @code{tex} or @code{texi2dvi}
14347 commands as a @code{compile-command} and have Emacs run it by typing
14348 @kbd{M-x compile}. This creates a special shell called the
14349 @file{*compilation*} buffer in which Emacs runs the compile command.
14350 For example, at the end of the @file{gdb.texinfo} file, after the
14351 @code{@@bye}, you could put the following:@refill
14356 compile-command: "texi2dvi gdb.texinfo"
14362 This technique is most often used by programmers who also compile programs
14363 this way; see @ref{Compilation, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.@refill
14366 @node Requirements Summary
14367 @section @TeX{} Formatting Requirements Summary
14368 @cindex Requirements for formatting
14369 @cindex Minimal requirements for formatting
14370 @cindex Formatting requirements
14372 Every Texinfo file that is to be input to @TeX{} must begin with a
14373 @code{\input} command and must contain an @code{@@setfilename} command:
14377 @@setfilename @var{arg-not-used-by-@TeX{}}
14381 The first command instructs @TeX{} to load the macros it needs to
14382 process a Texinfo file and the second command opens auxiliary files.
14384 Every Texinfo file must end with a line that terminates @TeX{}'s
14385 processing and forces out unfinished pages:
14391 Strictly speaking, these lines are all a Texinfo file needs to be
14392 processed successfully by @TeX{}.
14394 Usually, however, the beginning includes an @code{@@settitle} command to
14395 define the title of the printed manual, an @code{@@setchapternewpage}
14396 command, a title page, a copyright page, and permissions. Besides an
14397 @code{@@bye}, the end of a file usually includes indices and a table of
14398 contents. (And of course most manuals contain a body of text as well.)
14400 For more information, see:
14403 @item @ref{settitle, , @code{@@settitle}}.
14404 @item @ref{setchapternewpage, , @code{@@setchapternewpage}}.
14405 @item @ref{Headings, ,Page Headings}.
14406 @item @ref{Titlepage & Copyright Page}.
14407 @item @ref{Printing Indices & Menus}.
14408 @item @ref{Contents}.
14412 @node Preparing for TeX
14413 @section Preparing for @TeX{}
14414 @cindex Preparing for @TeX{}
14415 @cindex @TeX{} input initialization
14416 @cindex @b{.profile} initialization file
14417 @cindex @b{.cshrc} initialization file
14418 @cindex Initialization file for @TeX{} input
14420 @TeX{} needs to know where to find the @file{texinfo.tex} file that the
14421 @samp{\input texinfo} command on the first line reads. The
14422 @file{texinfo.tex} file tells @TeX{} how to handle @@-commands; it is
14423 included in all standard GNU distributions. The latest version is
14424 always available from the Texinfo source repository:
14426 @uref{http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/texinfo/texinfo/doc/texinfo.tex?rev=HEAD}
14429 @pindex texinfo.tex@r{, installing}
14431 Usually, the installer has put the @file{texinfo.tex} file in the
14432 default directory that contains @TeX{} macros when GNU Texinfo, Emacs or
14433 other GNU software is installed. In this case, @TeX{} will find the
14434 file and you do not need to do anything special. If this has not been
14435 done, you can put @file{texinfo.tex} in the current directory when you
14436 run @TeX{}, and @TeX{} will find it there.
14438 @pindex epsf.tex@r{, installing}
14439 Also, you should install @file{epsf.tex}, if it is not already installed
14440 from another distribution. More details are at the end of the description
14441 of the @code{@@image} command (@pxref{Images}).
14443 @pindex pdfcolor.tex@r{, installing}
14444 Likewise for @file{pdfcolor.tex}, if it is not already installed and you
14447 @pindex texinfo.cnf @r{installation}
14448 @cindex Customizing of @TeX{} for Texinfo
14449 @cindex Site-wide Texinfo configuration file
14450 Optionally, you may create an additional @file{texinfo.cnf}, and install
14451 it as well. This file is read by @TeX{} when the @code{@@setfilename}
14452 command is executed (@pxref{setfilename,, @code{@@setfilename}}). You can put any
14453 commands you like there, according to local site-wide conventions. They
14454 will be read by @TeX{} when processing any Texinfo document. For
14455 example, if @file{texinfo.cnf} contains the line @samp{@@afourpaper}
14456 (@pxref{A4 Paper}), then all Texinfo documents will be processed with
14457 that page size in effect. If you have nothing to put in
14458 @file{texinfo.cnf}, you do not need to create it.
14460 @cindex Environment variable @code{TEXINPUTS}
14462 If neither of the above locations for these system files suffice for
14463 you, you can specify the directories explicitly. For
14464 @file{texinfo.tex}, you can do this by writing the complete path for the
14465 file after the @code{\input} command. Another way, that works for both
14466 @file{texinfo.tex} and @file{texinfo.cnf} (and any other file @TeX{}
14467 might read), is to set the @code{TEXINPUTS} environment variable in your
14468 @file{.cshrc} or @file{.profile} file.
14470 Which you use of @file{.cshrc} or @file{.profile} depends on
14471 whether you use a Bourne shell-compatible (@code{sh}, @code{bash},
14472 @code{ksh}, @dots{}) or C shell-compatible (@code{csh}, @code{tcsh})
14473 command interpreter. The latter read the @file{.cshrc} file for
14474 initialization information, and the former read @file{.profile}.
14476 In a @file{.cshrc} file, you could use the following @code{csh} command
14480 setenv TEXINPUTS .:/home/me/mylib:
14484 In a @file{.profile} file, you could use the following @code{sh} command
14489 TEXINPUTS=.:/home/me/mylib:
14494 On MS-DOS/MS-Windows, you would say it like this@footnote{Note the use
14495 of the @samp{;} character, instead of @samp{:}, as directory separator
14496 on these systems.}:
14500 set TEXINPUTS=.;d:/home/me/mylib;c:
14505 It is customary for DOS/Windows users to put such commands in the
14506 @file{autoexec.bat} file, or in the Windows Registry.
14509 These settings would cause @TeX{} to look for @file{\input} file first
14510 in the current directory, indicated by the @samp{.}, then in a
14511 hypothetical user @samp{me}'s @file{mylib} directory, and finally in
14512 the system directories. (A leading, trailing, or doubled @samp{:}
14513 indicates searching the system directories at that point.)
14515 @cindex Dumping a .fmt file
14516 @cindex Format file, dumping
14517 Finally, you may wish to dump a @file{.fmt} file (@pxref{Memory dumps,,,
14518 web2c, Web2c}) so that @TeX{} can load Texinfo faster. (The
14519 disadvantage is that then updating @file{texinfo.tex} requires
14520 redumping.) You can do this by running this command, assuming
14521 @file{epsf.tex} is findable by @TeX{}:
14524 initex texinfo @@dump
14527 (@code{dump} is a @TeX{} primitive.) Then, move @file{texinfo.fmt} to
14528 wherever your @code{.fmt} files are found; typically, this will be in the
14529 subdirectory @file{web2c} of your @TeX{} installation.
14532 @node Overfull hboxes
14533 @section Overfull ``hboxes''
14534 @cindex Overfull @samp{hboxes}
14535 @cindex @samp{hboxes}, overfull
14536 @cindex Final output
14538 @TeX{} is sometimes unable to typeset a line without extending it into
14539 the right margin. This can occur when @TeX{} comes upon what it
14540 interprets as a long word that it cannot hyphenate, such as an
14541 electronic mail network address or a very long title. When this
14542 happens, @TeX{} prints an error message like this:
14545 Overfull @@hbox (20.76302pt too wide)
14550 (In @TeX{}, lines are in ``horizontal boxes'', hence the term, ``hbox''.
14551 @samp{@@hbox} is a @TeX{} primitive not needed in the Texinfo language.)
14553 @TeX{} also provides the line number in the Texinfo source file and
14554 the text of the offending line, which is marked at all the places that
14555 @TeX{} considered hyphenation.
14556 @xref{Debugging with TeX, , Catching Errors with @TeX{} Formatting},
14557 for more information about typesetting errors.
14559 If the Texinfo file has an overfull hbox, you can rewrite the sentence
14560 so the overfull hbox does not occur, or you can decide to leave it. A
14561 small excursion into the right margin often does not matter and may not
14562 even be noticeable.
14564 If you have many overfull boxes and/or an antipathy to rewriting, you
14565 can coerce @TeX{} into greatly increasing the allowable interword
14566 spacing, thus (if you're lucky) avoiding many of the bad line breaks,
14569 @findex \emergencystretch
14572 \global\emergencystretch = .9\hsize
14577 (You should adjust the fraction as needed.) This huge value for
14578 @code{\emergencystretch} cannot be the default, since then the typeset
14579 output would generally be of noticeably lower quality; the default
14580 is @samp{.15\hsize}. @code{\hsize} is the @TeX{} dimension
14581 containing the current line width.
14583 @cindex Black rectangle in hardcopy
14584 @cindex Rectangle, black in hardcopy
14585 @cindex Box, ugly black in hardcopy
14586 @cindex Ugly black rectangles in hardcopy
14587 For what overfull boxes you have, however, @TeX{} will print a large,
14588 ugly, black rectangle beside the line that contains the overfull hbox
14589 unless told otherwise. This is so you will notice the location of the
14590 problem if you are correcting a draft.
14593 To prevent such a monstrosity from marring your final printout, write
14594 the following in the beginning of the Texinfo file on a line of its own,
14595 before the @code{@@titlepage} command:
14603 @section Printing ``Small'' Books
14605 @cindex Small book size
14606 @cindex Book, printing small
14607 @cindex Page sizes for books
14608 @cindex Size of printed book
14610 By default, @TeX{} typesets pages for printing in an 8.5 by 11 inch
14611 format. However, you can direct @TeX{} to typeset a document in a 7 by
14612 9.25 inch format that is suitable for bound books by inserting the
14613 following command on a line by itself at the beginning of the Texinfo
14614 file, before the title page:@refill
14621 (Since many books are about 7 by 9.25 inches, this command might better
14622 have been called the @code{@@regularbooksize} command, but it came to be
14623 called the @code{@@smallbook} command by comparison to the 8.5 by 11
14626 If you write the @code{@@smallbook} command between the
14627 start-of-header and end-of-header lines, the Texinfo mode @TeX{}
14628 region formatting command, @code{texinfo-tex-region}, will format the
14629 region in ``small'' book size (@pxref{Start of Header}).@refill
14631 @xref{small}, for information about
14632 commands that make it easier to produce examples for a smaller manual.
14634 @xref{Format with texi2dvi}, and @ref{Preparing for TeX,,Preparing for
14635 @TeX{}}, for other ways to format with @code{@@smallbook} that do not
14636 require changing the source file.
14640 @section Printing on A4 Paper
14641 @cindex A4 paper, printing on
14642 @cindex A5 paper, printing on
14643 @cindex Paper size, A4
14644 @cindex European A4 paper
14647 You can tell @TeX{} to format a document for printing on European size
14648 A4 paper (or A5) with the @code{@@afourpaper} (or @code{@@afivepaper})
14649 command. Write the command on a line by itself near the beginning of
14650 the Texinfo file, before the title page. For example, this is how you
14651 would write the header for this manual:
14655 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
14656 @@c %**start of header
14657 @@setfilename texinfo
14660 @@c %**end of header
14664 @xref{Format with texi2dvi}, and @ref{Preparing for TeX,,Preparing for
14665 @TeX{}}, for other ways to format for different paper sizes that do not
14666 require changing the source file.
14670 You may or may not prefer the formatting that results from the command
14671 @code{@@afourlatex}. There's also @code{@@afourwide} for A4 paper in
14675 @section @code{@@pagesizes} [@var{width}][, @var{height}]: Custom Page Sizes
14677 @cindex Custom page sizes
14678 @cindex Page sizes, customized
14679 @cindex Text width and height
14680 @cindex Width of text area
14681 @cindex Height of text area
14682 @cindex Depth of text area
14684 You can explicitly specify the height and (optionally) width of the main
14685 text area on the page with the @code{@@pagesizes} command. Write this
14686 on a line by itself near the beginning of the Texinfo file, before the
14687 title page. The height comes first, then the width if desired,
14688 separated by a comma. Examples:
14691 @@pagesizes 200mm,150mm @c for b5 paper
14695 @@pagesizes 11.5in @c for legal paper
14698 @cindex B5 paper, printing on
14699 @cindex Legal paper, printing on
14700 This would be reasonable for printing on B5-size paper. To emphasize,
14701 this command specifies the size of the @emph{text area}, not the size of
14702 the paper (which is 250@dmn{mm} by 177@dmn{mm} for B5, 14@dmn{in} by
14703 8.5@dmn{in} for legal).
14705 @cindex Margins on page, not controllable
14706 To make more elaborate changes, such as changing any of the page
14707 margins, you must define a new command in @file{texinfo.tex} (or
14708 @file{texinfo.cnf}, @pxref{Preparing for TeX,,Preparing for @TeX{}}).
14710 @xref{Format with texi2dvi}, and @ref{Preparing for TeX,,Preparing for
14711 @TeX{}}, for other ways to specify @code{@@pagesizes} that do not
14712 require changing the source file.
14714 @code{@@pagesizes} is ignored by @code{makeinfo}.
14717 @node Cropmarks and Magnification
14718 @section Cropmarks and Magnification
14720 @cindex Cropmarks for printing
14721 @cindex Printing cropmarks
14722 You can (attempt to) direct @TeX{} to print cropmarks at the corners of
14723 pages with the @code{@@cropmarks} command. Write the @code{@@cropmarks}
14724 command on a line by itself between @code{@@iftex} and @code{@@end
14725 iftex} lines near the beginning of the Texinfo file, before the title
14726 page, like this:@refill
14736 This command is mainly for printers that typeset several pages on one
14737 sheet of film; but you can attempt to use it to mark the corners of a
14738 book set to 7 by 9.25 inches with the @code{@@smallbook} command.
14739 (Printers will not produce cropmarks for regular sized output that is
14740 printed on regular sized paper.) Since different printing machines work
14741 in different ways, you should explore the use of this command with a
14742 spirit of adventure. You may have to redefine the command in
14743 @file{texinfo.tex}.
14745 @findex \mag @r{(raw @TeX{} magnification)}
14746 @cindex Magnified printing
14747 @cindex Larger or smaller pages
14748 You can attempt to direct @TeX{} to typeset pages larger or smaller than
14749 usual with the @code{\mag} @TeX{} command. Everything that is typeset
14750 is scaled proportionally larger or smaller. (@code{\mag} stands for
14751 ``magnification''.) This is @emph{not} a Texinfo @@-command, but is a
14752 plain @TeX{} command that is prefixed with a backslash. You have to
14753 write this command between @code{@@tex} and @code{@@end tex}
14754 (@pxref{Raw Formatter Commands}).
14756 Follow the @code{\mag} command with an @samp{=} and then a number that
14757 is 1000 times the magnification you desire. For example, to print pages
14758 at 1.2 normal size, write the following near the beginning of the
14759 Texinfo file, before the title page:
14769 With some printing technologies, you can print normal-sized copies that
14770 look better than usual by giving a larger-than-normal master to your
14771 print shop. They do the reduction, thus effectively increasing the
14774 Depending on your system, DVI files prepared with a
14775 nonstandard-@code{\mag} may not print or may print only with certain
14776 magnifications. Be prepared to experiment.
14780 @section PDF Output
14784 The simplest way to generate PDF output from Texinfo source is to run
14785 the convenience script @command{texi2pdf}; this simply executes the
14786 @command{texi2dvi} script with the @option{--pdf} option
14787 (@pxref{Format with texi2dvi}). If for some reason you want to
14788 process by hand, simply run the @command{pdftex} program instead of
14789 plain @command{tex}. That is, run @samp{pdftex foo.texi} instead of
14790 @samp{tex foo.texi}.
14792 @dfn{PDF} stands for `Portable Document Format'. It was invented by
14793 Adobe Systems some years ago for document interchange, based on their
14794 PostScript language. Related links:
14798 GNU GV, a @uref{http://www.foolabs.com/xpdf/, Ghostscript-based PDF
14799 reader}. (It can also preview PostScript documents.)
14802 A freely available standalone @uref{http://www.foolabs.com/xpdf/,
14803 PDF reader} for the X window system.
14806 @uref{http://partners.adobe.com/asn/acrobat/sdk/public/docs/, PDF definition}.
14810 At present, Texinfo does not provide
14811 @samp{@@ifpdf} or @samp{@@pdf} commands as for the other output
14812 formats, since PDF documents contain many internal links that would be
14813 hard or impossible to get right at the Texinfo source level.
14815 PDF files require special software to be displayed, unlike the plain
14816 ASCII formats (Info, HTML) that Texinfo supports. They also tend to
14817 be much larger than the DVI files output by @TeX{} by default.
14818 Nevertheless, a PDF file does define an actual typeset document in a
14819 self-contained file, so it has its place.
14822 @node Obtaining TeX
14823 @section How to Obtain @TeX{}
14824 @cindex Obtaining @TeX{}
14825 @cindex @TeX{}, how to obtain
14827 @c !!! Here is information about obtaining TeX. Update it whenever.
14828 @c !!! Also consider updating TeX.README on ftp.gnu.org.
14829 @c Updated by RJC on 1 March 1995, conversation with MacKay.
14830 @c Updated by kb@cs.umb.edu on 29 July 1996.
14831 @c Updated by kb@cs.umb.edu on 25 April 1997.
14832 @c Updated by kb@cs.umb.edu on 27 February 1998.
14833 @TeX{} is freely redistributable. You can obtain @TeX{} for Unix
14834 systems via anonymous ftp or on physical media. The core material
14835 consists of the Web2c @TeX{} distribution (@uref{http://tug.org/web2c}).
14837 Instructions for retrieval by anonymous ftp and information on other
14838 available distributions:
14839 @uref{http://tug.org/unixtex.ftp}.
14841 The Free Software Foundation provides a core distribution on its Source
14842 Code CD-ROM suitable for printing Texinfo manuals. To order it, contact:
14846 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
14847 59 Temple Place Suite 330
14848 Boston, MA @ @ 02111-1307
14850 Telephone: @w{+1-617-542-5942}
14851 Fax: (including Japan) @w{+1-617-542-2652}
14852 Free Dial Fax (in Japan):
14853 @w{ } @w{ } @w{ } 0031-13-2473 (KDD)
14854 @w{ } @w{ } @w{ } 0066-3382-0158 (IDC)
14855 Electronic mail: @code{gnu@@gnu.org}
14859 Many other @TeX{} distributions are available; see
14860 @uref{http://tug.org/}.
14863 @node Creating and Installing Info Files
14864 @chapter Creating and Installing Info Files
14866 This chapter describes how to create and install Info files. @xref{Info
14867 Files}, for general information about the file format itself.
14870 * Creating an Info File::
14871 * Installing an Info File::
14875 @node Creating an Info File
14876 @section Creating an Info File
14877 @cindex Creating an Info file
14878 @cindex Info, creating an online file
14879 @cindex Formatting a file for Info
14881 @code{makeinfo} is a program that converts a Texinfo file into an Info
14882 file, HTML file, or plain text. @code{texinfo-format-region} and
14883 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} are GNU Emacs functions that convert
14886 For information on installing the Info file in the Info system,
14887 @pxref{Installing an Info File}.
14890 * makeinfo advantages:: @code{makeinfo} provides better error checking.
14891 * Invoking makeinfo:: How to run @code{makeinfo} from a shell.
14892 * makeinfo options:: Specify fill-column and other options.
14893 * Pointer Validation:: How to check that pointers point somewhere.
14894 * makeinfo in Emacs:: How to run @code{makeinfo} from Emacs.
14895 * texinfo-format commands:: Two Info formatting commands written
14896 in Emacs Lisp are an alternative
14897 to @code{makeinfo}.
14898 * Batch Formatting:: How to format for Info in Emacs Batch mode.
14899 * Tag and Split Files:: How tagged and split files help Info
14904 @node makeinfo advantages
14905 @subsection @code{makeinfo} Preferred
14907 The @code{makeinfo} utility creates an Info file from a Texinfo source
14908 file more quickly than either of the Emacs formatting commands and
14909 provides better error messages. We recommend it. @code{makeinfo} is a
14910 C program that is independent of Emacs. You do not need to run Emacs to
14911 use @code{makeinfo}, which means you can use @code{makeinfo} on machines
14912 that are too small to run Emacs. You can run @code{makeinfo} in any one
14913 of three ways: from an operating system shell, from a shell inside
14914 Emacs, or by typing the @kbd{C-c C-m C-r} or the @kbd{C-c C-m C-b}
14915 command in Texinfo mode in Emacs.
14917 The @code{texinfo-format-region} and the @code{texinfo-format-buffer}
14918 commands are useful if you cannot run @code{makeinfo}. Also, in some
14919 circumstances, they format short regions or buffers more quickly than
14923 @node Invoking makeinfo
14924 @subsection Running @code{makeinfo} from a Shell
14927 To create an Info file from a Texinfo file, invoke @command{makeinfo}
14928 followed by the name of the Texinfo file. Thus, to create the Info
14929 file for Bison, type the following to the shell:
14932 makeinfo bison.texinfo
14935 (You can run a shell inside Emacs by typing @kbd{M-x shell}.)
14937 @command{makeinfo} has many options to control its actions and output;
14938 see the next section.
14941 @node makeinfo options
14942 @subsection Options for @code{makeinfo}
14943 @cindex @code{makeinfo} options
14944 @cindex Options for @code{makeinfo}
14946 The @command{makeinfo} program accepts many options. Perhaps the most
14947 commonly needed are those that change the output format. By default,
14948 @command{makeinfo} outputs Info files.
14950 Each command line option is a word preceded by @samp{--} or a letter
14951 preceded by @samp{-}. You can use abbreviations for the long option
14952 names as long as they are unique.
14954 For example, you could use the following shell command to create an Info
14955 file for @file{bison.texinfo} in which each line is filled to only 68
14959 makeinfo --fill-column=68 bison.texinfo
14962 You can write two or more options in sequence, like this:@refill
14965 makeinfo --no-split --fill-column=70 @dots{}
14969 This would keep the Info file together as one possibly very long
14970 file and would also set the fill column to 70.
14977 @opindex -D @var{var}
14978 Cause the variable @var{var} to be defined. This is equivalent to
14979 @code{@@set @var{var}} in the Texinfo file (@pxref{set clear value}).
14981 @item --commands-in-node-names
14982 @opindex --commands-in-node-names
14983 Allow @code{@@}-commands in node names. This is not recommended, as it
14984 can probably never be implemented in @TeX{}. It also makes
14985 @code{makeinfo} much slower. Also, this option is ignored when
14986 @samp{--no-validate} is used. @xref{Pointer Validation}, for more
14989 @item --css-include=@var{file}
14990 @opindex --css-include
14991 Include the contents of @var{file}, which should contain cascading
14992 style sheets specifications, in the @samp{<style>} block of the HTML
14993 output. @xref{HTML CSS}. If @var{file} is @samp{-}, read standard
14998 Generate Docbook output rather than Info.
15000 @item --enable-encoding
15001 @opindex --enable-encoding
15002 Output accented and special characters in Info or plain text output
15003 based on @samp{@@documentencoding}.
15004 @xref{documentencoding,,@code{documentencoding}}, and @ref{Inserting Accents}.
15006 @item --error-limit=@var{limit}
15007 @itemx -e @var{limit}
15008 @opindex --error-limit=@var{limit}
15009 @opindex -e @var{limit}
15010 Set the maximum number of errors that @code{makeinfo} will report
15011 before exiting (on the assumption that continuing would be useless);
15014 @item --fill-column=@var{width}
15015 @itemx -f @var{width}
15016 @opindex --fill-column=@var{width}
15017 @opindex -f @var{width}
15018 Specify the maximum number of columns in a line; this is the right-hand
15019 edge of a line. Paragraphs that are filled will be filled to this
15020 width. (Filling is the process of breaking up and connecting lines so
15021 that lines are the same length as or shorter than the number specified
15022 as the fill column. Lines are broken between words.) The default value
15023 is 72. Ignored with @samp{--html}.
15025 @item --footnote-style=@var{style}
15026 @itemx -s @var{style}
15027 @opindex --footnote-style=@var{style}
15028 @opindex -s @var{style}
15029 Set the footnote style to @var{style}, either @samp{end} for the end
15030 node style (the default) or @samp{separate} for the separate node style.
15031 The value set by this option overrides the value set in a Texinfo file
15032 by an @code{@@footnotestyle} command (@pxref{Footnotes}). When the
15033 footnote style is @samp{separate}, @code{makeinfo} makes a new node
15034 containing the footnotes found in the current node. When the footnote
15035 style is @samp{end}, @code{makeinfo} places the footnote references at
15036 the end of the current node. Ignored with @samp{--html}.
15042 Ordinarily, if the input file has errors, the output files are not
15043 created. With this option, they are preserved.
15049 Print a usage message listing all available options, then exit successfully.
15053 Generate HTML output rather than Info. @xref{Generating HTML}. By
15054 default, the HTML output is split into one output file per Texinfo
15055 source node, and the split output is written into a subdirectory with
15056 the name of the top-level info file.
15059 @opindex -I @var{dir}
15060 Append @var{dir} to the directory search list for finding files that
15061 are included using the @code{@@include} command. By default,
15062 @code{makeinfo} searches only the current directory. If @var{dir} is
15063 not given, the current directory @file{.} is appended. Note that
15064 @var{dir} can actually be a list of several directories separated by the
15065 usual path separator character (@samp{:} on Unix, @samp{;} on
15066 MS-DOS/MS-Windows).
15069 @opindex --ifdocbook
15074 @itemx --ifplaintext
15075 @opindex --ifplaintext
15080 For the specified format, process @samp{@@if@var{format}} and
15081 @samp{@@@var{format}} commands even if not generating the given output
15082 format. For instance, if @option{--iftex} is specified, then
15083 @samp{@@iftex} and @samp{@@tex} blocks will be read.
15085 @item --macro-expand=@var{file}
15086 @itemx -E @var{file}
15087 @opindex --macro-expand=@var{file}
15088 @opindex -E @var{file}
15089 Output the Texinfo source with all the macros expanded to the named
15090 file. Normally, the results of macro expansion are used internally by
15091 @code{makeinfo} and then discarded. This option is used by
15092 @command{texi2dvi}.
15096 @opindex --no-headers
15097 @opindex --plaintext
15098 @cindex Plain text output
15099 @cindex ASCII text output
15100 @cindex Generating plain text files
15101 @cindex @file{INSTALL} file, generating
15102 @cindex Node separators, omitting
15103 @cindex Menus, omitting
15104 Do not include menus or node separator lines in the output, and
15105 implicitly @option{--enable-encoding} (see above). This results in a
15106 simple plain text file that you can (for example) send in email
15107 without complications, or include in a distribution (as in an
15108 @file{INSTALL} file).
15110 @cindex Navigation links, omitting
15111 For HTML output, likewise omit menus. And if @samp{--no-split} is also
15112 specified, do not include a navigation links at the top of each node
15113 (these are never included in the default case of split output).
15114 @xref{Generating HTML}.
15116 In both cases, ignore @code{@@setfilename} and write to standard
15117 output by default---can be overridden with @option{-o}.
15119 @item --no-ifdocbook
15120 @opindex --no-ifdocbook
15122 @opindex --no-ifhtml
15124 @opindex --no-ifinfo
15125 @itemx --no-ifplaintext
15126 @opindex --no-ifplaintext
15128 @opindex --no-iftex
15130 @opindex --no-ifxml
15131 Do not process @samp{@@if@var{format}} and @samp{@@@var{format}}
15132 commands, and do process @samp{@@ifnot@var{format}}, even if
15133 generating the given format. For instance, if @option{--no-ifhtml} is
15134 specified, then @samp{@@ifhtml} and @samp{@@html} blocks will not be
15135 read, and @samp{@@ifnothtml} blocks will be.
15137 @item --no-number-footnotes
15138 @opindex --no-number-footnotes
15139 Suppress automatic footnote numbering. By default, @code{makeinfo}
15140 numbers each footnote sequentially in a single node, resetting the
15141 current footnote number to 1 at the start of each node.
15143 @item --no-number-sections
15144 @opindex --no-number-sections
15145 Do not output chapter, section, and appendix numbers.
15146 You need to specify this if your manual is not hierarchically-structured.
15149 @opindex --no-split
15150 @cindex Splitting of output files
15151 @cindex Output file splitting
15152 Suppress the splitting stage of @code{makeinfo}. By default, large
15153 output files (where the size is greater than 70k bytes) are split into
15154 smaller subfiles. For Info output, each one is approximately 50k bytes.
15155 For HTML output, each file contains one node (@pxref{Generating HTML}).
15157 @item --no-pointer-validate
15158 @itemx --no-validate
15159 @opindex --no-pointer-validate
15160 @opindex --no-validate
15161 @cindex Pointer validation, suppressing
15162 Suppress the pointer-validation phase of @code{makeinfo}---a dangerous
15163 thing to do. This can also be done with the @code{@@novalidate}
15164 command (@pxref{Use TeX,,Use @TeX{}}). Normally, after a Texinfo file
15165 is processed, some consistency checks are made to ensure that cross
15166 references can be resolved, etc. @xref{Pointer Validation}.
15170 Suppress warning messages (but @emph{not} error messages).
15172 @item --number-sections
15173 @opindex --number-sections
15174 Output chapter, section, and appendix numbers as in printed manuals.
15175 This is the default. It works only with hierarchically-structured
15178 @item --output=@var{file}
15179 @itemx -o @var{file}
15180 @opindex --output=@var{file}
15181 @opindex -o @var{file}
15182 Specify that the output should be directed to @var{file} and not to the
15183 file name specified in the @code{@@setfilename} command found in the
15184 Texinfo source (@pxref{setfilename}). If @var{file} is @samp{-}, output
15185 goes to standard output and @samp{--no-split} is implied. For split
15186 HTML output, @var{file} is the name for the directory into which all
15187 HTML nodes are written (@pxref{Generating HTML}).
15190 @opindex -P @var{dir}
15191 Prepend @var{dir} to the directory search list for @code{@@include}.
15192 If @var{dir} is not given, the current directory @file{.} is prepended.
15193 See @samp{-I} for more details.
15195 @item --paragraph-indent=@var{indent}
15196 @itemx -p @var{indent}
15197 @opindex --paragraph-indent=@var{indent}
15198 @opindex -p @var{indent}
15199 Set the paragraph indentation style to @var{indent}. The value set by
15200 this option overrides the value set in a Texinfo file by an
15201 @code{@@paragraphindent} command (@pxref{paragraphindent}). The value
15202 of @var{indent} is interpreted as follows:
15206 Preserve any existing indentation at the starts of paragraphs.
15208 @item @samp{0} or @samp{none}
15209 Delete any existing indentation.
15212 Indent each paragraph by @var{num} spaces.
15215 @item --reference-limit=@var{limit}
15216 @itemx -r @var{limit}
15217 @opindex --reference-limit=@var{limit}
15218 @opindex -r @var{limit}
15219 Set the value of the number of references to a node that
15220 @code{makeinfo} will make without reporting a warning. If a node has more
15221 than this number of references in it, @code{makeinfo} will make the
15222 references but also report a warning. The default is 1000.
15224 @item --split-size=@var{num}
15225 @opindex --split-size=@var{num}
15226 Keep Info files to at most @var{num} characters; default is 300,000.
15229 Cause @var{var} to be undefined. This is equivalent to
15230 @code{@@clear @var{var}} in the Texinfo file (@pxref{set clear value}).
15234 Cause @code{makeinfo} to display messages saying what it is doing.
15235 Normally, @code{makeinfo} only outputs messages if there are errors or
15242 Print the version number, then exit successfully.
15246 Generate XML output rather than Info.
15250 @vindex TEXINFO_OUTPUT_FORMAT
15251 @cindex Environment variable @code{TEXINFO_OUTPUT_FORMAT}
15252 @command{makeinfo} also reads the environment variable
15253 @env{TEXINFO_OUTPUT_FORMAT} to determine the output format, if not
15254 overridden by a command line option. The possible values are:
15257 docbook html info plaintext xml
15260 If not set, Info output is the default.
15263 @node Pointer Validation
15264 @subsection Pointer Validation
15265 @cindex Pointer validation with @code{makeinfo}
15266 @cindex Validation of pointers
15268 If you do not suppress pointer validation with the @samp{--no-validate}
15269 option or the @code{@@novalidate} command in the source file (@pxref{Use
15270 TeX,,Use @TeX{}}), @code{makeinfo} will check the validity of the final
15271 Info file. Mostly, this means ensuring that nodes you have referenced
15272 really exist. Here is a complete list of what is checked:
15276 If a `Next', `Previous', or `Up' node reference is a reference to a
15277 node in the current file and is not an external reference such as to
15278 @file{(dir)}, then the referenced node must exist.@refill
15281 In every node, if the `Previous' node is different from the `Up' node,
15282 then the node pointed to by the `Previous' field must have a `Next'
15283 field which points back to this node.@refill
15286 Every node except the `Top' node must have an `Up' pointer.@refill
15289 The node referenced by an `Up' pointer must itself reference the current
15290 node through a menu item, unless the node referenced by `Up'
15291 has the form `(@var{file})'.
15294 If the `Next' reference of a node is not the same as the `Next' reference
15295 of the `Up' reference, then the node referenced by the `Next' pointer
15296 must have a `Previous' pointer that points back to the current node.
15297 This rule allows the last node in a section to point to the first node
15298 of the next chapter.@refill
15301 Every node except `Top' should be referenced by at least one other node,
15302 either via the `Previous' or `Next' links, or via a menu or a
15303 cross-reference.@refill
15306 @cindex @@-commands in @@node, limited support
15307 Some Texinfo documents might fail during the validation phase because
15308 they use commands like @code{@@value} and @code{@@definfoenclose} in
15309 node definitions and cross-references inconsistently. (Your best bet
15310 is to avoid using @@-commands in node names.) Consider the
15315 @@set nodename Node 1
15317 @@node @@value@{nodename@}, Node 2, Top, Top
15321 @@node Node 2, , Node 1, Top
15328 Here, the node ``Node 1'' was referenced both verbatim and through
15331 By default, @code{makeinfo} fails such cases, because node names are not
15332 fully expanded until they are written to the output file. You should
15333 always try to reference nodes consistently; e.g., in the above example,
15334 the second @code{@@node} line should have also used @code{@@value}.
15335 However, if, for some reason, you @emph{must} reference node names
15336 inconsistently, and @code{makeinfo} fails to validate the file, you can
15337 use the @samp{--commands-in-node-names} option to force @code{makeinfo}
15338 to perform the expensive expansion of all node names it finds in the
15339 document. This might considerably slow down the program, though;
15340 twofold increase in conversion time was measured for large documents
15341 such as the Jargon file.
15343 @cindex @@value in @@node lines
15344 The support for @code{@@}-commands in @code{@@node} directives is not
15345 general enough to be freely used. For example, if the example above
15346 redefined @code{nodename} somewhere in the document, @code{makeinfo}
15347 will fail to convert it, even if invoked with the
15348 @samp{--commands-in-node-names} option.
15350 @samp{--commands-in-node-names} has no effect if the @samp{--no-validate}
15354 @node makeinfo in Emacs
15355 @subsection Running @code{makeinfo} Within Emacs
15356 @cindex Running @code{makeinfo} in Emacs
15357 @cindex @code{makeinfo} inside Emacs
15358 @cindex Shell, running @code{makeinfo} in
15360 You can run @code{makeinfo} in GNU Emacs Texinfo mode by using either the
15361 @code{makeinfo-region} or the @code{makeinfo-buffer} commands. In
15362 Texinfo mode, the commands are bound to @kbd{C-c C-m C-r} and @kbd{C-c
15363 C-m C-b} by default.@refill
15367 @itemx M-x makeinfo-region
15368 Format the current region for Info.@refill
15369 @findex makeinfo-region
15372 @itemx M-x makeinfo-buffer
15373 Format the current buffer for Info.@refill
15374 @findex makeinfo-buffer
15377 When you invoke @code{makeinfo-region} the output goes to a temporary
15378 buffer. When you invoke @code{makeinfo-buffer} output goes to the
15379 file set with @code{@@setfilename} (@pxref{setfilename}).
15381 The Emacs @code{makeinfo-region} and @code{makeinfo-buffer} commands
15382 run the @code{makeinfo} program in a temporary shell buffer. If
15383 @code{makeinfo} finds any errors, Emacs displays the error messages in
15384 the temporary buffer.@refill
15386 @cindex Errors, parsing
15387 @cindex Parsing errors
15389 You can parse the error messages by typing @kbd{C-x `}
15390 (@code{next-error}). This causes Emacs to go to and position the
15391 cursor on the line in the Texinfo source that @code{makeinfo} thinks
15392 caused the error. @xref{Compilation, , Running @code{make} or
15393 Compilers Generally, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for more
15394 information about using the @code{next-error} command.@refill
15396 In addition, you can kill the shell in which the @code{makeinfo}
15397 command is running or make the shell buffer display its most recent
15402 @itemx M-x makeinfo-kill-job
15403 @findex makeinfo-kill-job
15404 Kill the current running @code{makeinfo} job
15405 (from @code{makeinfo-region} or @code{makeinfo-buffer}).@refill
15408 @itemx M-x makeinfo-recenter-output-buffer
15409 @findex makeinfo-recenter-output-buffer
15410 Redisplay the @code{makeinfo} shell buffer to display its most recent
15415 (Note that the parallel commands for killing and recentering a @TeX{}
15416 job are @kbd{C-c C-t C-k} and @kbd{C-c C-t C-l}. @xref{Texinfo Mode
15419 You can specify options for @code{makeinfo} by setting the
15420 @code{makeinfo-options} variable with either the @kbd{M-x
15421 customize} or the @kbd{M-x set-variable} command, or by setting the
15422 variable in your @file{.emacs} initialization file.
15424 For example, you could write the following in your @file{.emacs} file:@refill
15428 (setq makeinfo-options
15429 "--paragraph-indent=0 --no-split
15430 --fill-column=70 --verbose")
15435 @c If you write these three cross references using xref, you see
15436 @c three references to the same named manual, which looks strange.
15438 For more information, see @ref{makeinfo options, , Options for
15439 @code{makeinfo}}, as well as ``Easy Customization Interface,'' ``Examining
15440 and Setting Variables,'' and ``Init File'' in @cite{The GNU Emacs
15444 For more information, see@*
15445 @ref{Easy Customization, , Easy Customization Interface, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual},@*
15446 @ref{Examining, , Examining and Setting Variables, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual},@*
15447 @ref{Init File, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, and@*
15448 @ref{makeinfo options, , Options for @code{makeinfo}}.
15451 @node texinfo-format commands
15452 @subsection The @code{texinfo-format@dots{}} Commands
15454 In GNU Emacs in Texinfo mode, you can format part or all of a Texinfo
15455 file with the @code{texinfo-format-region} command. This formats the
15456 current region and displays the formatted text in a temporary buffer
15457 called @samp{*Info Region*}.@refill
15459 Similarly, you can format a buffer with the
15460 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} command. This command creates a new
15461 buffer and generates the Info file in it. Typing @kbd{C-x C-s} will
15462 save the Info file under the name specified by the
15463 @code{@@setfilename} line which must be near the beginning of the
15464 Texinfo file.@refill
15468 @itemx @code{texinfo-format-region}
15469 @findex texinfo-format-region
15470 Format the current region for Info.
15473 @itemx @code{texinfo-format-buffer}
15474 @findex texinfo-format-buffer
15475 Format the current buffer for Info.
15478 The @code{texinfo-format-region} and @code{texinfo-format-buffer}
15479 commands provide you with some error checking, and other functions can
15480 provide you with further help in finding formatting errors. These
15481 procedures are described in an appendix; see @ref{Catching Mistakes}.
15482 However, the @code{makeinfo} program is often faster and
15483 provides better error checking (@pxref{makeinfo in Emacs}).@refill
15485 @node Batch Formatting
15486 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
15487 @subsection Batch Formatting
15488 @cindex Batch formatting for Info
15489 @cindex Info batch formatting
15491 You can format Texinfo files for Info using @code{batch-texinfo-format}
15492 and Emacs Batch mode. You can run Emacs in Batch mode from any shell,
15493 including a shell inside of Emacs. (@xref{Command Arguments,,,
15494 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.)
15496 Here is a shell command to format all the files that end in
15497 @file{.texinfo} in the current directory:
15500 emacs -batch -funcall batch-texinfo-format *.texinfo
15504 Emacs processes all the files listed on the command line, even if an
15505 error occurs while attempting to format some of them.@refill
15507 Run @code{batch-texinfo-format} only with Emacs in Batch mode as shown;
15508 it is not interactive. It kills the Batch mode Emacs on completion.@refill
15510 @code{batch-texinfo-format} is convenient if you lack @code{makeinfo}
15511 and want to format several Texinfo files at once. When you use Batch
15512 mode, you create a new Emacs process. This frees your current Emacs, so
15513 you can continue working in it. (When you run
15514 @code{texinfo-format-region} or @code{texinfo-format-buffer}, you cannot
15515 use that Emacs for anything else until the command finishes.)@refill
15517 @node Tag and Split Files
15518 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
15519 @subsection Tag Files and Split Files
15520 @cindex Making a tag table automatically
15521 @cindex Tag table, making automatically
15523 If a Texinfo file has more than 30,000 bytes,
15524 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} automatically creates a tag table
15525 for its Info file; @code{makeinfo} always creates a tag table. With
15526 a @dfn{tag table}, Info can jump to new nodes more quickly than it can
15529 @cindex Indirect subfiles
15530 In addition, if the Texinfo file contains more than about 300,000
15531 bytes, @code{texinfo-format-buffer} and @code{makeinfo} split the
15532 large Info file into shorter @dfn{indirect} subfiles of about 300,000
15533 bytes each. Big files are split into smaller files so that Emacs does
15534 not need to make a large buffer to hold the whole of a large Info
15535 file; instead, Emacs allocates just enough memory for the small, split-off
15536 file that is needed at the time. This way, Emacs avoids wasting
15537 memory when you run Info. (Before splitting was implemented, Info
15538 files were always kept short and @dfn{include files} were designed as
15539 a way to create a single, large printed manual out of the smaller Info
15540 files. @xref{Include Files}, for more information. Include files are
15541 still used for very large documents, such as @cite{The Emacs Lisp
15542 Reference Manual}, in which each chapter is a separate file.)@refill
15544 When a file is split, Info itself makes use of a shortened version of
15545 the original file that contains just the tag table and references to
15546 the files that were split off. The split-off files are called
15547 @dfn{indirect} files.@refill
15549 The split-off files have names that are created by appending @w{@samp{-1}},
15550 @w{@samp{-2}}, @w{@samp{-3}} and so on to the file name specified by the
15551 @code{@@setfilename} command. The shortened version of the original file
15552 continues to have the name specified by @code{@@setfilename}.@refill
15554 At one stage in writing this document, for example, the Info file was saved
15555 as the file @file{test-texinfo} and that file looked like this:@refill
15559 Info file: test-texinfo, -*-Text-*-
15560 produced by texinfo-format-buffer
15561 from file: new-texinfo-manual.texinfo
15565 test-texinfo-1: 102
15566 test-texinfo-2: 50422
15569 test-texinfo-3: 101300
15573 Node: overview^?104
15574 Node: info file^?1271
15577 Node: printed manual^?4853
15578 Node: conventions^?6855
15584 (But @file{test-texinfo} had far more nodes than are shown here.) Each of
15585 the split-off, indirect files, @file{test-texinfo-1},
15586 @file{test-texinfo-2}, and @file{test-texinfo-3}, is listed in this file
15587 after the line that says @samp{Indirect:}. The tag table is listed after
15588 the line that says @samp{Tag table:}. @refill
15590 In the list of indirect files, the number following the file name
15591 records the cumulative number of bytes in the preceding indirect files,
15592 not counting the file list itself, the tag table, or the permissions
15593 text in each file. In the tag table, the number following the node name
15594 records the location of the beginning of the node, in bytes from the
15595 beginning of the (unsplit) output.
15597 If you are using @code{texinfo-format-buffer} to create Info files,
15598 you may want to run the @code{Info-validate} command. (The
15599 @code{makeinfo} command does such a good job on its own, you do not
15600 need @code{Info-validate}.) However, you cannot run the @kbd{M-x
15601 Info-validate} node-checking command on indirect files. For
15602 information on how to prevent files from being split and how to
15603 validate the structure of the nodes, see @ref{Using Info-validate}.
15606 @node Installing an Info File
15607 @section Installing an Info File
15608 @cindex Installing an Info file
15609 @cindex Info file installation
15610 @cindex @file{dir} directory for Info installation
15612 Info files are usually kept in the @file{info} directory. You can read
15613 Info files using the standalone Info program or the Info reader built
15614 into Emacs. (@inforef{Top, info, info}, for an introduction to Info.)
15617 * Directory File:: The top level menu for all Info files.
15618 * New Info File:: Listing a new Info file.
15619 * Other Info Directories:: How to specify Info files that are
15620 located in other directories.
15621 * Installing Dir Entries:: How to specify what menu entry to add
15622 to the Info directory.
15623 * Invoking install-info:: @code{install-info} options.
15627 @node Directory File
15628 @subsection The Directory File @file{dir}
15630 For Info to work, the @file{info} directory must contain a file that
15631 serves as a top level directory for the Info system. By convention,
15632 this file is called @file{dir}. (You can find the location of this file
15633 within Emacs by typing @kbd{C-h i} to enter Info and then typing
15634 @kbd{C-x C-f} to see the pathname to the @file{info} directory.)
15636 The @file{dir} file is itself an Info file. It contains the top level
15637 menu for all the Info files in the system. The menu looks like
15643 * Info: (info). Documentation browsing system.
15644 * Emacs: (emacs). The extensible, self-documenting
15646 * Texinfo: (texinfo). With one source file, make
15647 either a printed manual using
15648 @@TeX@{@} or an Info file.
15653 Each of these menu entries points to the `Top' node of the Info file
15654 that is named in parentheses. (The menu entry does not need to
15655 specify the `Top' node, since Info goes to the `Top' node if no node
15656 name is mentioned. @xref{Other Info Files, , Nodes in Other Info
15659 Thus, the @samp{Info} entry points to the `Top' node of the
15660 @file{info} file and the @samp{Emacs} entry points to the `Top' node
15661 of the @file{emacs} file.@refill
15663 In each of the Info files, the `Up' pointer of the `Top' node refers
15664 back to the @code{dir} file. For example, the line for the `Top'
15665 node of the Emacs manual looks like this in Info:@refill
15668 File: emacs Node: Top, Up: (DIR), Next: Distrib
15672 In this case, the @file{dir} file name is written in upper case
15673 letters---it can be written in either upper or lower case. This is not
15674 true in general, it is a special case for @file{dir}.
15677 @node New Info File
15678 @subsection Listing a New Info File
15679 @cindex Adding a new Info file
15680 @cindex Listing a new Info file
15681 @cindex New Info file, listing it in @file{dir} file
15682 @cindex Info file, listing a new
15683 @cindex @file{dir} file listing
15685 To add a new Info file to your system, you must write a menu entry to
15686 add to the menu in the @file{dir} file in the @file{info} directory.
15687 For example, if you were adding documentation for GDB, you would write
15688 the following new entry:@refill
15691 * GDB: (gdb). The source-level C debugger.
15695 The first part of the menu entry is the menu entry name, followed by a
15696 colon. The second part is the name of the Info file, in parentheses,
15697 followed by a period. The third part is the description.
15699 The name of an Info file often has a @file{.info} extension. Thus, the
15700 Info file for GDB might be called either @file{gdb} or @file{gdb.info}.
15701 The Info reader programs automatically try the file name both with and
15702 without @file{.info}@footnote{On MS-DOS/MS-Windows systems, Info will
15703 try the @file{.inf} extension as well.}; so it is better to avoid
15704 clutter and not to write @samp{.info} explicitly in the menu entry. For
15705 example, the GDB menu entry should use just @samp{gdb} for the file
15706 name, not @samp{gdb.info}.
15709 @node Other Info Directories
15710 @subsection Info Files in Other Directories
15711 @cindex Installing Info in another directory
15712 @cindex Info installed in another directory
15713 @cindex Another Info directory
15714 @cindex @file{dir} files and Info directories
15716 If an Info file is not in the @file{info} directory, there are three
15717 ways to specify its location:@refill
15721 Write the pathname in the @file{dir} file as the second part of the menu.
15724 If you are using Emacs, list the name of the file in a second @file{dir}
15725 file, in its directory; and then add the name of that directory to the
15726 @code{Info-directory-list} variable in your personal or site
15727 initialization file.
15729 This variable tells Emacs where to look for @file{dir} files (the files
15730 must be named @file{dir}). Emacs merges the files named @file{dir} from
15731 each of the listed directories. (In Emacs version 18, you can set the
15732 @code{Info-directory} variable to the name of only one
15736 Specify the Info directory name in the @code{INFOPATH} environment
15737 variable in your @file{.profile} or @file{.cshrc} initialization file.
15738 (Only you and others who set this environment variable will be able to
15739 find Info files whose location is specified this way.)
15742 For example, to reach a test file in the @file{/home/bob/info}
15743 directory, you could add an entry like this to the menu in the
15744 standard @file{dir} file:@refill
15747 * Test: (/home/bob/info/info-test). Bob's own test file.
15751 In this case, the absolute file name of the @file{info-test} file is
15752 written as the second part of the menu entry.@refill
15754 Alternatively, you could write the following in your @file{.emacs} file:
15756 @vindex Info-directory-list
15760 (setq Info-directory-list
15761 (cons (expand-file-name "/home/bob/info")
15762 Info-directory-list))
15766 This tells Emacs to merge the system @file{dir} file with the @file{dir}
15767 file in @file{/home/bob/info}. Thus, Info will list the
15768 @file{/home/bob/info/info-test} file as a menu entry in the
15769 @file{/home/bob/info/dir} file. Emacs does the merging only when
15770 @kbd{M-x info} is first run, so if you want to set
15771 @code{Info-directory-list} in an Emacs session where you've already run
15772 @code{info}, you must @code{(setq Info-dir-contents nil)} to force Emacs
15773 to recompose the @file{dir} file.
15776 @cindex Environment variable @code{INFOPATH}
15777 Finally, you can tell Info where to look by setting the @code{INFOPATH}
15778 environment variable in your shell startup file, such as @file{.cshrc},
15779 @file{.profile} or @file{autoexec.bat}. If you use a Bourne-compatible
15780 shell such as @code{sh} or @code{bash} for your shell command
15781 interpreter, you set the @code{INFOPATH} environment variable in the
15782 @file{.profile} initialization file; but if you use @code{csh} or
15783 @code{tcsh}, you set the variable in the @file{.cshrc} initialization
15784 file. On MS-DOS/MS-Windows systems, you must set @code{INFOPATH} in
15785 your @file{autoexec.bat} file or in the Registry. Each type of shell
15786 uses a different syntax.
15790 In a @file{.cshrc} file, you could set the @code{INFOPATH}
15791 variable as follows:@refill
15794 setenv INFOPATH .:~/info:/usr/local/emacs/info
15798 In a @file{.profile} file, you would achieve the same effect by
15802 INFOPATH=.:$HOME/info:/usr/local/emacs/info
15807 @pindex autoexec.bat
15808 In a @file{autoexec.bat} file, you write this command@footnote{Note the
15809 use of @samp{;} as the directory separator, and a different syntax for
15810 using values of other environment variables.}:
15813 set INFOPATH=.;%HOME%/info;c:/usr/local/emacs/info
15818 The @samp{.} indicates the current directory as usual. Emacs uses the
15819 @code{INFOPATH} environment variable to initialize the value of Emacs's
15820 own @code{Info-directory-list} variable. The stand-alone Info reader
15821 merges any files named @file{dir} in any directory listed in the
15822 @env{INFOPATH} variable into a single menu presented to you in the node
15823 called @samp{(dir)Top}.
15825 @cindex Colon, last in @env{INFOPATH}
15826 However you set @env{INFOPATH}, if its last character is a
15827 colon@footnote{On MS-DOS/MS-Windows systems, use semi-colon instead.}, this
15828 is replaced by the default (compiled-in) path. This gives you a way to
15829 augment the default path with new directories without having to list all
15830 the standard places. For example (using @code{sh} syntax):
15833 INFOPATH=/local/info:
15838 will search @file{/local/info} first, then the standard directories.
15839 Leading or doubled colons are not treated specially.
15841 @cindex @file{dir} file, creating your own
15842 When you create your own @file{dir} file for use with
15843 @code{Info-directory-list} or @env{INFOPATH}, it's easiest to start by
15844 copying an existing @file{dir} file and replace all the text after the
15845 @samp{* Menu:} with your desired entries. That way, the punctuation and
15846 special CTRL-_ characters that Info needs will be present.
15849 @node Installing Dir Entries
15850 @subsection Installing Info Directory Files
15852 When you install an Info file onto your system, you can use the program
15853 @code{install-info} to update the Info directory file @file{dir}.
15854 Normally the makefile for the package runs @code{install-info}, just
15855 after copying the Info file into its proper installed location.
15857 @findex dircategory
15859 In order for the Info file to work with @code{install-info}, you include
15860 the commands @code{@@dircategory} and
15861 @code{@@direntry}@dots{}@code{@@end direntry} in the Texinfo source
15862 file. Use @code{@@direntry} to specify the menu entries to add to the
15863 Info directory file, and use @code{@@dircategory} to specify which part
15864 of the Info directory to put it in. Here is how these commands are used
15868 @@dircategory Texinfo documentation system
15870 * Texinfo: (texinfo). The GNU documentation format.
15871 * install-info: (texinfo)Invoking install-info. @dots{}
15876 Here's what this produces in the Info file:
15879 INFO-DIR-SECTION Texinfo documentation system
15880 START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
15881 * Texinfo: (texinfo). The GNU documentation format.
15882 * install-info: (texinfo)Invoking install-info. @dots{}
15888 The @code{install-info} program sees these lines in the Info file, and
15889 that is how it knows what to do.
15891 Always use the @code{@@direntry} and @code{@@dircategory} commands near
15892 the beginning of the Texinfo input, before the first @code{@@node}
15893 command. If you use them later on in the input, @code{install-info}
15894 will not notice them.
15896 If you use @code{@@dircategory} more than once in the Texinfo source,
15897 each usage specifies the `current' category; any subsequent
15898 @code{@@direntry} commands will add to that category.
15900 @cindex Free Software Directory
15901 @cindex Dir categories, choosing
15902 @cindex Categories, choosing
15903 When choosing a category name for the @code{@@dircategory} command, we
15904 recommend consulting the @uref{http://www.gnu.org/directory,
15905 Free Software Directory}. If your program is not listed there,
15906 or listed incorrectly or incompletely, please report the situation to
15907 the directory maintainers (@email{bug-directory@@gnu.org}) so that the
15908 category names can be kept in sync.
15910 Here are a few examples (see the @file{util/dir-example} file in the
15911 Texinfo distribution for large sample @code{dir} file):
15917 Software development
15919 Text creation and manipulation
15922 @cindex Invoking nodes, including in dir file
15923 Each `Invoking' node for every program installed should have a
15924 corresponding @code{@@direntry}. This lets users easily find the
15925 documentation for the different programs they can run, as with the
15926 traditional @command{man} system.
15929 @node Invoking install-info
15930 @subsection Invoking @command{install-info}
15931 @pindex install-info
15933 @code{install-info} inserts menu entries from an Info file into the
15934 top-level @file{dir} file in the Info system (see the previous sections
15935 for an explanation of how the @file{dir} file works). It's most often
15936 run as part of software installation, or when constructing a @file{dir} file
15937 for all manuals on a system. Synopsis:
15940 install-info [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{info-file} [@var{dir-file}]]
15943 If @var{info-file} or @var{dir-file} are not specified, the options
15944 (described below) that define them must be. There are no compile-time
15945 defaults, and standard input is never used. @code{install-info} can
15946 read only one Info file and write only one @file{dir} file per invocation.
15948 @cindex @file{dir}, created by @code{install-info}
15949 If @var{dir-file} (however specified) does not exist,
15950 @code{install-info} creates it if possible (with no entries).
15952 @cindex Compressed files, reading
15953 @cindex Dir files, compressed
15954 If any input file is compressed with @code{gzip} (@pxref{Invoking
15955 gzip,,,gzip, Gzip}), @code{install-info} automatically uncompresses it
15956 for reading. And if @var{dir-file} is compressed, @code{install-info}
15957 also automatically leaves it compressed after writing any changes.
15958 If @var{dir-file} itself does not exist, @code{install-info} tries to
15959 open @file{@var{dir-file}.gz}.
15966 Delete the entries in @var{info-file} from @var{dir-file}. The file
15967 name in the entry in @var{dir-file} must be @var{info-file} (except for
15968 an optional @samp{.info} in either one). Don't insert any new entries.
15970 @item --dir-file=@var{name}
15971 @itemx -d @var{name}
15972 @opindex --dir-file=@var{name}
15973 @opindex -d @var{name}
15974 Specify file name of the Info directory file. This is equivalent to
15975 using the @var{dir-file} argument.
15977 @item --entry=@var{text}
15978 @itemx -e @var{text}
15979 @opindex --entry=@var{text}
15980 @opindex -e @var{text}
15981 Insert @var{text} as an Info directory entry; @var{text} should have the
15982 form of an Info menu item line plus zero or more extra lines starting
15983 with whitespace. If you specify more than one entry, they are all
15984 added. If you don't specify any entries, they are determined from
15985 information in the Info file itself.
15991 Display a usage message listing basic usage and all available options,
15992 then exit successfully.
15994 @item --info-file=@var{file}
15995 @itemx -i @var{file}
15996 @opindex --info-file=@var{file}
15997 @opindex -i @var{file}
15998 Specify Info file to install in the directory.
15999 Equivalent to using the @var{info-file} argument.
16001 @item --info-dir=@var{dir}
16002 @itemx -D @var{dir}
16003 @opindex --info-dir=@var{dir}
16004 @opindex -D @var{dir}
16005 Specify the directory where the directory file @file{dir} resides.
16006 Equivalent to @samp{--dir-file=@var{dir}/dir}.
16008 @item --item=@var{text}
16009 @opindex --item=@var{text}
16010 Same as @samp{--entry=@var{text}}. An Info directory entry is actually
16021 Same as @samp{--delete}.
16023 @item --section=@var{sec}
16024 @itemx -s @var{sec}
16025 @opindex --section=@var{sec}
16026 @opindex -s @var{sec}
16027 Put this file's entries in section @var{sec} of the directory. If you
16028 specify more than one section, all the entries are added in each of the
16029 sections. If you don't specify any sections, they are determined from
16030 information in the Info file itself.
16036 @cindex Version number, for install-info
16037 Display version information and exit successfully.
16042 @node Generating HTML
16043 @chapter Generating HTML
16044 @cindex HTML output
16046 @command{makeinfo} generates Info output by default, but given the
16047 @option{--html} option, it will generate HTML, for web browsers and
16048 other programs. This chapter gives some details on such HTML output.
16051 @command{makeinfo} can also write in XML and Docbook format, but we do
16052 not as yet describe these further. @xref{Output Formats}, for a brief
16053 overview of all the output formats.
16056 * HTML Translation:: Details of the HTML output.
16057 * HTML Splitting:: How HTML output is split.
16058 * HTML CSS:: Influencing HTML output with Cascading Style Sheets.
16059 * HTML Xref:: Cross-references in HTML output.
16063 @node HTML Translation
16064 @section HTML Translation
16066 @command{makeinfo} will include segments of Texinfo source between
16067 @code{@@ifhtml} and @code{@@end ifhtml} in the HTML output (but not
16068 any of the other conditionals, by default). Source between
16069 @code{@@html} and @code{@@end html} is passed without change to the
16070 output (i.e., suppressing the normal escaping of input @samp{<},
16071 @samp{>} and @samp{&} characters which have special significance in
16072 HTML). @xref{Conditional Commands}.
16074 @opindex --footnote-style@r{, ignored in HTML output}
16075 The @option{--footnote-style} option is currently ignored for HTML output;
16076 footnotes are always linked to the end of the output file.
16078 @cindex Navigation bar, in HTML output
16079 By default, a navigation bar is inserted at the start of each node,
16080 analogous to Info output. The @samp{--no-headers} option suppresses
16081 this if used with @samp{--no-split}. Header @code{<link>} elements in
16082 split output can support info-like navigation with browsers like Lynx
16083 and @w{Emacs W3} which implement this HTML@tie{}1.0 feature.
16085 @cindex HTML output, browser compatibility of
16086 The HTML generated is mostly standard (i.e., HTML@tie{}2.0, RFC-1866).
16087 One exception is that HTML@tie{}3.2 tables are generated from the
16088 @code{@@multitable} command, but tagged to degrade as well as possible
16089 in browsers without table support. The HTML@tie{}4 @samp{lang}
16090 attribute on the @samp{<html>} attribute is also used. (Please report
16091 output from an error-free run of @code{makeinfo} which has browser
16092 portability problems as a bug.)
16095 @node HTML Splitting
16096 @section HTML Splitting
16097 @cindex Split HTML output
16098 @cindex HTML output, split
16100 When splitting output (which is the default), @command{makeinfo}
16101 writes HTML output into (generally) one output file per Texinfo source
16104 The output file name is the node name with special characters replaced
16105 by @samp{-}'s, so it can work as a filename. In the unusual case of
16106 two different nodes having the same name after this treatment, they
16107 are written consecutively to the same file, with HTML anchors so each
16108 can be referred to separately. If @command{makeinfo} is run on a
16109 system which does not distinguish case in filenames, nodes which are
16110 the same except for case will also be folded into the same output
16113 When splitting, the HTML output files are written into a subdirectory,
16114 with the name chosen as follows:
16117 @command{makeinfo} first tries the subdirectory with the base name
16118 from @code{@@setfilename} (that is, any extension is removed). For
16119 example, HTML output for @code{@@setfilename gcc.info} would be
16120 written into a subdirectory named @samp{gcc}.
16123 If that directory cannot be created for any reason, then
16124 @command{makeinfo} tries appending @samp{.html} to the directory name.
16125 For example, output for @code{@@setfilename texinfo} would be written
16126 to @samp{texinfo.html}.
16129 If the @samp{@var{name}.html} directory can't be
16130 created either, @code{makeinfo} gives up.
16134 @noindent In any case, the top-level output file within the directory
16135 is always named @samp{index.html}.
16137 Monolithic output (@code{--no-split}) is named according to
16138 @code{@@setfilename} (with any @samp{.info} extension is replaced with
16139 @samp{.html}) or @code{--output} (the argument is used literally).
16144 @cindex HTML, and CSS
16145 @cindex CSS, and HTML output
16146 @cindex Cascading Style Sheets, and HTML output
16148 Cascading Style Sheets (CSS for short) is an Internet standard for
16149 influencing the display of HTML documents: see
16150 @uref{http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/}.
16152 By default, @command{makeinfo} includes a few simple CSS commands to
16153 better implement the appearance of some of the environments. Here
16154 are two of them, as an example:
16157 pre.display @{ font-family:inherit @}
16158 pre.smalldisplay @{ font-family:inherit; font-size:smaller @}
16161 A full explanation of CSS is (far) beyond this manual; please see the
16162 reference above. In brief, however, this specification tells the web
16163 browser to use a `smaller' font size for @code{@@smalldisplay} text,
16164 and to use the `inherited' font (generally a regular roman typeface)
16165 for both @code{@@smalldisplay} and @code{@@display}. By default, the
16166 HTML @samp{<pre>} command uses a monospaced font.
16168 You can influence the CSS in the HTML output with the
16169 @option{--css-include=@var{file}} option to @command{makeinfo}. This
16170 includes the contents @var{file} in the HTML output, as you might
16171 expect. However, the details are somewhat tricky, as described in the
16172 following, to provide maximum flexibility.
16174 @cindex @@import specifications, in CSS files
16175 The CSS file may begin with so-called @samp{@@import} directives,
16176 which link to external CSS specifications for browsers to use when
16177 interpreting the document. Again, a full description is beyond our
16178 scope here, but we'll describe how they work syntactically, so we can
16179 explain how @command{makeinfo} handles them.
16181 @cindex Comments, in CSS files
16182 There can be more than one @samp{@@import}, but they have to come
16183 first in the file, with only whitespace and comments interspersed, no
16184 normal definitions. (Technical exception: an @samp{@@charset}
16185 directive may precede the @samp{@@import}'s. This does not alter
16186 @command{makeinfo}'s behavior, it just copies the @samp{@@charset} if
16187 present.) Comments in CSS files are delimited by @samp{/* ... */}, as
16188 in C. An @samp{@@import} directive must be in one of these two forms:
16191 @@import url(http://example.org/foo.css);
16192 @@import "http://example.net/bar.css";
16195 As far as @command{makeinfo} is concerned, the crucial characters are
16196 the @samp{@@} at the beginning and the semicolon terminating the
16197 directive. When reading the CSS file, it simply copies any such
16198 @samp{@@}-directive into the output, as follows:
16201 @item If @var{file} contains only normal CSS declarations, it is
16202 included after @command{makeinfo}'s default CSS, thus overriding it.
16204 @item If @var{file} begins with @samp{@@import} specifications (see
16205 below), then the @samp{import}'s are included first (they have to come
16206 first, according to the standard), and then @command{makeinfo}'s
16207 default CSS is included. If you need to override @command{makeinfo}'s
16208 defaults from an @samp{@@import}, you can do so with the @samp{!@:
16209 important} CSS construct, as in:
16211 pre.smallexample @{ font-size: inherit ! important @}
16214 @item If @var{file} contains both @samp{@@import} and inline CSS
16215 specifications, the @samp{@@import}'s are included first, then
16216 @command{makeinfo}'s defaults, and lastly the inline CSS from
16219 @item Any @@-directive other than @samp{@@import} and @samp{@@charset}
16220 is treated as a CSS declaration, meaning @command{makeinfo} includes
16221 its default CSS and then the rest of the file.
16225 If the CSS file is malformed or erroneous, @command{makeinfo}'s output
16226 is unspecified. @command{makeinfo} does not try to interpret the
16227 meaning of the CSS file in any way; it just looks for the special
16228 @samp{@@} and @samp{;} characters and blindly copies the text into the
16229 output. Comments in the CSS file may or may not be included in the
16234 @section HTML Cross-references
16235 @cindex HTML cross-references
16236 @cindex Cross-references, in HTML output
16238 Cross-references between Texinfo manuals in HTML format amount, in the
16239 end, to a standard HTML @code{<a>} link, but the details are
16240 unfortunately complex. This section describes the algorithm used in
16241 detail, so that Texinfo can cooperate with other programs, such as
16242 @command{texi2html}, by writing mutually compatible HTML files.
16244 This algorithm may or may not be used for links @emph{within} HTML
16245 output for a Texinfo file. Since no issues of compatibility arise in
16246 such cases, we do not need to specify this.
16248 We try to support references to such ``external'' manuals in both
16249 monolithic and split forms. A @dfn{monolithic} (mono) manual is
16250 entirely contained in one file, and a @dfn{split} manual has a file
16251 for each node. (@xref{HTML Splitting}.)
16253 @cindex Dumas, Patrice
16254 Acknowledgement: this algorithm was primarily devised by Patrice Dumas
16258 * Link Basics: HTML Xref Link Basics.
16259 * Node Expansion: HTML Xref Node Name Expansion.
16260 * Command Expansion: HTML Xref Command Expansion.
16261 * 8-bit Expansion: HTML Xref 8-bit Character Expansion.
16262 * Mismatch: HTML Xref Mismatch.
16266 @node HTML Xref Link Basics
16267 @subsection HTML Cross-reference Link Basics
16268 @cindex HTML cross-reference link basics
16270 For our purposes, an HTML link consists of four components: a host
16271 name, a directory part, a file part, and a target part. We
16272 always assume the @code{http} protocol. For example:
16275 http://@var{host}/@var{dir}/@var{file}.html#@var{target}
16278 The information to construct a link comes from the node name and
16279 manual name in the cross-reference command in the Texinfo source
16280 (@pxref{Cross References}), and from @dfn{external information}, which
16281 is currently simply hardwired. In the future, it may come from an
16282 external data file.
16284 We now consider each part in turn.
16286 The @var{host} is hardwired to be the local host. This could either
16287 be the literal string @samp{localhost}, or, according to the rules for
16288 HTML links, the @samp{http://localhost/} could be omitted entirely.
16290 The @var{dir} and @var{file} parts are more complicated, and depend on
16291 the relative split/mono nature of both the manual being processed and
16292 the manual that the cross-reference refers to. The underlying idea is
16293 that there is one directory for Texinfo manuals in HTML, and each
16294 manual is either available as a monolithic file @file{manual.html}, or a
16295 split subdirectory @file{manual/*.html}. Here are the cases:
16299 If the present manual is split, and the referent manual is also split,
16300 the directory is @samp{../@var{referent/}} and the file is the
16301 expanded node name (described later).
16304 If the present manual is split, and the referent manual is mono, the
16305 directory is @samp{../} and the file is @file{@var{referent}.html}.
16308 If the present manual is mono, and the referent manual is split, the
16309 directory is @file{@var{referent}/} and the file is the expanded node
16313 If the present manual is mono, and the referent manual is also mono,
16314 the directory is @file{./} (or just the empty string), and the file is
16315 @file{@var{referent}.html}.
16319 One exception: the algorithm for node name expansion prefixes the
16320 string @samp{g_t} when the node name begins with a non-letter. This
16321 kludge (due to XHTML rules) is not necessary for filenames, and is
16324 Any directory part in the filename argument of the source
16325 cross-reference command is ignored. Thus, @code{@@xref@{,,,../foo@}}
16326 and @code{@@xref@{,,,foo@}} both use @samp{foo} as the manual name.
16327 This is because any such attempted hardwiring of the directory is very
16328 unlikely to be useful for both Info and HTML output.
16330 Finally, the @var{target} part is always the expanded node name.
16332 Whether the present manual is split or mono is determined by user
16333 option; @command{makeinfo} defaults to split, with the
16334 @option{--no-split} option overriding this.
16336 Whether the referent manual is split or mono is another bit of the
16337 external information. For now, @command{makeinfo} simply assumes the
16338 referent manual is the same as the present manual.
16340 There can be a mismatch between the format of the referent manual that
16341 the generating software assumes, and the format it's actually present
16342 in. @xref{HTML Xref Mismatch}.
16345 @node HTML Xref Node Name Expansion
16346 @subsection HTML Cross-reference Node Name Expansion
16347 @cindex HTML cross-reference node name expansion
16348 @cindex node name expansion, in HTML cross-references
16349 @cindex expansion, of node names in HTML cross-references
16351 As mentioned in the previous section, the key part of the HTML
16352 cross-reference algorithm is the conversion of node names in the
16353 Texinfo source into strings suitable for XHTML identifiers and
16354 filenames. The restrictions are similar for each: plain ASCII
16355 letters, numbers, and the @samp{-} and @samp{_} characters are all
16356 that can be used. (Although HTML anchors can contain most characters,
16357 XHTML is more restrictive.)
16359 Cross-references in Texinfo can actually refer either to nodes or
16360 anchors (@pxref{anchor}), but anchors are treated identically to nodes
16361 in this context, so we'll continue to say ``node'' names for
16364 (@@-commands and 8-bit characters are not presently handled by
16365 @command{makeinfo} for HTML cross-references. See the next section.)
16367 A special exception: the Top node (@pxref{The Top Node}) is always
16368 mapped to the file @file{index.html}, to match web server software.
16369 However, the HTML @emph{target} is @samp{Top}. Thus (in the split case):
16372 @@xref@{Top, Introduction,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual@}.
16373 @result{} <a href="emacs/index.html#Top">
16378 The standard ASCII letters (a-z and A-Z) are not modified. All other
16379 characters are changed as specified below.
16382 The standard ASCII numbers (0-9) are not modified except when a number
16383 is the first character of the node name. In that case, see below.
16386 Multiple consecutive space, tab and newline characters are transformed
16387 into just one space. (It's not possible to have newlines in node
16388 names with the current implementation, but we specify it anyway, just
16392 Leading and trailing spaces are removed.
16395 After the above has been applied, each remaining space character is
16396 converted into a @samp{-} character.
16399 Other ASCII 7-bit characters are transformed into @samp{_00@var{xx}},
16400 where @var{xx} is the ASCII character code in (lowercase) hexadecimal.
16401 This includes @samp{_}, which is mapped to @samp{_005f}.
16404 If the node name does not begin with a letter, the literal string
16405 @samp{g_t} is prefixed to the result. (Due to the rules above, that
16406 string can never occur otherwise; it is an arbitrary choice, standing
16407 for ``GNU Texinfo''.) This is necessary because XHTML requires that
16408 identifiers begin with a letter.
16415 @@node A node --- with _'%
16416 @result{} A-node-_002d_002d_002d-with-_005f_0027_0025
16419 Notice in particular:
16422 @item @samp{_} @result{} @samp{_005f}
16423 @item @samp{-} @result{} @samp{_002d}
16424 @item @samp{A node} @result{} @samp{A-node}
16427 On case-folding computer systems, nodes differing only by case will be
16428 mapped to the same file.
16430 In particular, as mentioned above, Top always maps to the file
16431 @file{index.html}. Thus, on a case-folding system, Top and a node
16432 named `Index' will both be written to @file{index.html}.
16434 Fortunately, the targets serve to distinguish these cases, since HTML
16435 target names are always case-sensitive, independent of operating
16439 @node HTML Xref Command Expansion
16440 @subsection HTML Cross-reference Command Expansion
16441 @cindex HTML cross-reference command expansion
16443 In standard Texinfo, node names may not contain @@-commands.
16444 @command{makeinfo} has an option @option{--commands-in-node-names}
16445 which partially supports it (@pxref{Invoking makeinfo}), but it is not
16446 robust and not recommended.
16448 Thus, @command{makeinfo} also does not fully implement this part of
16449 the HTML cross-reference algorithm, but it is documented here for the
16450 sake of completeness.
16452 First, comments are removed.
16454 Next, any @code{@@value} commands (@pxref{set value}) and macro invocations
16455 (@pxref{Invoking Macros}) are fully expanded.
16457 Then, for the following commands, the command name and braces are removed,
16458 the text of the argument is recursively transformed:
16460 @@asis @@b @@cite @@code @@command @@dfn @@dmn @@dotless
16461 @@emph @@env @@file @@indicateurl @@kbd @@key
16462 @@samp @@sc @@slanted @@strong @@t @@var @@w
16465 @noindent For @code{@@sc}, any letters are capitalized.
16467 The following commands are replaced by constant text, as shown. If
16468 any of these commands have non-empty arguments, as in
16469 @code{@@TeX@{bad@}}, it is an error, and the result is unspecified.
16470 `(space)' means a space character, `(nothing)' means the empty string,
16471 etc. The notation `U+@var{xxxx}' means Unicode code point @var{xxxx}.
16472 There are further transformations of many of these expansions for the
16473 final file or target name, such as space characters to @samp{-}, etc.,
16474 according to the other rules.
16476 @multitable @columnfractions .3 .5
16477 @item @code{@@(newline)} @tab (space)
16478 @item @code{@@(space)} @tab (space)
16479 @item @code{@@(tab)} @tab (space)
16480 @item @code{@@!} @tab @samp{!}
16481 @item @code{@@*} @tab (space)
16482 @item @code{@@-} @tab (nothing)
16483 @item @code{@@.} @tab @samp{.}
16484 @item @code{@@:} @tab (nothing)
16485 @item @code{@@?} @tab @samp{?}
16486 @item @code{@@@@} @tab @samp{@@}
16487 @item @code{@@@{} @tab @samp{@{}
16488 @item @code{@@@}} @tab @samp{@}}
16489 @item @code{@@LaTeX} @tab @samp{LaTeX}
16490 @item @code{@@TeX} @tab @samp{TeX}
16491 @item @code{@@bullet} @tab U+2022
16492 @item @code{@@comma} @tab @samp{,}
16493 @item @code{@@copyright} @tab U+00A9
16494 @item @code{@@dots} @tab U+2026
16495 @item @code{@@enddots} @tab @samp{...}
16496 @item @code{@@equiv} @tab U+2261
16497 @item @code{@@error} @tab @samp{error-->}
16498 @item @code{@@euro} @tab U+20AC
16499 @item @code{@@exclamdown} @tab U+00A1
16500 @item @code{@@expansion} @tab U+2192
16501 @item @code{@@minus} @tab U+2212
16502 @item @code{@@ordf} @tab U+00AA
16503 @item @code{@@ordm} @tab U+00BA
16504 @item @code{@@point} @tab U+2217
16505 @item @code{@@pounds} @tab U+00A3
16506 @item @code{@@print} @tab @samp{-|}
16507 @item @code{@@questiondown} @tab U+00BF
16508 @item @code{@@registeredsymbol} @tab U+00AE
16509 @item @code{@@result} @tab U+21D2
16510 @item @code{@@tie} @tab (space)
16513 An @code{@@acronym} or @code{@@abbr} command is replaced by the first
16514 argument, followed by the second argument in parentheses, if present.
16517 An @code{@@email} command is replaced by the @var{text} argument if
16518 present, else the address. @xref{email}.
16520 An @code{@@image} command is replaced by the filename (first)
16521 argument. @xref{Images}.
16523 A @code{@@verb} command is replaced by its transformed argument.
16526 Any other command is an error, and the result is unspecified.
16529 @node HTML Xref 8-bit Character Expansion
16530 @subsection HTML Cross-reference 8-bit Character Expansion
16531 @cindex HTML cross-reference 8-bit character expansion
16532 @cindex 8-bit characters, in HTML cross-references
16533 @cindex Expansion of 8-bit characters in HTML cross-references
16535 Usually, characters other than plain 7-bit ASCII are transformed into
16536 the corresponding Unicode code point(s) in Normalization Form C, which
16537 uses precomposed characters where available. (This is the
16538 normalization form recommended by the W3C and other bodies.) This
16539 holds when that code point is 0xffff or less, as it almost always is.
16541 These will then be further transformed by the rules above into the
16542 string @samp{_@var{xxxx}}, where @var{xxxx} is the code point in hex.
16544 For example, combining this rule and the previous section:
16547 @@node @@b@{A@} @@TeX@{@} @@u@{B@} @@point@{@}@@enddots@{@}
16548 @result{} A-TeX-B_0306-_2605_002e_002e_002e
16551 Notice: 1)@tie{}@code{@@enddots} expands to three periods which in
16552 turn expands to three @samp{_002e}'s; 2)@tie{}@code{@@u@{B@}} is a `B'
16553 with a breve accent, which does not exist as a pre-accented Unicode
16554 character, therefore expands to @samp{B_0306} (B with combining
16557 When the Unicode code point is above 0xffff, the transformation is
16558 @samp{__@var{xxxxxx}}, that is, two leading underscores followed by
16559 six hex digits. Since Unicode has declared that their highest code
16560 point is 0x10ffff, this is sufficient. (We felt it was better to
16561 define this extra escape than to always use six hex digits, since the
16562 first two would nearly always be zeros.)
16564 For the definition of Unicode Normalization Form C, see Unicode report
16565 UAX#15, @uref{http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/}. Many related
16566 documents and implementations are available elsewhere on the web.
16569 @node HTML Xref Mismatch
16570 @subsection HTML Cross-reference Mismatch
16571 @cindex HTML cross-reference mismatch
16572 @cindex Mismatched HTML cross-reference source and target
16574 As mentioned earlier (@pxref{HTML Xref Link Basics}), the generating
16575 software has to guess whether a given manual being cross-referenced is
16576 available in split or monolithic form---and, inevitably, it might
16577 guess wrong. However, it is possible when the referent manual itself
16578 is generated, it is possible to handle at least some mismatches.
16580 In the case where we assume the referent is split, but it is actually
16581 available in mono, the only recourse would be to generate a
16582 @file{manual/} subdirectory full of HTML files which redirect back to
16583 the monolithic @file{manual.html}. Since this is essentially the same
16584 as a split manual in the first place, it's not very appealing.
16586 On the other hand, in the case where we assume the referent is mono,
16587 but it is actually available in split, it is possible to use
16588 JavaScript to redirect from the putatively monolithic
16589 @file{manual.html} to the different @file{manual/node.html} files.
16593 function redirect() @{
16594 switch (location.hash) @{
16596 location.replace("manual/Node1.html#Node1"); break;
16598 location.replace("manual/Node2.html#Node2"); break;
16605 Then, in the @code{<body>} tag of @file{manual.html}:
16608 <body onLoad="redirect();">
16611 Once again, this is something the software which generated the
16612 @emph{referent} manual has to do in advance, it's not something the
16613 software generating the actual cross-reference in the present manual
16616 Ultimately, we hope to allow for an external configuration file to
16617 control which manuals are available from where, and how.
16623 external information
16624 --------------------
16626 The information for the reference is searched in the file
16627 `htmlxref.cnf' present in the following directories:
16628 <srcdir>/.texinfo/, ~/.texinfo/, SYSCONFDIR/texinfo/,
16630 The first match should be used.
16632 The file is line-oriented, with the following format:
16633 <manualname> <whitespace> <keyword> <whitespace> <urlprefix>
16634 with <keyword> being "mono" or "split". Thus
16635 texinfo split http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/manual/texinfo/html_node/
16636 texinfo mono http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/manual/texinfo/texinfo.html
16638 If the keyword is 'split', that is the target is split, the urlprefix gives
16639 the directory and host name.
16640 If the keyword is 'mono', that is the target is mono, the urlprefix gives
16641 directory, host and file name.
16643 '#' followed by a space begins comments. '#' followed by another character
16644 cannot begin comments as there are # in urls.
16650 @appendix @@-Command List
16651 @cindex Alphabetical @@-command list
16652 @cindex List of @@-commands
16653 @cindex @@-command list
16654 @cindex Reference to @@-commands
16656 Here is an alphabetical list of the @@-commands in Texinfo. Square
16657 brackets, @t{[}@w{ }@t{]}, indicate optional arguments; an ellipsis,
16658 @samp{@dots{}}, indicates repeated text.
16660 More specifics on the general syntax of different @@-commands are
16661 given in the section below.
16664 * Command Syntax:: General syntax for varieties of @@-commands.
16669 @item @@@var{whitespace}
16670 An @code{@@} followed by a space, tab, or newline produces a normal,
16671 stretchable, interword space. @xref{Multiple Spaces}.
16674 Generate an exclamation point that really does end a sentence (usually
16675 after an end-of-sentence capital letter). @xref{Ending a Sentence}.
16679 Generate an umlaut or acute accent, respectively, over the next
16680 character, as in @"o and @'o. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
16683 Force a line break. @xref{Line Breaks}.
16685 @item @@,@{@var{c}@}
16686 Generate a cedilla accent under @var{c}, as in @,{c}. @xref{Inserting
16690 Insert a discretionary hyphenation point. @xref{- and hyphenation}.
16693 Produce a period that really does end a sentence (usually after an
16694 end-of-sentence capital letter). @xref{Ending a Sentence}.
16697 Produces no output, but allows a line break. @xref{Line Breaks}.
16700 Indicate to @TeX{} that an immediately preceding period, question
16701 mark, exclamation mark, or colon does not end a sentence. Prevent
16702 @TeX{} from inserting extra whitespace as it does at the end of a
16703 sentence. The command has no effect on the Info file output.
16704 @xref{Not Ending a Sentence}.
16707 Generate a macron (bar) accent over the next character, as in @=o.
16708 @xref{Inserting Accents}.
16711 Generate a question mark that really does end a sentence (usually after
16712 an end-of-sentence capital letter). @xref{Ending a Sentence}.
16715 Stands for an at sign, @samp{@@}.
16716 @xref{Atsign Braces Comma, , Inserting @@ and @{@} and @comma{}}.
16719 Stands for a backslash (@samp{\}) inside @code{@@math}.
16720 @xref{math,,@code{math}}.
16724 Generate a circumflex (hat) or grave accent, respectively, over the next
16725 character, as in @^o and @`e.
16726 @xref{Inserting Accents}.
16729 Stands for a left brace, @samp{@{}.
16730 @xref{Atsign Braces Comma, , Inserting @@ and @{@} and @comma{}}.
16733 Stands for a right-hand brace, @samp{@}}.@*
16734 @xref{Atsign Braces Comma, , Inserting @@ and @{@} and @comma{}}.
16737 Generate a tilde accent over the next character, as in @~N.
16738 @xref{Inserting Accents}.
16742 Generate the uppercase and lowercase Scandinavian A-ring letters,
16743 respectively: @AA{}, @aa{}. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
16745 @item @@abbr@{@var{abbreviation}@}
16746 Tag @var{abbreviation} as an abbreviation, such as `Comput.'.
16747 @xref{abbr,, @code{abbr}}.
16749 @item @@acronym@{@var{acronym}@}
16750 Tag @var{acronym} as an acronym, such as `NASA'.
16751 @xref{acronym,, @code{acronym}}.
16755 Generate the uppercase and lowercase AE ligatures, respectively:
16756 @AE{}, @ae{}. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
16758 @itemx @@afivepaper
16759 Change page dimensions for the A5 paper size. @xref{A4 Paper}.
16762 @itemx @@afourpaper
16764 Change page dimensions for the A4 paper size. @xref{A4 Paper}.
16766 @item @@alias @var{new}=@var{existing}
16767 Make the command @samp{@@@var{new}} an alias for the existing command
16768 @samp{@@@var{existing}}. @xref{alias}.
16770 @item @@anchor@{@var{name}@}
16771 Define @var{name} as the current location for use as a cross-reference
16772 target. @xref{anchor,, @code{@@anchor}}.
16774 @item @@appendix @var{title}
16775 Begin an appendix. The title appears in the table
16776 of contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is
16777 underlined with asterisks. @xref{unnumbered & appendix, , The
16778 @code{@@unnumbered} and @code{@@appendix} Commands}.@refill
16780 @item @@appendixsec @var{title}
16781 @itemx @@appendixsection @var{title}
16782 Begin an appendix section within an appendix. The section title appears
16783 in the table of contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is
16784 underlined with equal signs. @code{@@appendixsection} is a longer
16785 spelling of the @code{@@appendixsec} command. @xref{unnumberedsec
16786 appendixsec heading, , Section Commands}.@refill
16788 @item @@appendixsubsec @var{title}
16789 Begin an appendix subsection within an appendix. The title appears
16790 in the table of contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is
16791 underlined with hyphens. @xref{unnumberedsubsec appendixsubsec
16792 subheading, , Subsection Commands}.@refill
16794 @item @@appendixsubsubsec @var{title}
16795 Begin an appendix subsubsection within an appendix subsection. The
16796 title appears in the table of contents of a printed manual. In Info,
16797 the title is underlined with periods. @xref{subsubsection,, The
16798 `subsub' Commands}.@refill
16801 Used following @code{@@table}, @code{@@ftable}, and @code{@@vtable} to
16802 print the table's first column without highlighting (``as is'').
16803 @xref{Two-column Tables, , Making a Two-column Table}.@refill
16805 @item @@author @var{author}
16806 Typeset @var{author} flushleft and underline it. @xref{title
16807 subtitle author, , The @code{@@title} and @code{@@author}
16810 @item @@b@{@var{text}@}
16811 Print @var{text} in @b{bold} font. No effect in Info. @xref{Fonts}.@refill
16815 Force a paragraph break. If used within a line, follow @code{@@br}
16816 with braces. @xref{br, , @code{@@br}}.@refill
16820 Generate a large round dot, or the closest possible
16821 thing to one. @xref{bullet, , @code{@@bullet}}.@refill
16824 Stop formatting a file. The formatters do not see the contents of a
16825 file following an @code{@@bye} command. @xref{Ending a File}.@refill
16827 @item @@c @var{comment}
16828 Begin a comment in Texinfo. The rest of the line does not appear in
16829 either the Info file or the printed manual. A synonym for
16830 @code{@@comment}. @xref{Comments}.
16833 Define the full caption for a @code{@@float}. @xref{caption shortcaption}.
16836 Highlight an example or quotation by drawing a box with rounded
16837 corners around it. Pair with @code{@@end cartouche}. No effect in
16838 Info. @xref{cartouche, , Drawing Cartouches Around Examples}.)@refill
16840 @item @@center @var{line-of-text}
16841 Center the line of text following the command.
16842 @xref{titlefont center sp, , @code{@@center}}.@refill
16844 @item @@centerchap @var{line-of-text}
16845 Like @code{@@chapter}, but centers the chapter title. @xref{chapter,,
16848 @item @@chapheading @var{title}
16849 Print a chapter-like heading in the text, but not in the table of
16850 contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is underlined with
16851 asterisks. @xref{majorheading & chapheading, , @code{@@majorheading}
16852 and @code{@@chapheading}}.@refill
16854 @item @@chapter @var{title}
16855 Begin a chapter. The chapter title appears in the table of
16856 contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is underlined with
16857 asterisks. @xref{chapter, , @code{@@chapter}}.@refill
16859 @item @@cindex @var{entry}
16860 Add @var{entry} to the index of concepts. @xref{Index Entries, ,
16861 Defining the Entries of an Index}.@refill
16863 @item @@cite@{@var{reference}@}
16864 Highlight the name of a book or other reference that lacks a
16865 companion Info file. @xref{cite, , @code{@@cite}}.@refill
16867 @item @@clear @var{flag}
16868 Unset @var{flag}, preventing the Texinfo formatting commands from
16869 formatting text between subsequent pairs of @code{@@ifset @var{flag}}
16870 and @code{@@end ifset} commands, and preventing
16871 @code{@@value@{@var{flag}@}} from expanding to the value to which
16873 @xref{set clear value, , @code{@@set} @code{@@clear} @code{@@value}}.@refill
16875 @item @@code@{@var{sample-code}@}
16876 Highlight text that is an expression, a syntactically complete token
16877 of a program, or a program name. @xref{code, , @code{@@code}}.@refill
16880 Insert a comma `,' character; only needed when a literal comma would
16881 be taken as an argument separator. @xref{Inserting a Comma}.
16883 @item @@command@{@var{command-name}@}
16884 Indicate a command name, such as @command{ls}.
16885 @xref{command,, @code{@@command}}.
16887 @item @@comment @var{comment}
16888 Begin a comment in Texinfo. The rest of the line does not appear in
16889 either the Info file or the printed manual. A synonym for @code{@@c}.
16893 Print a complete table of contents. Has no effect in Info, which uses
16894 menus instead. @xref{Contents, , Generating a Table of
16897 @item @@copyright@{@}
16898 Generate the copyright symbol @copyright{}. @xref{copyright symbol,,
16899 @code{@@copyright@{@}}}.
16902 @item @@ctrl@{@var{ctrl-char}@}
16903 Describe an @sc{ascii} control character. Insert actual control character
16904 into Info file. @xref{ctrl, , @code{@@ctrl}}.@refill
16907 @item @@defcodeindex @var{index-name}
16908 Define a new index and its indexing command. Print entries in an
16909 @code{@@code} font. @xref{New Indices, , Defining New
16912 @item @@defcv @var{category} @var{class} @var{name}
16913 @itemx @@defcvx @var{category} @var{class} @var{name}
16914 Format a description for a variable associated with a class in
16915 object-oriented programming. Takes three arguments: the category of
16916 thing being defined, the class to which it belongs, and its name.
16917 @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
16919 @item @@deffn @var{category} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16920 @itemx @@deffnx @var{category} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16921 Format a description for a function, interactive command, or similar
16922 entity that may take arguments. @code{@@deffn} takes as arguments the
16923 category of entity being described, the name of this particular
16924 entity, and its arguments, if any. @xref{Definition Commands}.@refill
16926 @item @@defindex @var{index-name}
16927 Define a new index and its indexing command. Print entries in a roman
16928 font. @xref{New Indices, , Defining New Indices}.@refill
16930 @item @@definfoenclose @var{newcmd}, @var{before}, @var{after},
16931 Create new @@-command @var{newcmd} for Info that marks text by enclosing
16932 it in strings that precede and follow the text. @xref{definfoenclose}.
16934 @item @@defivar @var{class} @var{instance-variable-name}
16935 @itemx @@defivarx @var{class} @var{instance-variable-name}
16936 This command formats a description for an instance variable in
16937 object-oriented programming. The command is equivalent to @samp{@@defcv
16938 @{Instance Variable@} @dots{}}. @xref{Definition Commands}, and
16939 @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
16941 @item @@defmac @var{macroname} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16942 @itemx @@defmacx @var{macroname} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16943 Format a description for a macro. The command is equivalent to
16944 @samp{@@deffn Macro @dots{}}. @xref{Definition Commands}, and
16945 @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
16947 @item @@defmethod @var{class} @var{method-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16948 @itemx @@defmethodx @var{class} @var{method-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16949 Format a description for a method in object-oriented programming. The
16950 command is equivalent to @samp{@@defop Method @dots{}}. Takes as
16951 arguments the name of the class of the method, the name of the
16952 method, and its arguments, if any. @xref{Definition Commands}, and
16953 @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
16955 @item @@defop @var{category} @var{class} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16956 @itemx @@defopx @var{category} @var{class} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16957 Format a description for an operation in object-oriented programming.
16958 @code{@@defop} takes as arguments the overall name of the category of
16959 operation, the name of the class of the operation, the name of the
16960 operation, and its arguments, if any. @xref{Definition
16961 Commands}, and @ref{Abstract Objects}.
16963 @item @@defopt @var{option-name}
16964 @itemx @@defoptx @var{option-name}
16965 Format a description for a user option. The command is equivalent to
16966 @samp{@@defvr @{User Option@} @dots{}}. @xref{Definition Commands}, and
16967 @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
16969 @item @@defspec @var{special-form-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16970 @itemx @@defspecx @var{special-form-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16971 Format a description for a special form. The command is equivalent to
16972 @samp{@@deffn @{Special Form@} @dots{}}. @xref{Definition Commands},
16973 and @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
16975 @item @@deftp @var{category} @var{name-of-type} @var{attributes}@dots{}
16976 @itemx @@deftpx @var{category} @var{name-of-type} @var{attributes}@dots{}
16977 Format a description for a data type. @code{@@deftp} takes as arguments
16978 the category, the name of the type (which is a word like @samp{int} or
16979 @samp{float}), and then the names of attributes of objects of that type.
16980 @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{Data Types}.
16982 @item @@deftypecv @var{category} @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name}
16983 @itemx @@deftypecvx @var{category} @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name}
16984 Format a description for a typed class variable in object-oriented programming.
16985 @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{Abstract Objects}.
16987 @item @@deftypefn @var{classification} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16988 @itemx @@deftypefnx @var{classification} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16989 Format a description for a function or similar entity that may take
16990 arguments and that is typed. @code{@@deftypefn} takes as arguments the
16991 classification of entity being described, the type, the name of the
16992 entity, and its arguments, if any. @xref{Definition Commands}, and
16993 @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
16995 @item @@deftypefun @var{data-type} @var{function-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16996 @itemx @@deftypefunx @var{data-type} @var{function-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
16997 Format a description for a function in a typed language.
16998 The command is equivalent to @samp{@@deftypefn Function @dots{}}.
16999 @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
17001 @item @@deftypeivar @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{variable-name}
17002 @itemx @@deftypeivarx @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{variable-name}
17003 Format a description for a typed instance variable in object-oriented
17004 programming. @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{Abstract Objects}.
17006 @item @@deftypemethod @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{method-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
17007 @itemx @@deftypemethodx @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{method-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
17008 Format a description for a typed method in object-oriented programming.
17009 @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
17011 @item @@deftypeop @var{category} @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
17012 @itemx @@deftypeopx @var{category} @var{class} @var{data-type} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
17013 Format a description for a typed operation in object-oriented programming.
17014 @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{Abstract Objects}.
17016 @item @@deftypevar @var{data-type} @var{variable-name}
17017 @itemx @@deftypevarx @var{data-type} @var{variable-name}
17018 Format a description for a variable in a typed language. The command is
17019 equivalent to @samp{@@deftypevr Variable @dots{}}. @xref{Definition
17020 Commands}, and @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
17022 @item @@deftypevr @var{classification} @var{data-type} @var{name}
17023 @itemx @@deftypevrx @var{classification} @var{data-type} @var{name}
17024 Format a description for something like a variable in a typed
17025 language---an entity that records a value. Takes as arguments the
17026 classification of entity being described, the type, and the name of the
17027 entity. @xref{Definition Commands}, and @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in
17030 @item @@defun @var{function-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
17031 @itemx @@defunx @var{function-name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
17032 Format a description for functions. The command is equivalent to
17033 @samp{@@deffn Function @dots{}}. @xref{Definition Commands}, and
17034 @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
17036 @item @@defvar @var{variable-name}
17037 @itemx @@defvarx @var{variable-name}
17038 Format a description for variables. The command is equivalent to
17039 @samp{@@defvr Variable @dots{}}. @xref{Definition Commands}, and
17040 @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
17042 @item @@defvr @var{category} @var{name}
17043 @itemx @@defvrx @var{category} @var{name}
17044 Format a description for any kind of variable. @code{@@defvr} takes
17045 as arguments the category of the entity and the name of the entity.
17046 @xref{Definition Commands},
17047 and @ref{deffnx,, Def Cmds in Detail}.
17050 Avoid @code{makeinfo} confusion stemming from the detailed node listing
17051 in a master menu. @xref{Master Menu Parts}.
17053 @item @@dfn@{@var{term}@}
17054 Highlight the introductory or defining use of a term.
17055 @xref{dfn, , @code{@@dfn}}.@refill
17057 @item @@dircategory @var{dirpart}
17058 Specify a part of the Info directory menu where this file's entry should
17059 go. @xref{Installing Dir Entries}.
17062 Begin the Info directory menu entry for this file. Pair with
17063 @code{@@end direntry}. @xref{Installing Dir Entries}.
17066 Begin a kind of example. Like @code{@@example} (indent text, do not
17067 fill), but do not select a new font. Pair with @code{@@end display}.
17068 @xref{display, , @code{@@display}}.
17070 @item @@dmn@{@var{dimension}@}
17071 Format a unit of measure, as in 12@dmn{pt}. Causes @TeX{} to insert a
17072 thin space before @var{dimension}. No effect in Info.
17073 @xref{dmn, , @code{@@dmn}}.
17076 Enter Docbook completely. Pair with @code{@@end docbook}. @xref{Raw
17077 Formatter Commands}.
17079 @item @@documentdescription
17080 Set the document description text, included in the HTML output. Pair
17081 with @code{@@end documentdescription}. @xref{documentdescription,,
17082 @code{@@documentdescription}}.
17084 @item @@documentencoding @var{enc}
17085 Declare the input encoding to be @var{enc}.
17086 @xref{documentencoding,, @code{@@documentencoding}}.
17088 @item @@documentlanguage @var{CC}
17089 Declare the document language as the two-character ISO-639 abbreviation
17090 @var{CC}. @xref{documentlanguage,, @code{@@documentlanguage}}.
17092 @item @@dotaccent@{@var{c}@}
17093 Generate a dot accent over the character @var{c}, as in @dotaccent{o}.
17094 @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17097 Insert an ellipsis: @samp{@dots{}}.
17098 @xref{dots, , @code{@@dots}}.@refill
17100 @item @@email@{@var{address}[, @var{displayed-text}]@}
17101 Indicate an electronic mail address.
17102 @xref{email, , @code{@@email}}.
17104 @item @@emph@{@var{text}@}
17105 Highlight @var{text}; text is displayed in @emph{italics} in printed
17106 output, and surrounded by asterisks in Info. @xref{Emphasis, ,
17109 @item @@end @var{environment}
17110 Ends @var{environment}, as in @samp{@@end example}. @xref{Formatting
17111 Commands,,@@-commands}.
17113 @item @@env@{@var{environment-variable}@}
17114 Indicate an environment variable name, such as @env{PATH}.
17115 @xref{env,, @code{@@env}}.
17117 @item @@enddots@{@}
17118 Generate an end-of-sentence of ellipsis, like this @enddots{}
17119 @xref{dots,,@code{@@dots@{@}}}.
17121 @item @@enumerate [@var{number-or-letter}]
17122 Begin a numbered list, using @code{@@item} for each entry.
17123 Optionally, start list with @var{number-or-letter}. Pair with
17124 @code{@@end enumerate}. @xref{enumerate, ,
17125 @code{@@enumerate}}.@refill
17128 Indicate to the reader the exact equivalence of two forms with a
17129 glyph: @samp{@equiv{}}. @xref{Equivalence}.@refill
17132 Generate the Euro currency sign.
17133 @xref{euro,,@code{@@euro@{@}}}.
17136 Indicate to the reader with a glyph that the following text is
17137 an error message: @samp{@error{}}. @xref{Error Glyph}.@refill
17139 @item @@evenfooting [@var{left}] @@| [@var{center}] @@| [@var{right}]
17140 @itemx @@evenheading [@var{left}] @@| [@var{center}] @@| [@var{right}]
17141 Specify page footings resp.@: headings for even-numbered (left-hand)
17142 pages. @xref{Custom Headings, ,
17143 How to Make Your Own Headings}.@refill
17145 @item @@everyfooting [@var{left}] @@| [@var{center}] @@| [@var{right}]
17146 @itemx @@everyheading [@var{left}] @@| [@var{center}] @@| [@var{right}]
17147 Specify page footings resp.@: headings for every page. Not relevant to
17148 Info. @xref{Custom Headings, , How to Make Your Own Headings}.@refill
17151 Begin an example. Indent text, do not fill, and select fixed-width font.
17152 Pair with @code{@@end example}. @xref{example, ,
17153 @code{@@example}}.@refill
17155 @item @@exampleindent @var{indent}
17156 Indent example-like environments by @var{indent} number of spaces
17157 (perhaps 0). @xref{exampleindent,, Paragraph Indenting}.
17159 @item @@exclamdown@{@}
17160 Produce an upside-down exclamation point. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17162 @item @@exdent @var{line-of-text}
17163 Remove any indentation a line might have. @xref{exdent, ,
17164 Undoing the Indentation of a Line}.@refill
17166 @item @@expansion@{@}
17167 Indicate the result of a macro expansion to the reader with a special
17168 glyph: @samp{@expansion{}}.
17169 @xref{expansion, , @expansion{} Indicating an Expansion}.@refill
17171 @item @@file@{@var{filename}@}
17172 Highlight the name of a file, buffer, node, or directory. @xref{file, ,
17173 @code{@@file}}.@refill
17176 Prevent @TeX{} from printing large black warning rectangles beside
17177 over-wide lines. @xref{Overfull hboxes}.@refill
17179 @item @@findex @var{entry}
17180 Add @var{entry} to the index of functions. @xref{Index Entries, ,
17181 Defining the Entries of an Index}.@refill
17184 Environment to define floating material. Pair with @code{@@end float}.
17188 @itemx @@flushright
17189 Left justify every line but leave the right end ragged.
17190 Leave font as is. Pair with @code{@@end flushleft}.
17191 @code{@@flushright} analogous.
17192 @xref{flushleft & flushright, , @code{@@flushleft} and
17193 @code{@@flushright}}.@refill
17195 @item @@footnote@{@var{text-of-footnote}@}
17196 Enter a footnote. Footnote text is printed at the bottom of the page
17197 by @TeX{}; Info may format in either `End' node or `Separate' node style.
17198 @xref{Footnotes}.@refill
17200 @item @@footnotestyle @var{style}
17201 Specify an Info file's footnote style, either @samp{end} for the end
17202 node style or @samp{separate} for the separate node style.
17203 @xref{Footnotes}.@refill
17206 Begin a kind of example. Like @code{@@display}, but do not narrow the
17207 margins. Pair with @code{@@end format}. @xref{example,,
17210 @item @@ftable @var{formatting-command}
17211 Begin a two-column table, using @code{@@item} for each entry.
17212 Automatically enter each of the items in the first column into the
17213 index of functions. Pair with @code{@@end ftable}. The same as
17214 @code{@@table}, except for indexing. @xref{ftable vtable, ,
17215 @code{@@ftable} and @code{@@vtable}}.@refill
17218 Hold text together that must appear on one printed page. Pair with
17219 @code{@@end group}. Not relevant to Info. @xref{group, ,
17220 @code{@@group}}.@refill
17222 @item @@H@{@var{c}@}
17223 Generate the long Hungarian umlaut accent over @var{c}, as in @H{o}.
17225 @item @@heading @var{title}
17226 Print an unnumbered section-like heading in the text, but not in the
17227 table of contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is
17228 underlined with equal signs. @xref{unnumberedsec appendixsec heading,
17229 , Section Commands}.@refill
17231 @item @@headings @var{on-off-single-double}
17232 Turn page headings on or off, and/or specify single-sided or double-sided
17233 page headings for printing. @xref{headings on off, , The
17234 @code{@@headings} Command}.
17237 Enter HTML completely. Pair with @code{@@end html}. @xref{Raw
17238 Formatter Commands}.
17240 @item @@hyphenation@{@var{hy-phen-a-ted words}@}
17241 Explicitly define hyphenation points. @xref{- and hyphenation,,
17242 @code{@@-} and @code{@@hyphenation}}.
17244 @item @@i@{@var{text}@}
17245 Print @var{text} in @i{italic} font. No effect in Info. @xref{Fonts}.
17247 @item @@ifclear @var{flag}
17248 If @var{flag} is cleared, the Texinfo formatting commands format text
17249 between @code{@@ifclear @var{flag}} and the following @code{@@end
17251 @xref{set clear value, , @code{@@set} @code{@@clear} @code{@@value}}.@refill
17256 Begin text that will appear only in the given output format.
17257 @code{@@ifinfo} output appears in both Info and (for historical
17258 compatibility) plain text output. Pair with @code{@@end ifdocbook}
17259 resp.@: @code{@@end ifhtml} resp.@: @code{@@end ifinfo}.
17260 @xref{Conditionals}.
17262 @item @@ifnotdocbook
17265 @itemx @@ifnotplaintext
17268 Begin a stretch of text that will be ignored in one output format but
17269 not the others. The text appears in the formats not specified:
17270 @code{@@ifnothtml} text is omitted from html output, etc. The exception
17271 is @code{@@ifnotinfo} text, which is omitted from plain text output as
17272 well as Info output. Pair with the corresponding @code{@@end
17273 ifnot@var{format}}. @xref{Conditionals}.
17275 @item @@ifplaintext
17276 Begin text that will appear only in the plain text output.
17277 Pair with @code{@@end ifplaintext}. @xref{Conditionals}.
17279 @item @@ifset @var{flag}
17280 If @var{flag} is set, the Texinfo formatting commands format text
17281 between @code{@@ifset @var{flag}} and the following @code{@@end ifset}
17283 @xref{set clear value, , @code{@@set} @code{@@clear} @code{@@value}}.@refill
17286 Begin text that will not appear in the Info file or other output, but
17287 will be processed only by @TeX{}. Pair with @code{@@end iftex}.
17288 @xref{Conditionals, , Conditionally Visible Text}.@refill
17291 Begin text that will appear only in the XML output. Pair with
17292 @code{@@end ifxml}. @xref{Conditionals}.
17295 Begin text that will not appear in any output. Pair with @code{@@end
17296 ignore}. @xref{Comments, , Comments and Ignored Text}.
17298 @item @@image@{@var{filename}, [@var{width}], [@var{height}], [@var{alt}], [@var{ext}]@}
17299 Include graphics image in external @var{filename} scaled to the given
17300 @var{width} and/or @var{height}, using @var{alt} text and looking for
17301 @samp{@var{filename}.@var{ext}} in HTML. @xref{Images}.
17303 @item @@include @var{filename}
17304 Incorporate the contents of the file @var{filename} into the Info file
17305 or printed document. @xref{Include Files}.@refill
17307 @item @@indicateurl@{@var{indicateurl}@}
17308 Indicate text that is a uniform resource locator for the World Wide
17309 Web. @xref{indicateurl, , @code{@@indicateurl}}.
17311 @item @@inforef@{@var{node-name}, [@var{entry-name}], @var{info-file-name}@}
17312 Make a cross reference to an Info file for which there is no printed
17313 manual. @xref{inforef, , Cross references using
17314 @code{@@inforef}}.@refill
17316 @item \input @var{macro-definitions-file}
17317 Use the specified macro definitions file. This command is used only
17318 in the first line of a Texinfo file to cause @TeX{} to make use of the
17319 @file{texinfo} macro definitions file. The backslash in @code{\input}
17320 is used instead of an @code{@@} because @TeX{} does not
17321 recognize @code{@@} until after it has read the definitions file.
17322 @xref{Texinfo File Header}.
17325 Indicate the beginning of a marked paragraph for @code{@@itemize} and
17326 @code{@@enumerate}; indicate the beginning of the text of a first column
17327 entry for @code{@@table}, @code{@@ftable}, and @code{@@vtable}.
17328 @xref{Lists and Tables}.@refill
17330 @item @@itemize @var{mark-generating-character-or-command}
17331 Produce a sequence of indented paragraphs, with a mark inside the left
17332 margin at the beginning of each paragraph. Pair with @code{@@end
17333 itemize}. @xref{itemize, , @code{@@itemize}}.@refill
17336 Like @code{@@item} but do not generate extra vertical space above the
17337 item text. @xref{itemx, , @code{@@itemx}}.@refill
17339 @item @@kbd@{@var{keyboard-characters}@}
17340 Indicate text that is characters of input to be typed by
17341 users. @xref{kbd, , @code{@@kbd}}.@refill
17343 @item @@kbdinputstyle @var{style}
17344 Specify when @code{@@kbd} should use a font distinct from @code{@@code}.
17345 @xref{kbd, , @code{@@kbd}}.@refill
17347 @item @@key@{@var{key-name}@}
17348 Indicate a name for a key on a keyboard.
17349 @xref{key, , @code{@@key}}.@refill
17351 @item @@kindex @var{entry}
17352 Add @var{entry} to the index of keys.
17353 @xref{Index Entries, , Defining the Entries of an Index}.@refill
17357 Generate the uppercase and lowercase Polish suppressed-L letters,
17358 respectively: @L{}, @l{}.
17361 Insert the logo @LaTeX{}. @xref{tex, , @TeX{} and @LaTeX{}}.
17364 Begin an example of Lisp code. Indent text, do not fill, and select
17365 fixed-width font. Pair with @code{@@end lisp}. @xref{lisp, , @code{@@lisp}}.
17367 @item @@listoffloats
17368 Produce a table-of-contents-like listing of @code{@@float}s.
17369 @xref{listoffloats}.
17371 @item @@lowersections
17372 Change subsequent chapters to sections, sections to subsections, and so
17373 on. @xref{Raise/lower sections, , @code{@@raisesections} and
17374 @code{@@lowersections}}.@refill
17376 @item @@macro @var{macroname} @{@var{params}@}
17377 Define a new Texinfo command @code{@@@var{macroname}@{@var{params}@}}.
17378 Only supported by @code{makeinfo} and @code{texi2dvi}. @xref{Defining
17381 @item @@majorheading @var{title}
17382 Print a chapter-like heading in the text, but not in the table of
17383 contents of a printed manual. Generate more vertical whitespace before
17384 the heading than the @code{@@chapheading} command. @xref{majorheading &
17385 chapheading, , @code{@@majorheading} and @code{@@chapheading}}.@refill
17387 @item @@math@{@var{mathematical-expression}@}
17388 Format a mathematical expression.
17389 @xref{math, , @code{@@math}: Inserting Mathematical Expressions}.
17392 Mark the beginning of a menu of nodes in Info. No effect in a printed
17393 manual. Pair with @code{@@end menu}. @xref{Menus}.@refill
17396 Generate a minus sign, `@minus{}'. @xref{minus, , @code{@@minus}}.@refill
17398 @item @@multitable @var{column-width-spec}
17399 Begin a multi-column table. Pair with @code{@@end multitable}.
17400 @xref{Multitable Column Widths}.
17402 @item @@need @var{n}
17403 Start a new page in a printed manual if fewer than @var{n} mils
17404 (thousandths of an inch) remain on the current page. @xref{need, ,
17405 @code{@@need}}.@refill
17407 @item @@node @var{name}, @var{next}, @var{previous}, @var{up}
17408 Define the beginning of a new node in Info, and serve as a locator for
17409 references for @TeX{}. @xref{node, , @code{@@node}}.@refill
17412 Prevent text from being indented as if it were a new paragraph.
17413 @xref{noindent, , @code{@@noindent}}.@refill
17416 Suppress validation of node references, omit creation of auxiliary files
17417 with @TeX{}. Use before @code{@@setfilename}. @xref{Pointer Validation}.
17421 Generate the uppercase and lowercase O-with-slash letters, respectively:
17424 @item @@oddfooting [@var{left}] @@| [@var{center}] @@| [@var{right}]
17425 @itemx @@oddheading [@var{left}] @@| [@var{center}] @@| [@var{right}]
17426 Specify page footings resp.@: headings for odd-numbered (right-hand)
17427 pages. @xref{Custom Headings, ,
17428 How to Make Your Own Headings}.@refill
17432 Generate the uppercase and lowercase OE ligatures, respectively:
17433 @OE{}, @oe{}. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17435 @item @@option@{@var{option-name}@}
17436 Indicate a command-line option, such as @option{-l} or @option{--help}.
17437 @xref{option,, @code{@@option}}.
17440 Start a new page in a printed manual. No effect in Info.
17441 @xref{page, , @code{@@page}}.@refill
17443 @item @@pagesizes [@var{width}][, @var{height}]
17444 Change page dimensions. @xref{pagesizes}.
17446 @item @@paragraphindent @var{indent}
17447 Indent paragraphs by @var{indent} number of spaces (perhaps 0); preserve
17448 source file indentation if @var{indent} is @code{asis}.
17449 @xref{paragraphindent,, Paragraph Indenting}.
17451 @item @@pindex @var{entry}
17452 Add @var{entry} to the index of programs. @xref{Index Entries, , Defining
17453 the Entries of an Index}.@refill
17456 Indicate the position of point in a buffer to the reader with a
17457 glyph: @samp{@point{}}. @xref{Point Glyph, , Indicating
17458 Point in a Buffer}.@refill
17461 Generate the pounds sterling currency sign.
17462 @xref{pounds,,@code{@@pounds@{@}}}.
17465 Indicate printed output to the reader with a glyph:
17466 @samp{@print{}}. @xref{Print Glyph}.@refill
17468 @item @@printindex @var{index-name}
17469 Print an alphabetized two-column index in a printed manual or generate
17470 an alphabetized menu of index entries for Info. @xref{Printing
17471 Indices & Menus}.@refill
17473 @item @@pxref@{@var{node-name}, [@var{entry}], [@var{topic-or-title}], [@var{info-file}], [@var{manual}]@}
17474 Make a reference that starts with a lower case `see' in a printed
17475 manual. Use within parentheses only. Do not follow command with a
17476 punctuation mark---the Info formatting commands automatically insert
17477 terminating punctuation as needed. Only the first argument is mandatory.
17478 @xref{pxref, , @code{@@pxref}}.@refill
17480 @item @@questiondown@{@}
17481 Generate an upside-down question mark. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17484 Narrow the margins to indicate text that is quoted from another real
17485 or imaginary work. Takes optional argument of prefix text. Pair with
17486 @code{@@end quotation}. @xref{quotation, ,
17487 @code{@@quotation}}.@refill
17489 @item @@r@{@var{text}@}
17490 Print @var{text} in @r{roman} font. No effect in Info.
17491 @xref{Fonts}.@refill
17493 @item @@raisesections
17494 Change subsequent sections to chapters, subsections to sections, and so
17495 on. @xref{Raise/lower sections, , @code{@@raisesections} and
17496 @code{@@lowersections}}.@refill
17498 @item @@ref@{@var{node-name}, [@var{entry}], [@var{topic-or-title}], [@var{info-file}], [@var{manual}]@}
17499 Make a reference. In a printed manual, the reference does not start
17500 with a `See'. Follow command with a punctuation mark. Only the first
17501 argument is mandatory. @xref{ref, , @code{@@ref}}.@refill
17504 This command used to refill and indent the paragraph after all the
17505 other processing has been done. It is no longer needed, since all
17506 formatters now automatically refill as needed, but you may still see
17507 it in the source to some manuals, as it does no harm.
17509 @item @@registeredsymbol@{@}
17510 Generate the legal symbol @registeredsymbol{}. @xref{registered
17511 symbol,, @code{@@registeredsymbol@{@}}}.
17514 Indicate the result of an expression to the reader with a special
17515 glyph: @samp{@result{}}. @xref{result, , @code{@@result}}.@refill
17517 @item @@ringaccent@{@var{c}@}
17518 Generate a ring accent over the next character, as in @ringaccent{o}.
17519 @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17521 @item @@samp@{@var{text}@}
17522 Highlight @var{text} that is a literal example of a sequence of
17523 characters. Used for single characters, for statements, and often for
17524 entire shell commands. @xref{samp, , @code{@@samp}}.@refill
17526 @item @@sansserif@{@var{text}@}
17527 Print @var{text} in a @sansserif{sans serif} font if possible. No
17528 effect in Info. @xref{Fonts}.
17530 @item @@sc@{@var{text}@}
17531 Set @var{text} in a printed output in @sc{the small caps font} and
17532 set text in the Info file in uppercase letters.
17533 @xref{Smallcaps}.@refill
17535 @item @@section @var{title}
17536 Begin a section within a chapter. In a printed manual, the section
17537 title is numbered and appears in the table of contents. In Info, the
17538 title is underlined with equal signs. @xref{section, ,
17539 @code{@@section}}.@refill
17541 @item @@set @var{flag} [@var{string}]
17542 Make @var{flag} active, causing the Texinfo formatting commands to
17543 format text between subsequent pairs of @code{@@ifset @var{flag}} and
17544 @code{@@end ifset} commands. Optionally, set value of @var{flag} to
17546 @xref{set clear value, , @code{@@set} @code{@@clear} @code{@@value}}.
17548 @item @@setchapternewpage @var{on-off-odd}
17549 Specify whether chapters start on new pages, and if so, whether on
17550 odd-numbered (right-hand) new pages. @xref{setchapternewpage, ,
17551 @code{@@setchapternewpage}}.
17553 @item @@setcontentsaftertitlepage
17554 Put the table of contents after the @samp{@@end titlepage} even if the
17555 @code{@@contents} command is not there. @xref{Contents}.
17557 @item @@setfilename @var{info-file-name}
17558 Provide a name to be used by the Info file. This command is essential
17559 for @TeX{} formatting as well, even though it produces no output.
17560 @xref{setfilename, , @code{@@setfilename}}.
17562 @item @@setshortcontentsaftertitlepage
17563 Place the short table of contents after the @samp{@@end titlepage}
17564 command even if the @code{@@shortcontents} command is not there.
17567 @item @@settitle @var{title}
17568 Provide a title for page headers in a printed manual, and the default
17569 document description for HTML @samp{<head>}.
17570 @xref{settitle, , @code{@@settitle}}.@refill
17572 @item @@shortcaption
17573 Define the short caption for a @code{@@float}. @xref{caption shortcaption}.
17575 @item @@shortcontents
17576 Print a short table of contents. Not relevant to Info, which uses
17577 menus rather than tables of contents. A synonym for
17578 @code{@@summarycontents}. @xref{Contents, , Generating a Table of
17581 @item @@shorttitlepage @var{title}
17582 Generate a minimal title page. @xref{titlepage,,@code{@@titlepage}}.
17584 @item @@slanted@{@var{text}@}
17585 Print @var{text} in a @slanted{slanted} font if possible. No effect
17586 in Info. @xref{Fonts}.
17589 Cause @TeX{} to produce a printed manual in a 7 by 9.25 inch format
17590 rather than the regular 8.5 by 11 inch format. @xref{smallbook, ,
17591 Printing Small Books}. Also, see @ref{small}.
17593 @item @@smalldisplay
17594 Begin a kind of example. Like @code{@@smallexample} (narrow margins, no
17595 filling), but do not select the fixed-width font. Pair with @code{@@end
17596 smalldisplay}. @xref{small}.
17598 @item @@smallexample
17599 Indent text to indicate an example. Do not fill, select fixed-width
17600 font, narrow the margins. In printed manuals, print text in a smaller
17601 font than with @code{@@example}. Pair with @code{@@end smallexample}.
17604 @item @@smallformat
17605 Begin a kind of example. Like @code{@@smalldisplay}, but do not narrow
17606 the margins. Pair with @code{@@end smallformat}. @xref{small}.
17609 Begin an example of Lisp code. Same as @code{@@smallexample}. Pair
17610 with @code{@@end smalllisp}. @xref{small}.
17613 Skip @var{n} blank lines. @xref{sp, , @code{@@sp}}.@refill
17616 Generate the German sharp-S es-zet letter, @ss{}. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17618 @item @@strong @{@var{text}@}
17619 Emphasize @var{text} by typesetting it in a @strong{bold} font for the
17620 printed manual and by surrounding it with asterisks for Info.
17621 @xref{emph & strong, , Emphasizing Text}.@refill
17623 @item @@subheading @var{title}
17624 Print an unnumbered subsection-like heading in the text, but not in
17625 the table of contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is
17626 underlined with hyphens. @xref{unnumberedsubsec appendixsubsec
17627 subheading, , @code{@@unnumberedsubsec} @code{@@appendixsubsec}
17628 @code{@@subheading}}.@refill
17630 @item @@subsection @var{title}
17631 Begin a subsection within a section. In a printed manual, the
17632 subsection title is numbered and appears in the table of contents. In
17633 Info, the title is underlined with hyphens. @xref{subsection, ,
17634 @code{@@subsection}}.@refill
17636 @item @@subsubheading @var{title}
17637 Print an unnumbered subsubsection-like heading in the text, but not in
17638 the table of contents of a printed manual. In Info, the title is
17639 underlined with periods. @xref{subsubsection, , The `subsub'
17642 @item @@subsubsection @var{title}
17643 Begin a subsubsection within a subsection. In a printed manual,
17644 the subsubsection title is numbered and appears in the table of
17645 contents. In Info, the title is underlined with periods.
17646 @xref{subsubsection, , The `subsub' Commands}.@refill
17648 @item @@subtitle @var{title}
17649 In a printed manual, set a subtitle in a normal sized font flush to
17650 the right-hand side of the page. Not relevant to Info, which does not
17651 have title pages. @xref{title subtitle author, , @code{@@title}
17652 @code{@@subtitle} and @code{@@author} Commands}.@refill
17654 @item @@summarycontents
17655 Print a short table of contents. Not relevant to Info, which uses
17656 menus rather than tables of contents. A synonym for
17657 @code{@@shortcontents}. @xref{Contents, , Generating a Table of
17660 @item @@syncodeindex @var{from-index} @var{into-index}
17661 Merge the index named in the first argument into the index named in
17662 the second argument, printing the entries from the first index in
17663 @code{@@code} font. @xref{Combining Indices}.@refill
17665 @item @@synindex @var{from-index} @var{into-index}
17666 Merge the index named in the first argument into the index named in
17667 the second argument. Do not change the font of @var{from-index}
17668 entries. @xref{Combining Indices}.@refill
17670 @item @@t@{@var{text}@}
17671 Print @var{text} in a @t{fixed-width}, typewriter-like font.
17672 No effect in Info. @xref{Fonts}.@refill
17675 Separate columns in a multitable. @xref{Multitable Rows}.
17677 @item @@table @var{formatting-command}
17678 Begin a two-column table, using @code{@@item} for each entry. Write
17679 each first column entry on the same line as @code{@@item}. First
17680 column entries are printed in the font resulting from
17681 @var{formatting-command}. Pair with @code{@@end table}.
17682 @xref{Two-column Tables, , Making a Two-column Table}.
17683 Also see @ref{ftable vtable, , @code{@@ftable} and @code{@@vtable}},
17684 and @ref{itemx, , @code{@@itemx}}.@refill
17687 Insert the logo @TeX{}. @xref{tex, , @TeX{} and @LaTeX{}}.
17690 Enter @TeX{} completely. Pair with @code{@@end tex}. @xref{Raw
17691 Formatter Commands}.
17693 @item @@thischapter
17694 @itemx @@thischaptername
17698 Only allowed in a heading or footing. Stands for the number and name of
17699 the current chapter (in the format `Chapter 1: Title'), the chapter name
17700 only, the filename, the current page number, and the title of the
17701 document, respectively. @xref{Custom Headings, , How to Make Your Own
17705 Generate a normal interword space at which a line break is not allowed.
17706 @xref{tie,, @code{@@tie@{@}}}.
17708 @item @@tieaccent@{@var{cc}@}
17709 Generate a tie-after accent over the next two characters @var{cc}, as in
17710 `@tieaccent{oo}'. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17712 @item @@tindex @var{entry}
17713 Add @var{entry} to the index of data types. @xref{Index Entries, ,
17714 Defining the Entries of an Index}.@refill
17716 @item @@title @var{title}
17717 In a printed manual, set a title flush to the left-hand side of the
17718 page in a larger than normal font and underline it with a black rule.
17719 Not relevant to Info, which does not have title pages. @xref{title
17720 subtitle author, , The @code{@@title} @code{@@subtitle} and
17721 @code{@@author} Commands}.@refill
17723 @item @@titlefont@{@var{text}@}
17724 In a printed manual, print @var{text} in a larger than normal font.
17725 Not relevant to Info, which does not have title pages.
17726 @xref{titlefont center sp, , The @code{@@titlefont} @code{@@center}
17727 and @code{@@sp} Commands}.@refill
17730 Indicate to Texinfo the beginning of the title page. Write command on
17731 a line of its own. Pair with @code{@@end titlepage}. Nothing between
17732 @code{@@titlepage} and @code{@@end titlepage} appears in Info.
17733 @xref{titlepage, , @code{@@titlepage}}.@refill
17736 Insert the current date, in `1 Jan 1900' style. @xref{Custom
17737 Headings, , How to Make Your Own Headings}.@refill
17739 @item @@top @var{title}
17740 In a Texinfo file to be formatted with @code{makeinfo}, identify the
17741 topmost @code{@@node} in the file, which must be written on the line
17742 immediately preceding the @code{@@top} command. Used for
17743 @code{makeinfo}'s node pointer insertion feature. The title is
17744 underlined with asterisks. Both the @code{@@node} line and the @code{@@top}
17745 line normally should be enclosed by @code{@@ifnottex} and @code{@@end
17746 ifnottex}. In @TeX{} and @code{texinfo-format-buffer}, the @code{@@top}
17747 command is merely a synonym for @code{@@unnumbered}. @xref{makeinfo
17748 Pointer Creation, , Creating Pointers with @code{makeinfo}}.
17750 @item @@u@{@var{c}@}
17751 @itemx @@ubaraccent@{@var{c}@}
17752 @itemx @@udotaccent@{@var{c}@}
17753 Generate a breve, underbar, or underdot accent, respectively, over or
17754 under the character @var{c}, as in @u{o}, @ubaraccent{o},
17755 @udotaccent{o}. @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17757 @item @@unnumbered @var{title}
17758 In a printed manual, begin a chapter that appears without chapter
17759 numbers of any kind. The title appears in the table of contents of a
17760 printed manual. In Info, the title is underlined with asterisks.
17761 @xref{unnumbered & appendix, , @code{@@unnumbered} and
17762 @code{@@appendix}}.@refill
17764 @item @@unnumberedsec @var{title}
17765 In a printed manual, begin a section that appears without section
17766 numbers of any kind. The title appears in the table of contents of a
17767 printed manual. In Info, the title is underlined with equal signs.
17768 @xref{unnumberedsec appendixsec heading, , Section Commands}.@refill
17770 @item @@unnumberedsubsec @var{title}
17771 In a printed manual, begin an unnumbered subsection within a
17772 chapter. The title appears in the table of contents of a printed
17773 manual. In Info, the title is underlined with hyphens.
17774 @xref{unnumberedsubsec appendixsubsec subheading, ,
17775 @code{@@unnumberedsubsec} @code{@@appendixsubsec}
17776 @code{@@subheading}}.@refill
17778 @item @@unnumberedsubsubsec @var{title}
17779 In a printed manual, begin an unnumbered subsubsection within a
17780 chapter. The title appears in the table of contents of a printed
17781 manual. In Info, the title is underlined with periods.
17782 @xref{subsubsection, , The `subsub' Commands}.@refill
17784 @item @@uref@{@var{url}[, @var{displayed-text}][, @var{replacement}@}
17785 @itemx @@url@{@var{url}[, @var{displayed-text}][, @var{replacement}@}
17786 Define a cross reference to an external uniform resource locator for the
17787 World Wide Web. @xref{uref, , @code{@@uref}}.
17789 @item @@v@{@var{c}@}
17790 Generate check accent over the character @var{c}, as in @v{o}.
17791 @xref{Inserting Accents}.
17793 @item @@value@{@var{flag}@}
17794 Replace @var{flag} with the value to which it is set by @code{@@set
17796 @xref{set clear value, , @code{@@set} @code{@@clear} @code{@@value}}.@refill
17798 @item @@var@{@var{metasyntactic-variable}@}
17799 Highlight a metasyntactic variable, which is something that stands for
17800 another piece of text. @xref{var, , Indicating Metasyntactic
17803 @item @@verb@{@var{delim} @var{literal} @var{delim}@}
17804 Output @var{literal}, delimited by the single character @var{delim},
17805 exactly as is (in the fixed-width font), including any whitespace or
17806 Texinfo special characters. @xref{verb,,@code{verb}}.
17809 Output the text of the environment exactly as is (in the fixed-width
17810 font). Pair with @code{@@end verbatim}. @xref{verbatim,,@code{verbatim}}.
17812 @item @@verbatiminclude @var{filename}
17813 Output the contents of @var{filename} exactly as is (in the fixed-width font).
17814 @xref{verbatiminclude,,@code{verbatiminclude}}.
17816 @item @@vindex @var{entry}
17817 Add @var{entry} to the index of variables. @xref{Index Entries, ,
17818 Defining the Entries of an Index}.@refill
17820 @item @@vskip @var{amount}
17821 In a printed manual, insert whitespace so as to push text on the
17822 remainder of the page towards the bottom of the page. Used in
17823 formatting the copyright page with the argument @samp{0pt plus
17824 1filll}. (Note spelling of @samp{filll}.) @code{@@vskip} may be used
17825 only in contexts ignored for Info. @xref{Copyright}.
17827 @item @@vtable @var{formatting-command}
17828 Begin a two-column table, using @code{@@item} for each entry.
17829 Automatically enter each of the items in the first column into the
17830 index of variables. Pair with @code{@@end vtable}. The same as
17831 @code{@@table}, except for indexing. @xref{ftable vtable, ,
17832 @code{@@ftable} and @code{@@vtable}}.@refill
17834 @item @@w@{@var{text}@}
17835 Prevent @var{text} from being split across two lines.
17836 @xref{w, , @code{@@w}}.@refill
17839 Enter XML completely. Pair with @code{@@end xml}. @xref{Raw
17840 Formatter Commands}.
17842 @item @@xref@{@var{node-name}, [@var{entry}], [@var{topic-or-title}], [@var{info-file}], [@var{manual}]@}
17843 Make a reference that starts with `See' in a printed manual. Follow
17844 command with a punctuation mark. Only the first argument is
17845 mandatory. @xref{xref, , @code{@@xref}}.@refill
17849 @node Command Syntax
17850 @section @@-Command Syntax
17851 @cindex @@-command syntax
17852 @cindex Syntax, of @@-commands
17853 @cindex Command syntax
17855 The character @samp{@@} is used to start special Texinfo commands.
17856 (It has the same meaning that @samp{\} has in plain @TeX{}.) Texinfo
17857 has four types of @@-command:@refill
17860 @item 1. Non-alphabetic commands.
17861 These commands consist of an @@ followed by a punctuation mark or other
17862 character that is not part of the alphabet. Non-alphabetic commands are
17863 almost always part of the text within a paragraph, and never take any
17864 argument. The two characters (@@ and the other one) are complete in
17865 themselves; none is followed by braces. The non-alphabetic commands
17866 are: @code{@@.}, @code{@@:}, @code{@@*}, @code{@@@kbd{SPACE}},
17867 @code{@@@kbd{TAB}}, @code{@@@kbd{NL}}, @code{@@@@}, @code{@@@{}, and
17868 @code{@@@}}.@refill
17870 @item 2. Alphabetic commands that do not require arguments.
17871 These commands start with @@ followed by a word followed by left- and
17872 right-hand braces. These commands insert special symbols in the
17873 document; they do not require arguments. For example,
17874 @code{@@dots@{@}} @result{} @samp{@dots{}}, @code{@@equiv@{@}}
17875 @result{} @samp{@equiv{}}, @code{@@TeX@{@}} @result{} `@TeX{}',
17876 and @code{@@bullet@{@}} @result{} @samp{@bullet{}}.@refill
17878 @item 3. Alphabetic commands that require arguments within braces.
17879 These commands start with @@ followed by a letter or a word, followed by an
17880 argument within braces. For example, the command @code{@@dfn} indicates
17881 the introductory or defining use of a term; it is used as follows: @samp{In
17882 Texinfo, @@@@-commands are @@dfn@{mark-up@} commands.}@refill
17884 @item 4. Alphabetic commands that occupy an entire line.
17885 These commands occupy an entire line. The line starts with @@,
17886 followed by the name of the command (a word); for example, @code{@@center}
17887 or @code{@@cindex}. If no argument is needed, the word is followed by
17888 the end of the line. If there is an argument, it is separated from
17889 the command name by a space. Braces are not used.@refill
17892 @cindex Braces and argument syntax
17893 Thus, the alphabetic commands fall into classes that have
17894 different argument syntaxes. You cannot tell to which class a command
17895 belongs by the appearance of its name, but you can tell by the
17896 command's meaning: if the command stands for a glyph, it is in
17897 class 2 and does not require an argument; if it makes sense to use the
17898 command together with other text as part of a paragraph, the command
17899 is in class 3 and must be followed by an argument in braces;
17900 otherwise, it is in class 4 and uses the rest of the line as its
17903 The purpose of having a different syntax for commands of classes 3 and
17904 4 is to make Texinfo files easier to read, and also to help the GNU
17905 Emacs paragraph and filling commands work properly. There is only one
17906 exception to this rule: the command @code{@@refill}, which is always
17907 used at the end of a paragraph immediately following the final period
17908 or other punctuation character. @code{@@refill} takes no argument and
17909 does @emph{not} require braces. @code{@@refill} never confuses the
17910 Emacs paragraph commands because it cannot appear at the beginning of
17911 a line. It is also no longer needed, since all formatters now refill
17912 paragraphs automatically.
17916 @appendix Tips and Hints
17918 Here are some tips for writing Texinfo documentation:@refill
17925 Write in the present tense, not in the past or the future.
17928 Write actively! For example, write ``We recommend that @dots{}'' rather
17929 than ``It is recommended that @dots{}''.
17932 Use 70 or 72 as your fill column. Longer lines are hard to read.
17935 Include a copyright notice and copying permissions.
17938 @subsubheading Index, Index, Index!
17940 Write many index entries, in different ways.
17941 Readers like indices; they are helpful and convenient.
17943 Although it is easiest to write index entries as you write the body of
17944 the text, some people prefer to write entries afterwards. In either
17945 case, write an entry before the paragraph to which it applies. This
17946 way, an index entry points to the first page of a paragraph that is
17947 split across pages.
17949 Here are more hints we have found valuable:
17953 Write each index entry differently, so each entry refers to a different
17954 place in the document.
17957 Write index entries only where a topic is discussed significantly. For
17958 example, it is not useful to index ``debugging information'' in a
17959 chapter on reporting bugs. Someone who wants to know about debugging
17960 information will certainly not find it in that chapter.
17963 Consistently capitalize the first word of every concept index entry,
17964 or else consistently use lower case. Terse entries often call for
17965 lower case; longer entries for capitalization. Whichever case
17966 convention you use, please use one or the other consistently! Mixing
17967 the two styles looks bad.
17970 Always capitalize or use upper case for those words in an index for
17971 which this is proper, such as names of countries or acronyms. Always
17972 use the appropriate case for case-sensitive names, such as those in C or
17976 Write the indexing commands that refer to a whole section immediately
17977 after the section command, and write the indexing commands that refer to
17978 a paragraph before that paragraph.
17980 In the example that follows, a blank line comes after the index
17981 entry for ``Leaping'':
17985 @@section The Dog and the Fox
17986 @@cindex Jumping, in general
17989 @@cindex Dog, lazy, jumped over
17990 @@cindex Lazy dog jumped over
17991 @@cindex Fox, jumps over dog
17992 @@cindex Quick fox jumps over dog
17993 The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
17998 (Note that the example shows entries for the same concept that are
17999 written in different ways---@samp{Lazy dog}, and @samp{Dog, lazy}---so
18000 readers can look up the concept in different ways.)
18003 @subsubheading Blank Lines
18007 Insert a blank line between a sectioning command and the first following
18008 sentence or paragraph, or between the indexing commands associated with
18009 the sectioning command and the first following sentence or paragraph, as
18010 shown in the tip on indexing. Otherwise, a formatter may fold title and
18011 paragraph together.
18014 Always insert a blank line before an @code{@@table} command and after an
18015 @code{@@end table} command; but never insert a blank line after an
18016 @code{@@table} command or before an @code{@@end table} command.
18027 Jump over lazy dogs.
18032 Also jump over lazy dogs.
18038 On the other hand, @dots{}
18042 Insert blank lines before and after @code{@@itemize} @dots{} @code{@@end
18043 itemize} and @code{@@enumerate} @dots{} @code{@@end enumerate} in the
18047 @subsubheading Complete Phrases
18049 Complete phrases are easier to read than @dots{}
18053 Write entries in an itemized list as complete sentences; or at least, as
18054 complete phrases. Incomplete expressions @dots{} awkward @dots{} like
18058 Write the prefatory sentence or phrase for a multi-item list or table as
18059 a complete expression. Do not write ``You can set:''; instead, write
18060 ``You can set these variables:''. The former expression sounds cut off.
18063 @subsubheading Editions, Dates and Versions
18065 Include edition numbers, version numbers, and dates in the
18066 @code{@@copying} text (for people reading the Texinfo file, and for the
18067 legal copyright in the output files). Then use @code{@@insertcopying}
18068 in the @code{@@titlepage} section (for people reading the printed
18069 output) and the Top node (for people reading the online output).
18071 It is easiest to do this using @code{@@set} and @code{@@value}.
18072 @xref{value Example, , @code{@@value} Example}, and @ref{GNU Sample Texts}.
18075 @subsubheading Definition Commands
18077 Definition commands are @code{@@deffn}, @code{@@defun},
18078 @code{@@defmac}, and the like, and enable you to write descriptions in
18079 a uniform format.@refill
18083 Write just one definition command for each entity you define with a
18084 definition command. The automatic indexing feature creates an index
18085 entry that leads the reader to the definition.
18088 Use @code{@@table} @dots{} @code{@@end table} in an appendix that
18089 contains a summary of functions, not @code{@@deffn} or other definition
18093 @subsubheading Capitalization
18097 Capitalize ``Texinfo''; it is a name. Do not write the @samp{x} or
18098 @samp{i} in upper case.
18101 Capitalize ``Info''; it is a name.
18104 Write @TeX{} using the @code{@@TeX@{@}} command. Note the uppercase
18105 @samp{T} and @samp{X}. This command causes the formatters to
18106 typeset the name according to the wishes of Donald Knuth, who wrote
18110 @subsubheading Spaces
18112 Do not use spaces to format a Texinfo file, except inside of
18113 @code{@@example} @dots{} @code{@@end example} and other literal
18114 environments and commands.
18117 For example, @TeX{} fills the following:
18122 @@kbd@{M-x vc-next-action@}
18123 Perform the next logical operation
18124 on the version-controlled file
18125 corresponding to the current buffer.
18131 so it looks like this:
18136 @kbd{M-x vc-next-action}
18137 Perform the next logical operation on the version-controlled file
18138 corresponding to the current buffer.
18143 `C-x v' `M-x vc-next-action' Perform the next logical operation on the
18144 version-controlled file corresponding to the current buffer.
18149 In this case, the text should be formatted with
18150 @code{@@table}, @code{@@item}, and @code{@@itemx}, to create a table.
18153 @subsubheading @@code, @@samp, @@var, and @samp{---}
18157 Use @code{@@code} around Lisp symbols, including command names.
18161 The main function is @@code@{vc-next-action@}, @dots{}
18165 Avoid putting letters such as @samp{s} immediately after an
18166 @samp{@@code}. Such letters look bad.
18169 Use @code{@@var} around meta-variables. Do not write angle brackets
18173 Use three hyphens in a row, @samp{---}, to indicate a long dash. @TeX{}
18174 typesets these as a long dash and the Info formatters reduce three
18178 @subsubheading Periods Outside of Quotes
18180 Place periods and other punctuation marks @emph{outside} of quotations,
18181 unless the punctuation is part of the quotation. This practice goes
18182 against publishing conventions in the United States, but enables the
18183 reader to distinguish between the contents of the quotation and the
18186 For example, you should write the following sentence with the period
18187 outside the end quotation marks:
18190 Evidently, @samp{au} is an abbreviation for ``author''.
18194 since @samp{au} does @emph{not} serve as an abbreviation for
18195 @samp{author.} (with a period following the word).
18197 @subsubheading Introducing New Terms
18201 Introduce new terms so that a reader who does not know them can
18202 understand them from context; or write a definition for the term.
18204 For example, in the following, the terms ``check in'', ``register'' and
18205 ``delta'' are all appearing for the first time; the example sentence should be
18206 rewritten so they are understandable.
18209 The major function assists you in checking in a file to your
18210 version control system and registering successive sets of changes to
18215 Use the @code{@@dfn} command around a word being introduced, to indicate
18216 that the reader should not expect to know the meaning already, and
18217 should expect to learn the meaning from this passage.
18220 @subsubheading @@pxref
18222 @c !!! maybe include this in the tips on pxref
18224 By the way, it is okay to use pxref with something else in front of
18225 it within the parens, as long as the pxref is followed by the close
18226 paren, and the material inside the parens is not part of a larger
18227 sentence. Also, you can use xref inside parens as part of a complete
18228 sentence so long as you terminate the cross reference with punctuation.
18230 Absolutely never use @code{@@pxref} except in the special context for
18231 which it is designed: inside parentheses, with the closing parenthesis
18232 following immediately after the closing brace. One formatter
18233 automatically inserts closing punctuation and the other does not. This
18234 means that the output looks right both in printed output and in an Info
18235 file, but only when the command is used inside parentheses.
18237 @subsubheading Invoking from a Shell
18239 You can invoke programs such as Emacs, GCC, and @code{gawk} from a
18240 shell. The documentation for each program should contain a section that
18241 describes this. Unfortunately, if the node names and titles for these
18242 sections are all different, they are difficult for users to find.
18244 So, there is a convention to name such sections with a phrase beginning
18245 with the word `Invoking', as in `Invoking Emacs'; this way, users can
18246 find the section easily.
18249 @subsubheading ANSI C Syntax
18251 When you use @code{@@example} to describe a C function's calling
18252 conventions, use the ANSI C syntax, like this:@refill
18255 void dld_init (char *@@var@{path@});
18259 And in the subsequent discussion, refer to the argument values by
18260 writing the same argument names, again highlighted with
18261 @code{@@var}.@refill
18264 Avoid the obsolete style that looks like this:@refill
18273 Also, it is best to avoid writing @code{#include} above the
18274 declaration just to indicate that the function is declared in a
18275 header file. The practice may give the misimpression that the
18276 @code{#include} belongs near the declaration of the function. Either
18277 state explicitly which header file holds the declaration or, better
18278 yet, name the header file used for a group of functions at the
18279 beginning of the section that describes the functions.@refill
18281 @subsubheading Bad Examples
18283 Here are several examples of bad writing to avoid:
18285 In this example, say, `` @dots{} you must @code{@@dfn}@{check
18286 in@} the new version.'' That flows better.
18289 When you are done editing the file, you must perform a
18290 @code{@@dfn}@{check in@}.
18293 In the following example, say, ``@dots{} makes a unified interface such as VC
18297 SCCS, RCS and other version-control systems all perform similar
18298 functions in broadly similar ways (it is this resemblance which makes
18299 a unified control mode like this possible).
18302 And in this example, you should specify what `it' refers to:
18305 If you are working with other people, it assists in coordinating
18306 everyone's changes so they do not step on each other.
18309 @subsubheading And Finally @dots{}
18313 Pronounce @TeX{} as if the @samp{X} were a Greek `chi', as the last
18314 sound in the name `Bach'. But pronounce Texinfo as in `speck':
18318 Write notes for yourself at the very end of a Texinfo file after the
18319 @code{@@bye}. None of the formatters process text after the
18320 @code{@@bye}; it is as if the text were within @code{@@ignore} @dots{}
18321 @code{@@end ignore}.
18325 @node Sample Texinfo Files
18326 @appendix Sample Texinfo Files
18327 @cindex Sample Texinfo files
18329 The first example is from the first chapter (@pxref{Short Sample}),
18330 given here in its entirety, without commentary. The second
18331 includes the full texts to be used in GNU manuals.
18334 * Short Sample Texinfo File::
18335 * GNU Sample Texts::
18336 * Verbatim Copying License::
18337 * All-permissive Copying License::
18341 @node Short Sample Texinfo File
18342 @section Short Sample
18343 @cindex Sample Texinfo file, no comments
18345 Here is a complete, short sample Texinfo file, without any commentary.
18346 You can see this file, with comments, in the first chapter. @xref{Short
18349 In a nutshell: The @command{makeinfo} program transforms a Texinfo
18350 source file such as this into an Info file or HTML; and @TeX{} typesets
18351 it for a printed manual.
18356 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
18357 @@c %**start of header
18358 @@setfilename sample.info
18359 @@settitle Sample Manual 1.0
18360 @@c %**end of header
18363 This is a short example of a complete Texinfo file.
18365 Copyright (C) 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
18369 @@title Sample Title
18371 @@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
18375 @@c Output the table of the contents at the beginning.
18386 * First Chapter:: The first chapter is the
18387 only chapter in this sample.
18388 * Index:: Complete index.
18392 @@node First Chapter
18393 @@chapter First Chapter
18395 @@cindex chapter, first
18397 This is the first chapter.
18398 @@cindex index entry, another
18400 Here is a numbered list.
18404 This is the first item.
18407 This is the second item.
18420 @node GNU Sample Texts
18421 @section GNU Sample Texts
18423 @cindex GNU sample texts
18424 @cindex Sample texts, GNU
18425 @cindex Full texts, GNU
18427 Following is a sample Texinfo document with the full texts that should
18428 be used in GNU manuals.
18430 As well as the legal texts, it also serves as a practical example of how
18431 many elements in a GNU system can affect the manual. If you're not
18432 familiar with all these different elements, don't worry. They're not
18433 required and a perfectly good manual can be written without them.
18434 They're included here nonetheless because many manuals do (or could)
18437 @xref{Short Sample}, for a minimal example of a Texinfo file.
18438 @xref{Beginning a File}, for a full explanation of that minimal
18441 Here are some notes on the example:
18448 @cindex Documentation identification
18449 @cindex Identification of documentation
18450 The @samp{$Id:} comment is for the CVS (@pxref{Top,, Overview, cvs,
18451 Concurrent Versions System}) or RCS (see rcsintro(1)) version control
18452 systems, which expand it into a string such as:
18454 $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.128 2004/12/29 15:06:41 karl Exp $
18456 (This is useful in all sources that use version control, not just manuals.)
18457 You may wish to include the @samp{$Id:} comment in the @code{@@copying}
18458 text, if you want a completely unambiguous reference to the
18459 documentation version.
18461 If you want to literally write @t{@w{$}Id$}, use @code{@@w}:
18462 @code{@@w@{$@}Id$}.
18465 @pindex automake@r{, and version info}
18466 @vindex UPDATED @r{Automake variable}
18467 @vindex VERSION @r{Automake variable}
18468 @pindex time-stamp.el
18469 The @file{version.texi} in the @code{@@include} command is maintained
18470 automatically by Automake (@pxref{Top,, Introduction, automake, GNU
18471 Automake}). It sets the @samp{VERSION} and @samp{UPDATED} values used
18472 elsewhere. If your distribution doesn't use Automake, but you do use
18473 Emacs, you may find the time-stamp.el package helpful (@pxref{Time
18474 Stamps,,,emacs,The GNU Emacs Manual}).
18477 The @code{@@syncodeindex} command reflects the recommendation to use
18478 only one index where possible, to make it easier for readers to look up
18482 The @code{@@dircategory} is for constructing the Info directory.
18483 @xref{Installing Dir Entries}, which includes a variety of recommended
18487 The `Invoking' node is a GNU standard to help users find the basic
18488 information about command-line usage of a given program. @xref{Manual
18489 Structure Details,,,standards, GNU Coding Standards}.
18492 @cindex GNU Free Documentation License, including entire
18493 @cindex Free Documentation License, including entire
18494 It is best to include the entire GNU Free Documentation License in a GNU
18495 manual, unless the manual is only a few pages long. Of course this
18496 sample is even shorter than that, but it includes the FDL anyway in
18497 order to show one conventional way to do so. The @file{fdl.texi} file
18498 is available on the GNU machines and in the Texinfo and other GNU
18499 source distributions.
18501 The FDL provides for omitting itself under certain conditions, but in
18502 that case the sample texts given here have to be modified. @xref{GNU
18503 Free Documentation License}.
18506 If your manual has invariant sections (again, see the license itself for
18507 details), then don't forget to change the text here accordingly.
18510 For documents that express your personal views, feelings or experiences,
18511 it is more appropriate to use a license permitting only verbatim
18512 copying, rather than the FDL. @xref{Verbatim Copying License}.
18516 Here is the sample document:
18519 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
18520 @comment $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.128 2004/12/29 15:06:41 karl Exp $
18521 @comment %**start of header
18522 @setfilename sample.info
18523 @include version.texi
18524 @settitle GNU Sample @value{VERSION}
18525 @syncodeindex pg cp
18526 @comment %**end of header
18528 This manual is for GNU Sample
18529 (version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}),
18530 which is an example in the Texinfo documentation.
18532 Copyright @copyright{} 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
18535 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
18536 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
18537 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
18538 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
18539 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the
18540 license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation
18543 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
18544 this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free
18545 Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.''
18549 @dircategory Texinfo documentation system
18551 * sample: (sample)Invoking sample.
18556 @subtitle for version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}
18557 @author A.U. Thor (@email{bug-texinfo@@gnu.org})
18559 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
18573 * Invoking sample::
18574 * Copying This Manual::
18579 @node Invoking sample
18580 @chapter Invoking sample
18583 @cindex invoking @command{sample}
18585 This is a sample manual. There is no sample program to
18586 invoke, but if there was, you could see its basic usage
18587 and command line options here.
18590 @node Copying This Manual
18591 @appendix Copying This Manual
18594 * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual.
18609 @node Verbatim Copying License
18610 @section Verbatim Copying License
18612 @cindex Verbatim copying license
18613 @cindex License for verbatim copying
18615 For software manuals and other documentation, it is important to use a
18616 license permitting free redistribution and updating, so that when a free
18617 program is changed, the documentation can be updated as well.
18619 On the other hand, for documents that express your personal views,
18620 feelings or experiences, it is more appropriate to use a license
18621 permitting only verbatim copying.
18623 Here is sample text for such a license permitting verbatim copying only.
18624 This is just the license text itself. For a complete sample document,
18625 see the previous sections.
18629 This document is a sample for allowing verbatim copying only.
18631 Copyright @copyright{} 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
18634 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies
18635 of this entire document without royalty provided the
18636 copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved.
18642 @node All-permissive Copying License
18643 @section All-permissive Copying License
18645 @cindex All-permissive copying license
18646 @cindex License for all-permissive copying
18648 For software manuals and other documentation, it is important to use a
18649 license permitting free redistribution and updating, so that when a free
18650 program is changed, the documentation can be updated as well.
18652 On the other hand, for small supporting files, short manuals (under 300
18653 lines long) and rough documentation (README files, INSTALL files, etc.),
18654 the full FDL would be overkill. They can use a simple all-permissive
18657 Here is sample text for such an all-permissive license. This is just
18658 the license text itself. For a complete sample document, see the
18662 Copyright @copyright{} 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
18664 Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification,
18665 are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright
18666 notice and this notice are preserved.
18670 @node Include Files
18671 @appendix Include Files
18672 @cindex Include files
18674 When @TeX{} or an Info formatting command sees an @code{@@include}
18675 command in a Texinfo file, it processes the contents of the file named
18676 by the command and incorporates them into the DVI or Info file being
18677 created. Index entries from the included file are incorporated into
18678 the indices of the output file.
18680 Include files let you keep a single large document as a collection of
18681 conveniently small parts.
18684 * Using Include Files:: How to use the @code{@@include} command.
18685 * texinfo-multiple-files-update:: How to create and update nodes and
18686 menus when using included files.
18687 * Include Files Requirements:: @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update} needs.
18688 * Sample Include File:: A sample outer file with included files
18689 within it; and a sample included file.
18690 * Include Files Evolution:: How use of the @code{@@include} command
18691 has changed over time.
18694 @node Using Include Files
18695 @section How to Use Include Files
18698 To include another file within a Texinfo file, write the
18699 @code{@@include} command at the beginning of a line and follow it on
18700 the same line by the name of a file to be included. For example:
18703 @@include buffers.texi
18706 The name of the file is taken literally, with a single exception:
18707 @code{@@value@{@var{var}@}} references are expanded. This makes it
18708 possible to reliably include files in other directories in a
18709 distribution. @xref{verbatiminclude,,@code{@@verbatiminclude}}, for
18712 An included file should simply be a segment of text that you expect to
18713 be included as is into the overall or @dfn{outer} Texinfo file; it
18714 should not contain the standard beginning and end parts of a Texinfo
18715 file. In particular, you should not start an included file with a
18716 line saying @samp{\input texinfo}; if you do, that phrase is inserted
18717 into the output file as is. Likewise, you should not end an included
18718 file with an @code{@@bye} command; nothing after @code{@@bye} is
18721 In the past, you were required to write an @code{@@setfilename} line at the
18722 beginning of an included file, but no longer. Now, it does not matter
18723 whether you write such a line. If an @code{@@setfilename} line exists
18724 in an included file, it is ignored.@refill
18726 Conventionally, an included file begins with an @code{@@node} line that
18727 is followed by an @code{@@chapter} line. Each included file is one
18728 chapter. This makes it easy to use the regular node and menu creating
18729 and updating commands to create the node pointers and menus within the
18730 included file. However, the simple Emacs node and menu creating and
18731 updating commands do not work with multiple Texinfo files. Thus you
18732 cannot use these commands to fill in the `Next', `Previous', and `Up'
18733 pointers of the @code{@@node} line that begins the included file. Also,
18734 you cannot use the regular commands to create a master menu for the
18735 whole file. Either you must insert the menus and the `Next',
18736 `Previous', and `Up' pointers by hand, or you must use the GNU Emacs
18737 Texinfo mode command, @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update}, that is
18738 designed for @code{@@include} files.@refill
18740 When an included file does not have any node lines in it, the
18741 multiple files update command does not try to create a menu entry
18742 for it. Consequently, you can include any file, such as a
18743 version or an update file without node lines, not just files that
18744 are chapters. Small includable files like this are created by
18745 Automake (@pxref{GNU Sample Texts}).
18748 @node texinfo-multiple-files-update
18749 @section @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update}
18750 @findex texinfo-multiple-files-update
18752 GNU Emacs Texinfo mode provides the @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update}
18753 command. This command creates or updates `Next', `Previous', and `Up'
18754 pointers of included files as well as those in the outer or overall
18755 Texinfo file, and it creates or updates a main menu in the outer file.
18756 Depending whether you call it with optional arguments, the command
18757 updates only the pointers in the first @code{@@node} line of the
18758 included files or all of them:@refill
18761 @item M-x texinfo-multiple-files-update
18762 Called without any arguments:@refill
18766 Create or update the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers of the
18767 first @code{@@node} line in each file included in an outer or overall
18768 Texinfo file.@refill
18771 Create or update the `Top' level node pointers of the outer or
18772 overall file.@refill
18775 Create or update a main menu in the outer file.@refill
18778 @item C-u M-x texinfo-multiple-files-update
18779 Called with @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument:
18783 Create or update pointers in the first @code{@@node} line in each
18787 Create or update the `Top' level node pointers of the outer file.
18790 Create and insert a master menu in the outer file. The master menu
18791 is made from all the menus in all the included files.@refill
18794 @item C-u 8 M-x texinfo-multiple-files-update
18795 Called with a numeric prefix argument, such as @kbd{C-u 8}:
18799 Create or update @strong{all} the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers
18800 of all the included files.@refill
18803 Create or update @strong{all} the menus of all the included
18807 Create or update the `Top' level node pointers of the outer or
18808 overall file.@refill
18811 And then create a master menu in the outer file. This is similar to
18812 invoking @code{texinfo-master-menu} with an argument when you are
18813 working with just one file.@refill
18817 Note the use of the prefix argument in interactive use: with a regular
18818 prefix argument, just @w{@kbd{C-u}}, the
18819 @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update} command inserts a master menu;
18820 with a numeric prefix argument, such as @kbd{C-u 8}, the command
18821 updates @strong{every} pointer and menu in @strong{all} the files and then inserts a
18822 master menu.@refill
18825 @node Include Files Requirements
18826 @section Include Files Requirements
18827 @cindex Include files requirements
18828 @cindex Requirements for include files
18830 If you plan to use the @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update} command,
18831 the outer Texinfo file that lists included files within it should
18832 contain nothing but the beginning and end parts of a Texinfo file, and
18833 a number of @code{@@include} commands listing the included files. It
18834 should not even include indices, which should be listed in an included
18835 file of their own.@refill
18837 Moreover, each of the included files must contain exactly one highest
18838 level node (conventionally, @code{@@chapter} or equivalent),
18839 and this node must be the first node in the included file.
18840 Furthermore, each of these highest level nodes in each included file
18841 must be at the same hierarchical level in the file structure.
18842 Usually, each is an @code{@@chapter}, an @code{@@appendix}, or an
18843 @code{@@unnumbered} node. Thus, normally, each included file contains
18844 one, and only one, chapter or equivalent-level node.@refill
18846 The outer file should contain only @emph{one} node, the `Top' node. It
18847 should @emph{not} contain any nodes besides the single `Top' node. The
18848 @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update} command will not process
18852 @node Sample Include File
18853 @section Sample File with @code{@@include}
18854 @cindex Sample @code{@@include} file
18855 @cindex Include file sample
18856 @cindex @code{@@include} file sample
18858 Here is an example of an outer Texinfo file with @code{@@include} files
18859 within it before running @code{texinfo-multiple-files-update}, which
18860 would insert a main or master menu:
18864 \input texinfo @@c -*-texinfo-*-
18865 @c %**start of header
18866 @@setfilename include-example.info
18867 @@settitle Include Example
18868 @c %**end of header
18871 ... @xref{Sample Texinfo Files}, for
18872 examples of the rest of the frontmatter ...
18877 @@top Include Example
18882 @@include foo.texinfo
18883 @@include bar.texinfo
18884 @@include concept-index.texinfo
18889 An included file, such as @file{foo.texinfo}, might look like this:
18894 @@chapter First Chapter
18896 Contents of first chapter @dots{}
18900 The full contents of @file{concept-index.texinfo} might be as simple as this:
18904 @@node Concept Index
18905 @@unnumbered Concept Index
18911 The outer Texinfo source file for @cite{The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
18912 Manual} is named @file{elisp.texi}. This outer file contains a master
18913 menu with 417 entries and a list of 41 @code{@@include}
18917 @node Include Files Evolution
18918 @section Evolution of Include Files
18920 When Info was first created, it was customary to create many small
18921 Info files on one subject. Each Info file was formatted from its own
18922 Texinfo source file. This custom meant that Emacs did not need to
18923 make a large buffer to hold the whole of a large Info file when
18924 someone wanted information; instead, Emacs allocated just enough
18925 memory for the small Info file that contained the particular
18926 information sought. This way, Emacs could avoid wasting memory.@refill
18928 References from one file to another were made by referring to the file
18929 name as well as the node name. (@xref{Other Info Files, , Referring to
18930 Other Info Files}. Also, see @ref{Four and Five Arguments, ,
18931 @code{@@xref} with Four and Five Arguments}.)@refill
18933 Include files were designed primarily as a way to create a single,
18934 large printed manual out of several smaller Info files. In a printed
18935 manual, all the references were within the same document, so @TeX{}
18936 could automatically determine the references' page numbers. The Info
18937 formatting commands used include files only for creating joint
18938 indices; each of the individual Texinfo files had to be formatted for
18939 Info individually. (Each, therefore, required its own
18940 @code{@@setfilename} line.)@refill
18942 However, because large Info files are now split automatically, it is
18943 no longer necessary to keep them small.@refill
18945 Nowadays, multiple Texinfo files are used mostly for large documents,
18946 such as @cite{The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, and for projects
18947 in which several different people write different sections of a
18948 document simultaneously.@refill
18950 In addition, the Info formatting commands have been extended to work
18951 with the @code{@@include} command so as to create a single large Info
18952 file that is split into smaller files if necessary. This means that
18953 you can write menus and cross references without naming the different
18954 Texinfo files.@refill
18958 @appendix Page Headings
18961 @cindex Page numbering
18962 @cindex Page headings
18963 @cindex Formatting headings and footings
18965 Most printed manuals contain headings along the top of every page
18966 except the title and copyright pages. Some manuals also contain
18967 footings. (Headings and footings have no meaning to Info, which is
18968 not paginated.)@refill
18971 * Headings Introduced:: Conventions for using page headings.
18972 * Heading Format:: Standard page heading formats.
18973 * Heading Choice:: How to specify the type of page heading.
18974 * Custom Headings:: How to create your own headings and footings.
18977 @node Headings Introduced
18978 @section Headings Introduced
18980 Texinfo provides standard page heading formats for manuals that are
18981 printed on one side of each sheet of paper and for manuals that are
18982 printed on both sides of the paper. Typically, you will use these
18983 formats, but you can specify your own format if you wish.@refill
18985 In addition, you can specify whether chapters should begin on a new
18986 page, or merely continue the same page as the previous chapter; and if
18987 chapters begin on new pages, you can specify whether they must be
18988 odd-numbered pages.@refill
18990 By convention, a book is printed on both sides of each sheet of paper.
18991 When you open a book, the right-hand page is odd-numbered, and
18992 chapters begin on right-hand pages---a preceding left-hand page is
18993 left blank if necessary. Reports, however, are often printed on just
18994 one side of paper, and chapters begin on a fresh page immediately
18995 following the end of the preceding chapter. In short or informal
18996 reports, chapters often do not begin on a new page at all, but are
18997 separated from the preceding text by a small amount of whitespace.@refill
18999 The @code{@@setchapternewpage} command controls whether chapters begin
19000 on new pages, and whether one of the standard heading formats is used.
19001 In addition, Texinfo has several heading and footing commands that you
19002 can use to generate your own heading and footing formats.@refill
19004 In Texinfo, headings and footings are single lines at the tops and
19005 bottoms of pages; you cannot create multiline headings or footings.
19006 Each header or footer line is divided into three parts: a left part, a
19007 middle part, and a right part. Any part, or a whole line, may be left
19008 blank. Text for the left part of a header or footer line is set
19009 flushleft; text for the middle part is centered; and, text for the
19010 right part is set flushright.@refill
19012 @node Heading Format
19013 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19014 @section Standard Heading Formats
19016 Texinfo provides two standard heading formats, one for manuals printed
19017 on one side of each sheet of paper, and the other for manuals printed
19018 on both sides of the paper.
19020 By default, nothing is specified for the footing of a Texinfo file,
19021 so the footing remains blank.@refill
19023 The standard format for single-sided printing consists of a header
19024 line in which the left-hand part contains the name of the chapter, the
19025 central part is blank, and the right-hand part contains the page
19029 A single-sided page looks like this:
19033 _______________________
19035 | chapter page number |
19037 | Start of text ... |
19043 The standard format for two-sided printing depends on whether the page
19044 number is even or odd. By convention, even-numbered pages are on the
19045 left- and odd-numbered pages are on the right. (@TeX{} will adjust the
19046 widths of the left- and right-hand margins. Usually, widths are
19047 correct, but during double-sided printing, it is wise to check that
19048 pages will bind properly---sometimes a printer will produce output in
19049 which the even-numbered pages have a larger right-hand margin than the
19050 odd-numbered pages.)@refill
19052 In the standard double-sided format, the left part of the left-hand
19053 (even-numbered) page contains the page number, the central part is
19054 blank, and the right part contains the title (specified by the
19055 @code{@@settitle} command). The left part of the right-hand
19056 (odd-numbered) page contains the name of the chapter, the central part
19057 is blank, and the right part contains the page number.@refill
19060 Two pages, side by side as in an open book, look like this:@refill
19064 _______________________ _______________________
19066 | page number title | | chapter page number |
19068 | Start of text ... | | More text ... |
19075 The chapter name is preceded by the word ``Chapter'', the chapter number
19076 and a colon. This makes it easier to keep track of where you are in the
19079 @node Heading Choice
19080 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19081 @section Specifying the Type of Heading
19083 @TeX{} does not begin to generate page headings for a standard Texinfo
19084 file until it reaches the @code{@@end titlepage} command. Thus, the
19085 title and copyright pages are not numbered. The @code{@@end
19086 titlepage} command causes @TeX{} to begin to generate page headings
19087 according to a standard format specified by the
19088 @code{@@setchapternewpage} command that precedes the
19089 @code{@@titlepage} section.@refill
19092 There are four possibilities:@refill
19095 @item No @code{@@setchapternewpage} command
19096 Cause @TeX{} to specify the single-sided heading format, with chapters
19097 on new pages. This is the same as @code{@@setchapternewpage on}.@refill
19099 @item @code{@@setchapternewpage on}
19100 Specify the single-sided heading format, with chapters on new pages.@refill
19102 @item @code{@@setchapternewpage off}
19103 Cause @TeX{} to start a new chapter on the same page as the last page of
19104 the preceding chapter, after skipping some vertical whitespace. Also
19105 cause @TeX{} to typeset for single-sided printing. (You can override
19106 the headers format with the @code{@@headings double} command; see
19107 @ref{headings on off, , The @code{@@headings} Command}.)@refill
19109 @item @code{@@setchapternewpage odd}
19110 Specify the double-sided heading format, with chapters on new pages.@refill
19114 Texinfo lacks an @code{@@setchapternewpage even} command.@refill
19116 @node Custom Headings
19117 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19118 @section How to Make Your Own Headings
19120 You can use the standard headings provided with Texinfo or specify
19121 your own. By default, Texinfo has no footers, so if you specify them,
19122 the available page size for the main text will be slightly reduced.
19124 Texinfo provides six commands for specifying headings and
19128 @code{@@everyheading} @code{@@everyfooting} generate page headers and
19129 footers that are the same for both even- and odd-numbered pages.
19131 @code{@@evenheading} and @code{@@evenfooting} command generate headers
19132 and footers for even-numbered (left-hand) pages.
19134 @code{@@oddheading} and @code{@@oddfooting} generate headers and footers
19135 for odd-numbered (right-hand) pages.
19138 Write custom heading specifications in the Texinfo file immediately
19139 after the @code{@@end titlepage} command.
19140 You must cancel the predefined heading commands with the
19141 @code{@@headings off} command before defining your own
19142 specifications.@refill
19145 Here is how to tell @TeX{} to place the chapter name at the left, the
19146 page number in the center, and the date at the right of every header
19147 for both even- and odd-numbered pages:@refill
19152 @@everyheading @@thischapter @@| @@thispage @@| @@today@{@}
19157 You need to divide the left part from the central part and the central
19158 part from the right part by inserting @samp{@@|} between parts.
19159 Otherwise, the specification command will not be able to tell where
19160 the text for one part ends and the next part begins.@refill
19162 Each part can contain text or @@-commands. The text
19163 is printed as if the part were within an ordinary paragraph in the
19164 body of the page. The @@-commands replace
19165 themselves with the page number, date, chapter name, or
19169 Here are the six heading and footing commands:@refill
19171 @findex everyheading
19172 @findex everyfooting
19174 @item @@everyheading @var{left} @@| @var{center} @@| @var{right}
19175 @itemx @@everyfooting @var{left} @@| @var{center} @@| @var{right}
19177 The `every' commands specify the format for both even- and odd-numbered
19178 pages. These commands are for documents that are printed on one side
19179 of each sheet of paper, or for documents in which you want symmetrical
19180 headers or footers.@refill
19182 @findex evenheading
19183 @findex evenfooting
19186 @item @@evenheading @var{left} @@| @var{center} @@| @var{right}
19187 @itemx @@oddheading @var{left} @@| @var{center} @@| @var{right}
19188 @itemx @@evenfooting @var{left} @@| @var{center} @@| @var{right}
19189 @itemx @@oddfooting @var{left} @@| @var{center} @@| @var{right}
19191 The `even' and `odd' commands specify the format for even-numbered
19192 pages and odd-numbered pages. These commands are for books and
19193 manuals that are printed on both sides of each sheet of paper.
19196 Use the @samp{@@this@dots{}} series of @@-commands to
19197 provide the names of chapters
19198 and sections and the page number. You can use the
19199 @samp{@@this@dots{}} commands in the left, center, or right portions
19200 of headers and footers, or anywhere else in a Texinfo file so long as
19201 they are between @code{@@iftex} and @code{@@end iftex} commands.@refill
19204 Here are the @samp{@@this@dots{}} commands:@refill
19209 Expands to the current page number.@refill
19210 @c !!! Karl Berry says that `thissection' can fail on page breaks.
19212 @item @@thissection
19213 Expands to the name of the current section.@refill
19216 @findex thischaptername
19217 @item @@thischaptername
19218 Expands to the name of the current chapter.@refill
19220 @findex thischapter
19221 @item @@thischapter
19222 Expands to the number and name of the current
19223 chapter, in the format `Chapter 1: Title'.@refill
19227 Expands to the name of the document, as specified by the
19228 @code{@@settitle} command.@refill
19232 For @code{@@include} files only: expands to the name of the current
19233 @code{@@include} file. If the current Texinfo source file is not an
19234 @code{@@include} file, this command has no effect. This command does
19235 @emph{not} provide the name of the current Texinfo source file unless
19236 it is an @code{@@include} file. (@xref{Include Files}, for more
19237 information about @code{@@include} files.)@refill
19241 You can also use the @code{@@today@{@}} command, which expands to the
19242 current date, in `1 Jan 1900' format.@refill
19245 Other @@-commands and text are printed in a header or footer just as
19246 if they were in the body of a page. It is useful to incorporate text,
19247 particularly when you are writing drafts:@refill
19252 @@everyheading @@emph@{Draft!@} @@| @@thispage @@| @@thischapter
19253 @@everyfooting @@| @@| Version: 0.27: @@today@{@}
19257 Beware of overlong titles: they may overlap another part of the
19258 header or footer and blot it out.@refill
19261 @node Catching Mistakes
19262 @appendix Formatting Mistakes
19263 @cindex Structure, catching mistakes in
19264 @cindex Nodes, catching mistakes
19265 @cindex Catching mistakes
19266 @cindex Correcting mistakes
19267 @cindex Mistakes, catching
19268 @cindex Problems, catching
19269 @cindex Debugging the Texinfo structure
19271 Besides mistakes in the content of your documentation, there are two
19272 kinds of mistake you can make with Texinfo: you can make mistakes with
19273 @@-commands, and you can make mistakes with the structure of the nodes
19276 Emacs has two tools for catching the @@-command mistakes and two for
19277 catching structuring mistakes.@refill
19279 For finding problems with @@-commands, you can run @TeX{} or a region
19280 formatting command on the region that has a problem; indeed, you can
19281 run these commands on each region as you write it.@refill
19283 For finding problems with the structure of nodes and chapters, you can use
19284 @kbd{C-c C-s} (@code{texinfo-show-structure}) and the related @code{occur}
19285 command and you can use the @kbd{M-x Info-validate} command.@refill
19288 * makeinfo Preferred:: @code{makeinfo} finds errors.
19289 * Debugging with Info:: How to catch errors with Info formatting.
19290 * Debugging with TeX:: How to catch errors with @TeX{} formatting.
19291 * Using texinfo-show-structure:: How to use @code{texinfo-show-structure}.
19292 * Using occur:: How to list all lines containing a pattern.
19293 * Running Info-Validate:: How to find badly referenced nodes.
19297 @node makeinfo Preferred
19298 @section @code{makeinfo} Find Errors
19300 The @code{makeinfo} program does an excellent job of catching errors
19301 and reporting them---far better than @code{texinfo-format-region} or
19302 @code{texinfo-format-buffer}. In addition, the various functions for
19303 automatically creating and updating node pointers and menus remove
19304 many opportunities for human error.@refill
19306 If you can, use the updating commands to create and insert pointers
19307 and menus. These prevent many errors. Then use @code{makeinfo} (or
19308 its Texinfo mode manifestations, @code{makeinfo-region} and
19309 @code{makeinfo-buffer}) to format your file and check for other
19310 errors. This is the best way to work with Texinfo. But if you
19311 cannot use @code{makeinfo}, or your problem is very puzzling, then you
19312 may want to use the tools described in this appendix.@refill
19314 @node Debugging with Info
19315 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19316 @section Catching Errors with Info Formatting
19317 @cindex Catching errors with Info formatting
19318 @cindex Debugging with Info formatting
19320 After you have written part of a Texinfo file, you can use the
19321 @code{texinfo-format-region} or the @code{makeinfo-region} command to
19322 see whether the region formats properly.@refill
19324 Most likely, however, you are reading this section because for some
19325 reason you cannot use the @code{makeinfo-region} command; therefore, the
19326 rest of this section presumes that you are using
19327 @code{texinfo-format-region}.@refill
19329 If you have made a mistake with an @@-command,
19330 @code{texinfo-format-region} will stop processing at or after the
19331 error and display an error message. To see where in the buffer the
19332 error occurred, switch to the @samp{*Info Region*} buffer; the cursor
19333 will be in a position that is after the location of the error. Also,
19334 the text will not be formatted after the place where the error
19335 occurred (or more precisely, where it was detected).@refill
19337 For example, if you accidentally end a menu with the command @code{@@end
19338 menus} with an `s' on the end, instead of with @code{@@end menu}, you
19339 will see an error message that says:@refill
19342 @@end menus is not handled by texinfo
19346 The cursor will stop at the point in the buffer where the error
19347 occurs, or not long after it. The buffer will look like this:@refill
19351 ---------- Buffer: *Info Region* ----------
19354 * Using texinfo-show-structure:: How to use
19355 `texinfo-show-structure'
19357 * Running Info-Validate:: How to check for
19358 unreferenced nodes.
19361 ---------- Buffer: *Info Region* ----------
19365 The @code{texinfo-format-region} command sometimes provides slightly
19366 odd error messages. For example, the following cross reference fails to format:@refill
19369 (@@xref@{Catching Mistakes, for more info.)
19373 In this case, @code{texinfo-format-region} detects the missing closing
19374 brace but displays a message that says @samp{Unbalanced parentheses}
19375 rather than @samp{Unbalanced braces}. This is because the formatting
19376 command looks for mismatches between braces as if they were
19377 parentheses.@refill
19379 Sometimes @code{texinfo-format-region} fails to detect mistakes. For
19380 example, in the following, the closing brace is swapped with the
19381 closing parenthesis:@refill
19384 (@@xref@{Catching Mistakes), for more info.@}
19388 Formatting produces:
19390 (*Note for more info.: Catching Mistakes)
19393 The only way for you to detect this error is to realize that the
19394 reference should have looked like this:@refill
19397 (*Note Catching Mistakes::, for more info.)
19400 Incidentally, if you are reading this node in Info and type @kbd{f
19401 @key{RET}} (@code{Info-follow-reference}), you will generate an error
19405 No such node: "Catching Mistakes) The only way @dots{}
19409 This is because Info perceives the example of the error as the first
19410 cross reference in this node and if you type a @key{RET} immediately
19411 after typing the Info @kbd{f} command, Info will attempt to go to the
19412 referenced node. If you type @kbd{f catch @key{TAB} @key{RET}}, Info
19413 will complete the node name of the correctly written example and take
19414 you to the `Catching Mistakes' node. (If you try this, you can return
19415 from the `Catching Mistakes' node by typing @kbd{l}
19416 (@code{Info-last}).)
19418 @c !!! section on using Elisp debugger ignored.
19420 Sometimes @code{texinfo-format-region} will stop long after the
19421 original error; this is because it does not discover the problem until
19422 then. In this case, you will need to backtrack.@refill
19425 @c * Using the Emacs Lisp Debugger:: How to use the Emacs Lisp debugger.
19428 @c node Using the Emacs Lisp Debugger
19429 @c appendixsubsec Using the Emacs Lisp Debugger
19430 @c index Using the Emacs Lisp debugger
19431 @c index Emacs Lisp debugger
19432 @c index Debugger, using the Emacs Lisp
19434 If an error is especially elusive, you can turn on the Emacs Lisp
19435 debugger and look at the backtrace; this tells you where in the
19436 @code{texinfo-format-region} function the problem occurred. You can
19437 turn on the debugger with the command:@refill
19440 M-x set-variable @key{RET} debug-on-error @key{RET} t @key{RET}
19444 and turn it off with
19447 M-x set-variable @key{RET} debug-on-error @key{RET} nil @key{RET}
19450 Often, when you are using the debugger, it is easier to follow what is
19451 going on if you use the Emacs Lisp files that are not byte-compiled.
19452 The byte-compiled sources send octal numbers to the debugger that may
19453 look mysterious. To use the uncompiled source files, load
19454 @file{texinfmt.el} and @file{texinfo.el} with the @kbd{M-x load-file}
19457 The debugger will not catch an error if @code{texinfo-format-region}
19458 does not detect one. In the example shown above,
19459 @code{texinfo-format-region} did not find the error when the whole
19460 list was formatted, but only when part of the list was formatted.
19461 When @code{texinfo-format-region} did not find an error, the debugger
19462 did not find one either. @refill
19464 However, when @code{texinfo-format-region} did report an error, it
19465 invoked the debugger. This is the backtrace it produced:@refill
19468 ---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
19469 Signalling: (search-failed "[@},]")
19470 re-search-forward("[@},]")
19473 texinfo-format-parse-args()
19475 texinfo-format-xref()
19476 funcall(texinfo-format-xref)
19481 texinfo-format-scan()
19482 (save-excursion ...)
19484 texinfo-format-region(103370 103631)
19485 * call-interactively(texinfo-format-region)
19486 ---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
19489 The backtrace is read from the bottom up.
19490 @code{texinfo-format-region} was called interactively; and it, in
19491 turn, called various functions, including @code{texinfo-format-scan},
19492 @code{texinfo-format-xref} and @code{texinfo-format-parse-args}.
19493 Inside the function @code{texinfo-format-parse-args}, the function
19494 @code{re-search-forward} was called; it was this function that could
19495 not find the missing right-hand brace.@refill
19497 @xref{Lisp Debug, , Debugging Emacs Lisp, emacs, The GNU Emacs
19498 Manual}, for more information.@refill
19501 @node Debugging with TeX
19502 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19503 @section Catching Errors with @TeX{} Formatting
19504 @cindex Catching errors with @TeX{} formatting
19505 @cindex Debugging with @TeX{} formatting
19507 You can also catch mistakes when you format a file with @TeX{}.@refill
19509 Usually, you will want to do this after you have run
19510 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} (or, better, @code{makeinfo-buffer}) on
19511 the same file, because @code{texinfo-format-buffer} sometimes displays
19512 error messages that make more sense than @TeX{}. (@xref{Debugging
19513 with Info}, for more information.)@refill
19515 For example, @TeX{} was run on a Texinfo file, part of which is shown
19519 ---------- Buffer: texinfo.texi ----------
19520 name of the Texinfo file as an extension. The
19521 @@samp@{??@} are `wildcards' that cause the shell to
19522 substitute all the raw index files. (@@xref@{sorting
19523 indices, for more information about sorting
19525 ---------- Buffer: texinfo.texi ----------
19529 (The cross reference lacks a closing brace.)
19530 @TeX{} produced the following output, after which it stopped:@refill
19533 ---------- Buffer: *tex-shell* ----------
19535 @{sorting indices, for more information about sorting
19536 indices.) @@refill @@ETC.
19537 ! Paragraph ended before @@xref was complete.
19543 ---------- Buffer: *tex-shell* ----------
19546 In this case, @TeX{} produced an accurate and
19547 understandable error message:
19550 Paragraph ended before @@xref was complete.
19554 @samp{@@par} is an internal @TeX{} command of no relevance to Texinfo.
19555 @samp{l.27} means that @TeX{} detected the problem on line 27 of the
19556 Texinfo file. The @samp{?} is the prompt @TeX{} uses in this
19557 circumstance.@refill
19559 Unfortunately, @TeX{} is not always so helpful, and sometimes you must
19560 truly be a Sherlock Holmes to discover what went wrong.@refill
19562 In any case, if you run into a problem like this, you can do one of three
19567 You can tell @TeX{} to continue running and ignore just this error by
19568 typing @key{RET} at the @samp{?} prompt.@refill
19571 You can tell @TeX{} to continue running and to ignore all errors as best
19572 it can by typing @kbd{r @key{RET}} at the @samp{?} prompt.@refill
19574 This is often the best thing to do. However, beware: the one error
19575 may produce a cascade of additional error messages as its consequences
19576 are felt through the rest of the file. To stop @TeX{} when it is
19577 producing such an avalanche of error messages, type @kbd{C-c} (or
19578 @kbd{C-c C-c}, if you are running a shell inside Emacs).
19581 You can tell @TeX{} to stop this run by typing @kbd{x @key{RET}}
19582 at the @samp{?} prompt.@refill
19585 If you are running @TeX{} inside Emacs, you need to switch to the shell
19586 buffer and line at which @TeX{} offers the @samp{?} prompt.
19588 Sometimes @TeX{} will format a file without producing error messages even
19589 though there is a problem. This usually occurs if a command is not ended
19590 but @TeX{} is able to continue processing anyhow. For example, if you fail
19591 to end an itemized list with the @code{@@end itemize} command, @TeX{} will
19592 write a DVI file that you can print out. The only error message that
19593 @TeX{} will give you is the somewhat mysterious comment that@refill
19596 (@@end occurred inside a group at level 1)
19600 However, if you print the DVI file, you will find that the text
19601 of the file that follows the itemized list is entirely indented as if
19602 it were part of the last item in the itemized list. The error message
19603 is the way @TeX{} says that it expected to find an @code{@@end}
19604 command somewhere in the file; but that it could not determine where
19605 it was needed.@refill
19607 Another source of notoriously hard-to-find errors is a missing
19608 @code{@@end group} command. If you ever are stumped by
19609 incomprehensible errors, look for a missing @code{@@end group} command
19612 If the Texinfo file lacks header lines,
19613 @TeX{} may stop in the
19614 beginning of its run and display output that looks like the following.
19615 The @samp{*} indicates that @TeX{} is waiting for input.@refill
19618 This is TeX, Version 3.14159 (Web2c 7.0)
19624 In this case, simply type @kbd{\end @key{RET}} after the asterisk. Then
19625 write the header lines in the Texinfo file and run the @TeX{} command
19626 again. (Note the use of the backslash, @samp{\}. @TeX{} uses @samp{\}
19627 instead of @samp{@@}; and in this circumstance, you are working
19628 directly with @TeX{}, not with Texinfo.)@refill
19630 @node Using texinfo-show-structure
19631 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19632 @section Using @code{texinfo-show-structure}
19633 @cindex Showing the structure of a file
19634 @findex texinfo-show-structure
19636 It is not always easy to keep track of the nodes, chapters, sections, and
19637 subsections of a Texinfo file. This is especially true if you are revising
19638 or adding to a Texinfo file that someone else has written.@refill
19640 In GNU Emacs, in Texinfo mode, the @code{texinfo-show-structure}
19641 command lists all the lines that begin with the @@-commands that
19642 specify the structure: @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@section},
19643 @code{@@appendix}, and so on. With an argument (@w{@kbd{C-u}}
19644 as prefix argument, if interactive),
19645 the command also shows the @code{@@node} lines. The
19646 @code{texinfo-show-structure} command is bound to @kbd{C-c C-s} in
19647 Texinfo mode, by default.@refill
19649 The lines are displayed in a buffer called the @samp{*Occur*} buffer,
19650 indented by hierarchical level. For example, here is a part of what was
19651 produced by running @code{texinfo-show-structure} on this manual:@refill
19655 Lines matching "^@@\\(chapter \\|sect\\|subs\\|subh\\|
19656 unnum\\|major\\|chapheading \\|heading \\|appendix\\)"
19657 in buffer texinfo.texi.
19659 4177:@@chapter Nodes
19660 4198: @@heading Two Paths
19661 4231: @@section Node and Menu Illustration
19662 4337: @@section The @@code@{@@@@node@} Command
19663 4393: @@subheading Choosing Node and Pointer Names
19664 4417: @@subsection How to Write an @@code@{@@@@node@} Line
19665 4469: @@subsection @@code@{@@@@node@} Line Tips
19670 This says that lines 4337, 4393, and 4417 of @file{texinfo.texi} begin
19671 with the @code{@@section}, @code{@@subheading}, and @code{@@subsection}
19672 commands respectively. If you move your cursor into the @samp{*Occur*}
19673 window, you can position the cursor over one of the lines and use the
19674 @kbd{C-c C-c} command (@code{occur-mode-goto-occurrence}), to jump to
19675 the corresponding spot in the Texinfo file. @xref{Other Repeating
19676 Search, , Using Occur, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for more
19677 information about @code{occur-mode-goto-occurrence}.@refill
19679 The first line in the @samp{*Occur*} window describes the @dfn{regular
19680 expression} specified by @var{texinfo-heading-pattern}. This regular
19681 expression is the pattern that @code{texinfo-show-structure} looks for.
19682 @xref{Regexps, , Using Regular Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual},
19683 for more information.@refill
19685 When you invoke the @code{texinfo-show-structure} command, Emacs will
19686 display the structure of the whole buffer. If you want to see the
19687 structure of just a part of the buffer, of one chapter, for example,
19688 use the @kbd{C-x n n} (@code{narrow-to-region}) command to mark the
19689 region. (@xref{Narrowing, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.) This is
19690 how the example used above was generated. (To see the whole buffer
19691 again, use @kbd{C-x n w} (@code{widen}).)@refill
19693 If you call @code{texinfo-show-structure} with a prefix argument by
19694 typing @w{@kbd{C-u C-c C-s}}, it will list lines beginning with
19695 @code{@@node} as well as the lines beginning with the @@-sign commands
19696 for @code{@@chapter}, @code{@@section}, and the like.@refill
19698 You can remind yourself of the structure of a Texinfo file by looking at
19699 the list in the @samp{*Occur*} window; and if you have mis-named a node
19700 or left out a section, you can correct the mistake.@refill
19703 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19704 @section Using @code{occur}
19705 @cindex Occurrences, listing with @code{@@occur}
19708 Sometimes the @code{texinfo-show-structure} command produces too much
19709 information. Perhaps you want to remind yourself of the overall structure
19710 of a Texinfo file, and are overwhelmed by the detailed list produced by
19711 @code{texinfo-show-structure}. In this case, you can use the @code{occur}
19712 command directly. To do this, type@refill
19719 and then, when prompted, type a @dfn{regexp}, a regular expression for
19720 the pattern you want to match. (@xref{Regexps, , Regular Expressions,
19721 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.) The @code{occur} command works from
19722 the current location of the cursor in the buffer to the end of the
19723 buffer. If you want to run @code{occur} on the whole buffer, place
19724 the cursor at the beginning of the buffer.@refill
19726 For example, to see all the lines that contain the word
19727 @samp{@@chapter} in them, just type @samp{@@chapter}. This will
19728 produce a list of the chapters. It will also list all the sentences
19729 with @samp{@@chapter} in the middle of the line.@refill
19731 If you want to see only those lines that start with the word
19732 @samp{@@chapter}, type @samp{^@@chapter} when prompted by
19733 @code{occur}. If you want to see all the lines that end with a word
19734 or phrase, end the last word with a @samp{$}; for example,
19735 @samp{catching mistakes$}. This can be helpful when you want to see
19736 all the nodes that are part of the same chapter or section and
19737 therefore have the same `Up' pointer.@refill
19739 @xref{Other Repeating Search, , Using Occur, emacs , The GNU Emacs Manual},
19740 for more information.@refill
19742 @node Running Info-Validate
19743 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19744 @section Finding Badly Referenced Nodes
19745 @findex Info-validate
19746 @cindex Nodes, checking for badly referenced
19747 @cindex Checking for badly referenced nodes
19748 @cindex Looking for badly referenced nodes
19749 @cindex Finding badly referenced nodes
19750 @cindex Badly referenced nodes
19752 You can use the @code{Info-validate} command to check whether any of
19753 the `Next', `Previous', `Up' or other node pointers fail to point to a
19754 node. This command checks that every node pointer points to an
19755 existing node. The @code{Info-validate} command works only on Info
19756 files, not on Texinfo files.@refill
19758 The @code{makeinfo} program validates pointers automatically, so you
19759 do not need to use the @code{Info-validate} command if you are using
19760 @code{makeinfo}. You only may need to use @code{Info-validate} if you
19761 are unable to run @code{makeinfo} and instead must create an Info file
19762 using @code{texinfo-format-region} or @code{texinfo-format-buffer}, or
19763 if you write an Info file from scratch.@refill
19766 * Using Info-validate:: How to run @code{Info-validate}.
19767 * Unsplit:: How to create an unsplit file.
19768 * Tagifying:: How to tagify a file.
19769 * Splitting:: How to split a file manually.
19772 @node Using Info-validate
19773 @subsection Running @code{Info-validate}
19774 @cindex Running @code{Info-validate}
19775 @cindex Info validating a large file
19776 @cindex Validating a large file
19778 To use @code{Info-validate}, visit the Info file you wish to check and
19786 Note that the @code{Info-validate} command requires an upper case
19787 `I'. You may also need to create a tag table before running
19788 @code{Info-validate}. @xref{Tagifying}.
19790 If your file is valid, you will receive a message that says ``File appears
19791 valid''. However, if you have a pointer that does not point to a node,
19792 error messages will be displayed in a buffer called @samp{*problems in
19793 info file*}.@refill
19795 For example, @code{Info-validate} was run on a test file that contained
19796 only the first node of this manual. One of the messages said:@refill
19799 In node "Overview", invalid Next: Texinfo Mode
19803 This meant that the node called @samp{Overview} had a `Next' pointer that
19804 did not point to anything (which was true in this case, since the test file
19805 had only one node in it).@refill
19807 Now suppose we add a node named @samp{Texinfo Mode} to our test case
19808 but we do not specify a `Previous' for this node. Then we will get
19809 the following error message:@refill
19812 In node "Texinfo Mode", should have Previous: Overview
19816 This is because every `Next' pointer should be matched by a
19817 `Previous' (in the node where the `Next' points) which points back.@refill
19819 @code{Info-validate} also checks that all menu entries and cross references
19820 point to actual nodes.@refill
19822 @code{Info-validate} requires a tag table and does not work with files
19823 that have been split. (The @code{texinfo-format-buffer} command
19824 automatically splits large files.) In order to use @code{Info-validate}
19825 on a large file, you must run @code{texinfo-format-buffer} with an
19826 argument so that it does not split the Info file; and you must create a
19827 tag table for the unsplit file.
19830 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19831 @subsection Creating an Unsplit File
19832 @cindex Creating an unsplit file
19833 @cindex Unsplit file creation
19835 You can run @code{Info-validate} only on a single Info file that has a
19836 tag table. The command will not work on the indirect subfiles that
19837 are generated when a master file is split. If you have a large file
19838 (longer than 300,000 bytes or so), you need to run the
19839 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} or @code{makeinfo-buffer} command in such
19840 a way that it does not create indirect subfiles. You will also need
19841 to create a tag table for the Info file. After you have done this,
19842 you can run @code{Info-validate} and look for badly referenced
19845 The first step is to create an unsplit Info file. To prevent
19846 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} from splitting a Texinfo file into
19847 smaller Info files, give a prefix to the @kbd{M-x
19848 texinfo-format-buffer} command:@refill
19851 C-u M-x texinfo-format-buffer
19862 When you do this, Texinfo will not split the file and will not create
19863 a tag table for it. @refill
19864 @cindex Making a tag table manually
19865 @cindex Tag table, making manually
19868 @subsection Tagifying a File
19870 After creating an unsplit Info file, you must create a tag table for
19871 it. Visit the Info file you wish to tagify and type:@refill
19878 (Note the upper case @samp{I} in @code{Info-tagify}.) This creates an
19879 Info file with a tag table that you can validate.@refill
19881 The third step is to validate the Info file:@refill
19888 (Note the upper case @samp{I} in @code{Info-validate}.)
19889 In brief, the steps are:@refill
19893 C-u M-x texinfo-format-buffer
19899 After you have validated the node structure, you can rerun
19900 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} in the normal way so it will construct a
19901 tag table and split the file automatically, or you can make the tag
19902 table and split the file manually.@refill
19905 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
19906 @subsection Splitting a File Manually
19907 @cindex Splitting an Info file manually
19908 @cindex Info file, splitting manually
19910 You should split a large file or else let the
19911 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} or @code{makeinfo-buffer} command do it
19912 for you automatically. (Generally you will let one of the formatting
19913 commands do this job for you. @xref{Creating an Info File}.)@refill
19915 The split-off files are called the indirect subfiles.@refill
19917 Info files are split to save memory. With smaller files, Emacs does not
19918 have make such a large buffer to hold the information.@refill
19920 If an Info file has more than 30 nodes, you should also make a tag
19921 table for it. @xref{Using Info-validate}, for information
19922 about creating a tag table. (Again, tag tables are usually created
19923 automatically by the formatting command; you only need to create a tag
19924 table yourself if you are doing the job manually. Most likely, you
19925 will do this for a large, unsplit file on which you have run
19926 @code{Info-validate}.)@refill
19928 @c Info-split is autoloaded in `loaddefs.el' in Emacs 18.51
19930 Before running @code{Info-split}, you need to load the @code{info} library
19931 into Emacs by giving the command @kbd{M-x load-library @key{RET} info
19935 Visit the Info file you wish to tagify and split and type the two
19944 (Note that the @samp{I} in @samp{Info} is upper case.)@refill
19946 When you use the @code{Info-split} command, the buffer is modified into a
19947 (small) Info file which lists the indirect subfiles. This file should be
19948 saved in place of the original visited file. The indirect subfiles are
19949 written in the same directory the original file is in, with names generated
19950 by appending @samp{-} and a number to the original file name.@refill
19952 The primary file still functions as an Info file, but it contains just
19953 the tag table and a directory of subfiles.@refill
19957 The simple description in the command summary seems sufficient to me
19958 these days, so ignore this appendix. --karl, 13mar04.
19960 @node Refilling Paragraphs
19961 @appendix Refilling Paragraphs
19962 @cindex Refilling paragraphs
19963 @cindex Filling paragraphs
19964 @cindex Paragraphs, filling
19967 The @code{@@refill} command refills and, optionally, indents the first
19968 line of a paragraph.@footnote{Perhaps the command should have been
19969 called the @code{@@refillandindent} command, but @code{@@refill} is
19970 shorter and the name was chosen before indenting was possible.} The
19971 @code{@@refill} command is no longer important, but we describe it here
19972 because you once needed it. You will see it in many old Texinfo
19975 Without refilling, paragraphs containing long @@-constructs may look
19976 bad after formatting because the formatter removes @@-commands and
19977 shortens some lines more than others. In the past, neither the
19978 @code{texinfo-format-region} command nor the
19979 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} command refilled paragraphs
19980 automatically. The @code{@@refill} command had to be written at the
19981 end of every paragraph to cause these formatters to fill them. (Both
19982 @TeX{} and @code{makeinfo} have always refilled paragraphs
19983 automatically.) Now, all the Info formatters automatically fill and
19984 indent those paragraphs that need to be filled and indented.@refill
19986 The @code{@@refill} command causes @code{texinfo-format-region} and
19987 @code{texinfo-format-buffer} to refill a paragraph in the Info file
19988 @emph{after} all the other processing has been done. For this reason,
19989 you can not use @code{@@refill} with a paragraph containing either
19990 @code{@@*} or @code{@@w@{ @dots{} @}} since the refilling action will
19991 override those two commands.@refill
19993 The @code{texinfo-format-region} and @code{texinfo-format-buffer}
19994 commands now automatically append @code{@@refill} to the end of each
19995 paragraph that should be filled. They do not append @code{@@refill} to
19996 the ends of paragraphs that contain @code{@@*} or @w{@code{@@w@{ @dots{}@}}}
19997 and therefore do not refill or indent them.@refill
20002 @c These are no longer ``new'', and the explanations
20003 @c are all given elsewhere anyway, I think. --karl, 25apr97.
20004 @c So ignore the entire appendix.
20006 @c node New Features, Command and Variable Index, Obtaining TeX, Top
20007 @c appendix Second Edition Features
20010 % Widen the space for the first column so three control-character
20011 % strings fit in the first column. Switched back to default .8in
20012 % value at end of chapter.
20013 \global\tableindent=1.0in
20016 The second edition of the Texinfo manual describes more than 20 new
20017 Texinfo mode commands and more than 50 previously undocumented Texinfo
20018 @@-commands. This edition is more than twice the length of the first
20021 Here is a brief description of the new commands.@refill
20024 * New Texinfo Mode Commands:: The updating commands are especially useful.
20025 * New Commands:: Many newly described @@-commands.
20028 @c node New Texinfo Mode Commands, New Commands, Obtaining TeX, Obtaining TeX
20029 @c appendixsec New Texinfo Mode Commands
20031 Texinfo mode provides commands and features especially designed for
20032 working with Texinfo files. More than 20 new commands have been
20033 added, including commands for automatically creating and updating
20034 both nodes and menus. This is a tedious task when done by hand.@refill
20036 The keybindings are intended to be somewhat mnemonic.@refill
20038 @c subheading Update all nodes and menus
20040 The @code{texinfo-master-menu} command is the primary command:
20044 @itemx M-x texinfo-master-menu
20045 Create or update a master menu.
20046 With @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument,
20047 first create or update all nodes
20051 @c subheading Update Pointers
20054 Create or update `Next', `Previous', and `Up' node pointers.@refill
20057 @xref{Updating Nodes and Menus}.
20061 @itemx M-x texinfo-update-node
20065 @itemx M-x texinfo-every-node-update
20066 Update every node in the buffer.
20069 @c subheading Update Menus
20072 Create or update menus.@refill
20075 @xref{Updating Nodes and Menus}.
20079 @itemx M-x texinfo-make-menu
20080 Make or update a menu.
20083 @itemx M-x texinfo-all-menus-update
20084 Make or update all the menus in a buffer.
20085 With @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument,
20086 first update all the nodes.
20089 @c subheading Insert Title as Description
20092 Insert a node's chapter or section title in the space for the
20093 description in a menu entry line; position point so you can edit the
20094 insert. (This command works somewhat differently than the other
20095 insertion commands, which insert only a predefined string.)@refill
20098 @xref{Inserting, Inserting Frequently Used Commands}.
20105 @c subheading Format for Info
20108 Provide keybindings both for the Info formatting commands that are
20109 written in Emacs Lisp and for @code{makeinfo} that is written in
20113 @xref{Info Formatting}.
20116 Use the Emacs lisp @code{texinfo-format@dots{}} commands:
20127 Use @code{makeinfo}:
20137 Recenter the @code{makeinfo} output buffer.
20140 Kill the @code{makeinfo} formatting job.
20143 @c subheading Typeset and Print
20146 Typeset and print Texinfo documents from within Emacs.
20153 Run @code{texi2dvi} on the buffer.
20156 Run @TeX{} on the region.
20159 Run @code{texindex}.
20162 Print the DVI file.
20165 Show the print queue.
20168 Delete a job from the print queue.
20171 Kill the current @TeX{} formatting job.
20174 Quit a currently stopped @TeX{} formatting job.
20177 Recenter the output buffer.
20180 @c subheading Other Updating Commands
20183 The ``other updating commands'' do not have standard keybindings because
20184 they are used less frequently.@refill
20187 @xref{Other Updating Commands}.
20190 @item M-x texinfo-insert-node-lines
20191 Insert missing @code{@@node} lines using
20192 section titles as node names.
20194 @item M-x texinfo-multiple-files-update
20195 Update a multi-file document.
20196 With a numeric prefix, such as @kbd{C-u 8},
20197 update @strong{every} pointer and
20198 menu in @strong{all} the files and
20199 then insert a master menu.
20201 @item M-x texinfo-indent-menu-description
20202 Indent descriptions in menus.
20204 @item M-x texinfo-sequential-node-update
20205 Insert node pointers in strict sequence.
20208 @c no.de New Commands, , New Texinfo Mode Commands, Obtaining TeX
20209 @c appendix.sec New Texinfo @@-Commands
20211 The second edition of the Texinfo manual describes more than 50
20212 commands that were not described in the first edition. A third or so
20213 of these commands existed in Texinfo but were not documented in the
20214 manual; the others are new. Here is a listing, with brief
20215 descriptions of them:@refill
20217 @c subheading Indexing
20220 Create your own index, and merge indices.@refill
20226 @item @@defindex @var{index-name}
20227 Define a new index and its indexing command.
20228 See also the @code{@@defcodeindex} command.
20230 @c written verbosely to avoid overfull hbox
20231 @item @@synindex @var{from-index} @var{into-index}
20232 Merge the @var{from-index} index into the @var{into-index} index.
20233 See also the @code{@@syncodeindex} command.
20236 @c subheading Definitions
20239 Describe functions, variables, macros,
20240 commands, user options, special forms, and other such artifacts in a
20241 uniform format.@refill
20244 @xref{Definition Commands}.
20247 @item @@deffn @var{category} @var{name} @var{arguments}@dots{}
20248 Format a description for functions, interactive
20249 commands, and similar entities.
20251 @item @@defvr, @@defop, @dots{}
20252 15 other related commands.
20255 @c subheading Glyphs
20258 Indicate the results of evaluation, expansion,
20259 printed output, an error message, equivalence of expressions, and the
20260 location of point.@refill
20274 @item @@expansion@{@}
20275 @itemx @expansion{}
20288 Result of an expression
20291 @c subheading Page Headings
20294 Customize page headings.
20300 @item @@headings @var{on-off-single-double}
20301 Headings on or off, single, or double-sided.
20303 @item @@evenfooting [@var{left}] @@| [@var{center}] @@| [@var{right}]
20304 Footings for even-numbered (left-hand) pages.
20306 @item @@evenheading, @@everyheading, @@oddheading, @dots{}
20307 Five other related commands.
20309 @item @@thischapter
20310 Insert name of chapter and chapter number.
20312 @item @@thischaptername, @@thisfile, @@thistitle, @@thispage
20316 @c subheading Formatting
20319 Format blocks of text.
20322 @xref{Quotations and Examples}, and@*
20323 @ref{Lists and Tables, , Making Lists and Tables}.
20327 Draw rounded box surrounding text (no effect in Info).
20329 @item @@enumerate @var{optional-arg}
20330 Enumerate a list with letters or numbers.
20332 @item @@exdent @var{line-of-text}
20333 Remove indentation.
20342 Do not narrow nor change font.
20344 @item @@ftable @var{formatting-command}
20345 @itemx @@vtable @var{formatting-command}
20346 Two-column table with indexing.
20349 For an example of Lisp code.
20351 @item @@smallexample
20353 Like @@table and @@lisp, but for (originally) @@smallbook.
20356 @c subheading Conditionals
20359 Conditionally format text.
20362 @xref{set clear value, , @code{@@set} @code{@@clear} @code{@@value}}.@refill
20365 @item @@set @var{flag} [@var{string}]
20366 Set a flag. Optionally, set value
20367 of @var{flag} to @var{string}.
20369 @item @@clear @var{flag}
20372 @item @@value@{@var{flag}@}
20373 Replace with value to which @var{flag} is set.
20375 @item @@ifset @var{flag}
20376 Format, if @var{flag} is set.
20378 @item @@ifclear @var{flag}
20379 Ignore, if @var{flag} is set.
20382 @c subheading @@heading series for Titles
20385 Produce unnumbered headings that do not appear in a table of contents.
20388 @xref{Structuring}.
20391 @item @@heading @var{title}
20392 Unnumbered section-like heading not listed
20393 in the table of contents of a printed manual.
20395 @item @@chapheading, @@majorheading, @@c subheading, @@subsubheading
20400 @c subheading Font commands
20404 @xref{Smallcaps}, and @*
20408 @item @@r@{@var{text}@}
20409 Print in roman font.
20411 @item @@sc@{@var{text}@}
20412 Print in @sc{small caps} font.
20415 @c subheading Miscellaneous
20418 See @ref{title subtitle author, , @code{@@title} @code{@@subtitle} and @code{@@author} Commands},@*
20419 see @ref{Customized Highlighting},@*
20420 see @ref{Overfull hboxes},@*
20421 see @ref{Footnotes},@*
20422 see @ref{dmn, , Format a Dimension},@*
20423 see @ref{Raise/lower sections, , @code{@@raisesections} and @code{@@lowersections}},@*
20424 see @ref{math, , @code{@@math}: Inserting Mathematical Expressions}.@*
20425 see @ref{minus, , Inserting a Minus Sign},@*
20426 see @ref{paragraphindent, , Paragraph Indenting},@*
20427 see @ref{Cross Reference Commands},@*
20428 see @ref{title subtitle author, , @code{@@title} @code{@@subtitle} and @code{@@author}}, and@*
20429 see @ref{Custom Headings, , How to Make Your Own Headings}.
20432 @item @@author @var{author}
20433 Typeset author's name.
20435 @c @item @@definfoenclose @var{new-command}, @var{before}, @var{after},
20436 @c Define a highlighting command for Info. (Info only.)
20439 Produce cleaner printed output.
20441 @item @@footnotestyle @var{end-or-separate}
20442 Specify footnote style.
20444 @item @@dmn@{@var{dimension}@}
20445 Format a dimension.
20447 @item @@global@@let@var{new-cmd}=@var{existing-cmd}
20448 Define a highlighting command for @TeX{}. (@TeX{} only.)
20450 @item @@lowersections
20451 Reduce hierarchical level of sectioning commands.
20453 @item @@math@{@var{mathematical-expression}@}
20454 Format a mathematical expression.
20457 Generate a minus sign.
20459 @item @@paragraphindent @var{asis-or-number}
20460 Specify paragraph indentation.
20462 @item @@raisesections
20463 Raise hierarchical level of sectioning commands.
20465 @item @@ref@{@var{node-name}, @r{[}@var{entry}@r{]}, @r{[}@var{topic-or-title}@r{]}, @r{[}@var{info-file}@r{]}, @r{[}@var{manual}@r{]}@}
20466 Make a reference. In the printed manual, the
20467 reference does not start with the word `see'.
20469 @item @@title @var{title}
20470 Typeset @var{title} in the alternative
20473 @item @@subtitle @var{subtitle}
20474 Typeset @var{subtitle} in the alternative
20478 Insert the current date.
20481 % Switch width of first column of tables back to default value
20482 \global\tableindent=.8in
20487 @node Copying This Manual
20488 @appendix Copying This Manual
20491 * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual.
20497 @node Command and Variable Index
20498 @unnumbered Command and Variable Index
20500 This is an alphabetical list of all the @@-commands, assorted Emacs Lisp
20501 functions, and several variables. To make the list easier to use, the
20502 commands are listed without their preceding @samp{@@}.@refill
20507 @node Concept Index
20508 @unnumbered Concept Index