Fix copyright years by hand.
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / misc / info.texi
1 \input texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c We must \input texinfo.tex instead of texinfo, otherwise make
3 @c distcheck in the Texinfo distribution fails, because the texinfo Info
4 @c file is made first, and texi2dvi must include . first in the path.
5 @comment %**start of header
6 @setfilename info.info
7 @settitle Info
8 @syncodeindex fn cp
9 @syncodeindex vr cp
10 @syncodeindex ky cp
11 @comment %**end of header
12
13 @copying
14 This file describes how to use Info, the on-line, menu-driven GNU
15 documentation system.
16
17 Copyright @copyright{} 1989, 1992, 1996--2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
18
19 @quotation
20 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
21 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
22 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
23 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
24 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
25 is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
26
27 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and
28 modify this GNU manual.''
29 @end quotation
30 @end copying
31
32 @dircategory Texinfo documentation system
33 @direntry
34 * Info: (info). How to use the documentation browsing system.
35 @end direntry
36
37 @titlepage
38 @title Info
39 @subtitle The online, hyper-text GNU documentation system
40 @author Brian Fox
41 @author and the GNU Texinfo community
42 @page
43 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
44 @insertcopying
45 @end titlepage
46
47 @contents
48
49 @ifnottex
50 @node Top
51 @top Info: An Introduction
52
53 The GNU Project distributes most of its on-line manuals in the
54 @dfn{Info format}, which you read using an @dfn{Info reader}. You are
55 probably using an Info reader to read this now.
56
57 There are two primary Info readers: @code{info}, a stand-alone program
58 designed just to read Info files (@pxref{Top,,What is Info?,
59 info-stnd, GNU Info}), and the @code{info} package in GNU Emacs, a
60 general-purpose editor. At present, only the Emacs reader supports
61 using a mouse.
62
63 @ifinfo
64 If you are new to the Info reader and want to learn how to use it,
65 type the command @kbd{h} now. It brings you to a programmed
66 instruction sequence.
67
68 To read about advanced Info commands, type @kbd{n} twice. This
69 brings you to @cite{Advanced Info Commands}, skipping over the `Getting
70 Started' chapter.
71 @end ifinfo
72 @end ifnottex
73
74 @insertcopying
75
76 @menu
77 * Getting Started:: Getting started using an Info reader.
78 * Advanced:: Advanced Info commands.
79 * Expert Info:: Info commands for experts.
80 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
81 * Index:: An index of topics, commands, and variables.
82 @end menu
83
84 @node Getting Started, Advanced, Top, Top
85 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
86 @chapter Getting Started
87
88 This first part of this Info manual describes how to get around inside
89 of Info. The second part of the manual describes various advanced
90 Info commands. The third part briefly explains how to generate Info
91 files from Texinfo files, and describes how to write an Info file
92 by hand.
93
94 @ifnotinfo
95 This manual is primarily designed for browsing with an Info reader
96 program on a computer, so that you can try Info commands while reading
97 about them. Reading it on paper or with an HTML browser is less
98 effective, since you must take it on faith that the commands described
99 really do what the manual says. By all means go through this manual
100 now that you have it; but please try going through the on-line version
101 as well.
102
103 @cindex Info reader, how to invoke
104 @cindex entering Info
105 There are two ways of looking at the online version of this manual:
106
107 @enumerate
108 @item
109 Type @code{info} at your shell's command line. This approach uses a
110 stand-alone program designed just to read Info files.
111
112 @item
113 Type @code{emacs} at the command line; then type @kbd{C-h i}
114 (@kbd{Control-h}, followed by @kbd{i}). This approach uses the Info
115 mode of the Emacs editor.
116 @end enumerate
117
118 In either case, then type @kbd{mInfo} (just the letters), followed by
119 @key{RET}---the ``Return'' or ``Enter'' key. At this point, you should
120 be ready to follow the instructions in this manual as you read them on
121 the screen.
122 @c FIXME! (pesch@cygnus.com, 14 dec 1992)
123 @c Is it worth worrying about what-if the beginner goes to somebody
124 @c else's Emacs session, which already has an Info running in the middle
125 @c of something---in which case these simple instructions won't work?
126 @end ifnotinfo
127
128 @menu
129 * Help-Small-Screen:: Starting Info on a Small Screen.
130 * Help:: How to use Info.
131 * Help-P:: Returning to the Previous node.
132 * Help-^L:: The Space, DEL, B and ^L commands.
133 * Help-Inv:: Invisible text in Emacs Info.
134 * Help-M:: Menus.
135 * Help-Xref:: Following cross-references.
136 * Help-Int:: Some intermediate Info commands.
137 * Help-Q:: Quitting Info.
138 @end menu
139
140 @node Help-Small-Screen
141 @section Starting Info on a Small Screen
142
143 @ifnotinfo
144 (In Info, you only see this section if your terminal has a small
145 number of lines; most readers pass by it without seeing it.)
146 @end ifnotinfo
147
148 @cindex small screen, moving around
149 Since your terminal has a relatively small number of lines on its
150 screen, it is necessary to give you special advice at the beginning.
151
152 If the entire text you are looking at fits on the screen, the text
153 @samp{All} will be displayed at the bottom of the screen. In the
154 stand-alone Info reader, it is displayed at the bottom right corner of
155 the screen; in Emacs, it is displayed on the modeline. If you see the
156 text @samp{Top} instead, it means that there is more text below that
157 does not fit. To move forward through the text and see another screen
158 full, press @key{SPC}, the Space bar. To move back up, press the key
159 labeled @samp{Backspace} or @samp{DEL} (on some keyboards, this key
160 might be labeled @samp{Delete}), or @key{S-SPC}.
161
162 @ifinfo
163 Here are 40 lines of junk, so you can try @key{SPC} and @key{DEL} (or
164 @key{S-SPC}) and see what they do. At the end are instructions of
165 what you should do next.
166
167 @format
168 This is line 20
169 This is line 21
170 This is line 22
171 This is line 23
172 This is line 24
173 This is line 25
174 This is line 26
175 This is line 27
176 This is line 28
177 This is line 29
178 This is line 30
179 This is line 31
180 This is line 32
181 This is line 33
182 This is line 34
183 This is line 35
184 This is line 36
185 This is line 37
186 This is line 38
187 This is line 39
188 This is line 40
189 This is line 41
190 This is line 42
191 This is line 43
192 This is line 44
193 This is line 45
194 This is line 46
195 This is line 47
196 This is line 48
197 This is line 49
198 This is line 50
199 This is line 51
200 This is line 52
201 This is line 53
202 This is line 54
203 This is line 55
204 This is line 56
205 This is line 57
206 This is line 58
207 This is line 59
208 @end format
209
210 If you have managed to get here, go back to the beginning with
211 @kbd{DEL} (or @key{S-SPC}), and come back here again, then you
212 understand the about the @samp{Space} and @samp{Backspace} keys. So
213 now type an @kbd{n}---just one character; don't type the quotes and
214 don't type the Return key afterward---to get to the normal start of
215 the course.
216 @end ifinfo
217
218 @node Help, Help-P, Help-Small-Screen, Getting Started
219 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
220 @section How to use Info
221
222 You are talking to the program Info, for reading documentation.
223
224 There are two ways to use Info: from within Emacs or as a
225 stand-alone reader that you can invoke from a shell using the command
226 @command{info}.
227
228 @cindex node, in Info documents
229 Right now you are looking at one @dfn{Node} of Information.
230 A node contains text describing a specific topic at a specific
231 level of detail. This node's topic is ``how to use Info''. The mode
232 line says that this is node @samp{Help} in the file @file{info}.
233
234 @cindex header of Info node
235 The top line of a node is its @dfn{header}. This node's header
236 (look at it now) says that the @samp{Next} node after this one is the
237 node called @samp{Help-P}. An advanced Info command lets you go to
238 any node whose name you know. In the stand-alone Info reader program,
239 the header line shows the names of this node and the Info file as
240 well. In Emacs, the header line is displayed with a special typeface,
241 and remains at the top of the window all the time even if you scroll
242 through the node.
243
244 Besides a @samp{Next}, a node can have a @samp{Previous} link, or an
245 @samp{Up} link, or both. As you can see, this node has all of these
246 links.
247
248 @kindex n @r{(Info mode)}
249 Now it is time to move on to the @samp{Next} node, named @samp{Help-P}.
250
251 @format
252 >> Type @kbd{n} to move there. Type just one character;
253 do not type the quotes and do not type a @key{RET} afterward.
254 @end format
255
256 @noindent
257 @samp{>>} in the margin means it is really time to try a command.
258
259 @format
260 >> If you are in Emacs and have a mouse, and if you already practiced
261 typing @kbd{n} to get to the next node, click now with the left
262 mouse button on the @samp{Next} link to do the same ``the mouse way''.
263 @end format
264
265 @node Help-P, Help-^L, Help, Getting Started
266 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
267 @section Returning to the Previous node
268
269 @kindex p @r{(Info mode)}
270 This node is called @samp{Help-P}. The @samp{Previous} node, as you see,
271 is @samp{Help}, which is the one you just came from using the @kbd{n}
272 command. Another @kbd{n} command now would take you to the next
273 node, @samp{Help-^L}.
274
275 @format
276 >> But do not type @kbd{n} yet. First, try the @kbd{p} command, or
277 (in Emacs) click on the @samp{Prev} link. That takes you to
278 the @samp{Previous} node. Then use @kbd{n} to return here.
279 @end format
280
281 If you read this in Emacs, you will see an @samp{Info} item in the
282 menu bar, close to its right edge. Clicking the mouse on the
283 @samp{Info} menu-bar item opens a menu of commands which include
284 @samp{Next} and @samp{Previous} (and also some others which you didn't yet
285 learn about).
286
287 This all probably seems insultingly simple so far, but @emph{please
288 don't} start skimming. Things will get complicated soon enough!
289 Also, please do not try a new command until you are told it is time
290 to. You could make Info skip past an important warning that was
291 coming up.
292
293 @format
294 >> Now do an @kbd{n}, or (in Emacs) click the middle mouse button on
295 the @samp{Next} link, to get to the node @samp{Help-^L} and learn more.
296 @end format
297
298 @node Help-^L, Help-Inv, Help-P, Getting Started
299 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
300 @section The Space, DEL, B and ^L commands
301
302 This node's mode line tells you that you are now at node
303 @samp{Help-^L}, and the header line tells you that @kbd{p} would get
304 you back to @samp{Help-P}. The node's title is highlighted and may be
305 underlined as well; it says what the node is about.
306
307 This is a big node and it does not all fit on your display screen.
308 You can tell that there is more that is not visible because you
309 can see the text @samp{Top} rather than @samp{All} near the bottom of
310 the screen.
311
312 @kindex SPC @r{(Info mode)}
313 @kindex DEL @r{(Info mode)}
314 @kindex BACKSPACE @r{(Info mode)}
315 @findex Info-scroll-up
316 @findex Info-scroll-down
317 The @key{SPC}, @key{BACKSPACE} (or @key{DEL})@footnote{The key which
318 we call ``Backspace or DEL'' in this manual is labeled differently on
319 different keyboards. Look for a key which is a little ways above the
320 @key{ENTER} or @key{RET} key and which you normally use outside Emacs
321 to erase the character before the cursor, i.e., the character you
322 typed last. It might be labeled @samp{Backspace} or @samp{<-} or
323 @samp{DEL}, or sometimes @samp{Delete}.} and @kbd{b} commands exist to
324 allow you to ``move around'' in a node that does not all fit on the
325 screen at once. @key{SPC} moves forward, to show what was below the
326 bottom of the screen. @key{DEL} or @key{BACKSPACE} moves backward, to
327 show what was above the top of the screen (there is not anything above
328 the top until you have typed some spaces).
329
330 @format
331 >> Now try typing a @key{SPC} (afterward, type a @key{BACKSPACE} to
332 return here).
333 @end format
334
335 When you type the @key{SPC}, the two lines that were at the bottom of
336 the screen appear at the top, followed by more lines. @key{DEL} or
337 @key{BACKSPACE} takes the two lines from the top and moves them to the
338 bottom, @emph{usually}, but if there are not a full screen's worth of
339 lines above them they may not make it all the way to the bottom.
340
341 If you are reading this in Emacs, note that the header line is
342 always visible, never scrolling off the display. That way, you can
343 always see the @samp{Next}, @samp{Prev}, and @samp{Up} links, and you
344 can conveniently go to one of these links at any time by
345 clicking the middle mouse button on the link.
346
347 @cindex reading Info documents top to bottom
348 @cindex Info documents as tutorials
349 @key{SPC} and @key{DEL} not only move forward and backward through
350 the current node. They also move between nodes. @key{SPC} at the end
351 of a node moves to the next node; @key{DEL} (or @key{BACKSPACE}) at
352 the beginning of a node moves to the previous node. In effect, these
353 commands scroll through all the nodes in an Info file as a single
354 logical sequence. You can read an entire manual top to bottom by just
355 typing @key{SPC}, and move backward through the entire manual from
356 bottom to top by typing @key{DEL} (or @key{BACKSPACE}).
357
358 In this sequence, a node's subnodes appear following their parent.
359 If a node has a menu, @key{SPC} takes you into the subnodes listed in
360 the menu, one by one. Once you reach the end of a node, and have seen
361 all of its subnodes, @key{SPC} takes you to the next node or to the
362 parent's next node.
363
364 @kindex PAGEUP @r{(Info mode)}
365 @kindex PAGEDOWN @r{(Info mode)}
366 Many keyboards nowadays have two scroll keys labeled @samp{PageUp}
367 and @samp{PageDown} (or maybe @samp{Prior} and @samp{Next}). If your
368 keyboard has these keys, you can use them to move forward and backward
369 through the text of one node, like @key{SPC} and @key{BACKSPACE} (or
370 @key{DEL}). However, @key{PAGEUP} and @key{PAGEDOWN} keys never
371 scroll beyond the beginning or the end of the current node.
372
373 @kindex C-l @r{(Info mode)}
374 If your screen is ever garbaged, you can tell Info to display it
375 again by typing @kbd{C-l} (@kbd{Control-L}---that is, hold down
376 @key{CTRL} and type @kbd{L} or @kbd{l}).
377
378 @format
379 >> Type @kbd{C-l} now.
380 @end format
381
382 @kindex b @r{(Info mode)}
383 To move back to the beginning of the node you are on, you can type
384 the @key{BACKSPACE} key (or @key{DEL}) many times. You can also type
385 @kbd{b} just once. @kbd{b} stands for ``beginning.''
386
387 @format
388 >> Try that now. (We have put in enough verbiage to push this past
389 the first screenful, but screens are so big nowadays that perhaps it
390 isn't enough. You may need to shrink your Emacs or Info window.)
391 Then come back, by typing @key{SPC} one or more times.
392 @end format
393
394 @kindex ? @r{(Info mode)}
395 @findex Info-summary
396 You have just learned a considerable number of commands. If you
397 want to use one but have trouble remembering which, you should type
398 @kbd{?}, which displays a brief list of commands. When you are
399 finished looking at the list, make it go away by typing @key{SPC}
400 repeatedly.
401
402 @format
403 >> Type a @key{?} now. Press @key{SPC} to see consecutive screenfuls of
404 the list until finished. Then type @key{SPC} several times. If
405 you are using Emacs, the help will then go away automatically.
406 @end format
407
408 (If you are using the stand-alone Info reader, type @kbd{C-x 0} to
409 return here, that is---press and hold @key{CTRL}, type an @kbd{x},
410 then release @key{CTRL} and @kbd{x}, and press @kbd{0}; that's a zero,
411 not the letter ``o''.)
412
413 From now on, you will encounter large nodes without warning, and
414 will be expected to know how to use @key{SPC} and @key{BACKSPACE} to
415 move around in them without being told. Since not all terminals have
416 the same size screen, it would be impossible to warn you anyway.
417
418 @format
419 >> Now type @kbd{n}, or click the middle mouse button on the @samp{Next} link,
420 to visit the next node.
421 @end format
422
423 @node Help-Inv, Help-M, Help-^L, Getting Started
424 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
425 @section Invisible text in Emacs Info
426
427 Before discussing menus, we need to make some remarks that are only
428 relevant to users reading Info using Emacs. Users of the stand-alone
429 version can skip this node by typing @kbd{]} now.
430
431 @cindex invisible text in Emacs
432 In Emacs, certain text that appears in the stand-alone version is
433 normally hidden, technically because it has the @samp{invisibility}
434 property. Invisible text is really a part of the text. It becomes
435 visible (by default) after killing and yanking, it appears in printed
436 output, it gets saved to file just like any other text, and so on.
437 Thus it is useful to know it is there.
438
439 @findex visible-mode
440 You can make invisible text visible by using the command @kbd{M-x
441 visible-mode}. Visible mode is a minor mode, so using the command a
442 second time will make the text invisible again. Watch the effects of
443 the command on the ``menu'' below and the top line of this node.
444
445 If you prefer to @emph{always} see the invisible text, you can set
446 @code{Info-hide-note-references} to @code{nil}. Enabling Visible mode
447 permanently is not a real alternative, because Emacs Info also uses
448 (although less extensively) another text property that can change the
449 text being displayed, the @samp{display} property. Only the
450 invisibility property is affected by Visible mode. When, in this
451 tutorial, we refer to the @samp{Emacs} behavior, we mean the
452 @emph{default} Emacs behavior.
453
454 Now type @kbd{]}, to learn about the @kbd{]} and @kbd{[} commands.
455
456 @menu
457 * ]: Help-]. Node telling about ].
458 * stuff: Help-]. Same node.
459 * Help-]:: Yet again, same node.
460 @end menu
461
462 @node Help-], , , Help-Inv
463 @subsection The @kbd{]} and @kbd{[} commands
464
465 If you type @kbd{n} now, you get an error message saying that this
466 node has no next node. Similarly, if you type @kbd{p}, the error
467 message tells you that there is no previous node. (The exact message
468 depends on the Info reader you use.) This is because @kbd{n} and
469 @kbd{p} carry you to the next and previous node @emph{at the same
470 level}. The present node is contained in a menu (see next) of the
471 node you came from, and hence is considered to be at a lower level.
472 It is the only node in the previous node's menu (even though it was
473 listed three times). Hence it has no next or previous node that
474 @kbd{n} or @kbd{p} could move to.
475
476 If you systematically move through a manual by typing @kbd{n}, you run
477 the risk of skipping many nodes. You do not run this risk if you
478 systematically use @kbd{@key{SPC}}, because, when you scroll to the
479 bottom of a node and type another @kbd{@key{SPC}}, then this carries
480 you to the following node in the manual @emph{regardless of level}.
481 If you immediately want to go to that node, without having to scroll
482 to the bottom of the screen first, you can type @kbd{]}.
483
484 Similarly, @kbd{@key{BACKSPACE}} (or @kbd{@key{S-SPC}}) carries you to
485 the preceding node regardless of level, after you scrolled to the
486 beginning of the present node. If you want to go to the preceding
487 node immediately, you can type @kbd{[}.
488
489 For instance, typing this sequence will come back here in three steps:
490 @kbd{[ n [}. To do the same backward, type @kbd{] p ]}.
491
492 Now type @kbd{]} to go to the next node and learn about menus.
493
494 @node Help-M, Help-Xref, Help-Inv, Getting Started
495 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
496 @section Menus and the @kbd{m} command
497
498 @cindex menus in an Info document
499 @cindex Info menus
500 With only the @kbd{n} (next), @kbd{p} (previous), @kbd{@key{SPC}},
501 @kbd{@key{BACKSPACE}}, @kbd{]} and @kbd{[} commands for moving between
502 nodes, nodes are restricted to a linear sequence. Menus allow a
503 branching structure. A menu is a list of other nodes you can move to.
504 It is actually just part of the text of the node formatted specially
505 so that Info can interpret it. The beginning of a menu is always
506 identified by a line which starts with @w{@samp{* Menu:}}. A node
507 contains a menu if and only if it has a line in it which starts that
508 way. The only menu you can use at any moment is the one in the node
509 you are in. To use a menu in any other node, you must move to that
510 node first.
511
512 After the start of the menu, each line that starts with a @samp{*}
513 identifies one subtopic. The line usually contains a brief name for
514 the subtopic (followed by a @samp{:}, normally hidden in Emacs), the
515 name of the node that talks about that subtopic (again, normally
516 hidden in Emacs), and optionally some further description of the
517 subtopic. Lines in the menu that do not start with a @samp{*} have no
518 special meaning---they are only for the human reader's benefit and do
519 not define additional subtopics. Here is an example:
520
521 @example
522 * Foo: Node about FOO. This tells about FOO.
523 @end example
524
525 The subtopic name is Foo, and the node describing it is @samp{Node
526 about FOO}. The rest of the line is just for the reader's
527 Information. [[ But this line is not a real menu item, simply because
528 there is no line above it which starts with @w{@samp{* Menu:}}. Also,
529 in a real menu item, the @samp{*} would appear at the very start of
530 the line. This is why the ``normally hidden'' text in Emacs, namely
531 @samp{: Node about FOO.}, is actually visible in this example, even
532 when Visible mode is off.]]
533
534 When you use a menu to go to another node (in a way that will be
535 described soon), what you specify is the subtopic name, the first
536 thing in the menu line. Info uses it to find the menu line, extracts
537 the node name from it, and goes to that node. The reason that there
538 is both a subtopic name and a node name is that the node name must be
539 meaningful to the computer and may therefore have to be ugly looking.
540 The subtopic name can be chosen just to be convenient for the user to
541 specify. Often the node name is convenient for the user to specify
542 and so both it and the subtopic name are the same. There is an
543 abbreviation for this:
544
545 @example
546 * Foo:: This tells about FOO.
547 @end example
548
549 @noindent
550 This means that the subtopic name and node name are the same; they are
551 both @samp{Foo}. (The @samp{::} is normally hidden in Emacs.)
552
553 @format
554 >> Now use @key{SPC} to find the menu in this node, then come back to
555 the front with a @kbd{b} and some @key{SPC}s. As you see, a menu is
556 actually visible in its node. If you cannot find a menu in a node
557 by looking at it, then the node does not have a menu and the
558 @kbd{m} command is not available.
559 @end format
560
561 If you keep typing @key{SPC} once the menu appears on the screen, it
562 will move to another node (the first one in the menu). If that
563 happens, type @key{BACKSPACE} to come back.
564
565 @kindex m @r{(Info mode)}
566 The command to go to one of the subnodes is @kbd{m}. This is very
567 different from the commands you have used: it is a command that
568 prompts you for more input.
569
570 The Info commands you know do not need additional input; when you
571 type one of them, Info processes it instantly and then is ready for
572 another command. The @kbd{m} command is different: it needs to know
573 the @dfn{name of the subtopic}. Once you have typed @kbd{m}, Info
574 tries to read the subtopic name.
575
576 Now, in the stand-alone Info, look for the line containing many
577 dashes near the bottom of the screen. (This is the stand-alone
578 equivalent for the mode line in Emacs.) There is one more line
579 beneath that one, but usually it is blank. (In Emacs, this is the
580 echo area.) When it is blank, Info is ready for a command, such as
581 @kbd{n} or @kbd{b} or @key{SPC} or @kbd{m}. If that line contains
582 text ending in a colon, it means Info is reading more input for the
583 last command. You can't type an Info command then, because Info is
584 trying to read input, not commands. You must either give the input
585 and finish the command you started, or type @kbd{Control-g} to cancel
586 the command. When you have done one of those things, the input entry
587 line becomes blank again. Then you can type Info commands again.
588
589 @findex Info-menu
590 The command to go to a subnode via a menu is @kbd{m}. After you type
591 the @kbd{m}, the line at the bottom of the screen says @samp{Menu item: }.
592 You must then type the name of the subtopic you want, and end it with
593 a @key{RET}.
594
595 @cindex abbreviating Info subnodes
596 You can abbreviate the subtopic name. If the abbreviation is not
597 unique, the first matching subtopic is chosen. Some menus put
598 the shortest possible abbreviation for each subtopic name in capital
599 letters, so you can see how much you need to type. It does not
600 matter whether you use upper case or lower case when you type the
601 subtopic. You should not put any spaces at the end, or inside of the
602 item name, except for one space where a space appears in the item in
603 the menu.
604
605 @cindex completion of Info node names
606 You can also use the @dfn{completion} feature to help enter the
607 subtopic name. If you type the @key{TAB} key after entering part of a
608 name, it will fill in more of the name---as much as Info can deduce
609 from the part you have entered.
610
611 If you move the cursor to one of the menu subtopic lines, then you do
612 not need to type the argument: you just type a @key{RET}, and it
613 stands for the subtopic of the line you are on. You can also click
614 the middle mouse button directly on the subtopic line to go there.
615
616 Here is a menu to give you a chance to practice. This menu gives you
617 three ways of going to one place, Help-FOO:
618
619 @menu
620 * Foo: Help-FOO. A node you can visit for fun.
621 * Bar: Help-FOO. We have made two ways to get to the same place.
622 * Help-FOO:: And yet another!
623 @end menu
624
625 (Turn Visible mode on if you are using Emacs.)
626
627 @format
628 >> Now type just an @kbd{m} and see what happens:
629 @end format
630
631 Now you are ``inside'' an @kbd{m} command. Commands cannot be used
632 now; the next thing you will type must be the name of a subtopic.
633
634 You can change your mind about doing the @kbd{m} by typing
635 @kbd{Control-g}.
636
637 @format
638 >> Try that now; notice the bottom line clear.
639 @end format
640
641 @format
642 >> Then type another @kbd{m}.
643 @end format
644
645 @format
646 >> Now type @kbd{BAR}, the item name. Do not type @key{RET} yet.
647 @end format
648
649 While you are typing the item name, you can use the @key{DEL} (or
650 @key{BACKSPACE}) key to cancel one character at a time if you make a
651 mistake.
652
653 @format
654 >> Press @key{DEL} to cancel the @samp{R}. You could type another @kbd{R}
655 to replace it. But you do not have to, since @samp{BA} is a valid
656 abbreviation.
657 @end format
658
659 @format
660 >> Now you are ready to go. Type a @key{RET}.
661 @end format
662
663 After visiting @samp{Help-FOO}, you should return here.
664
665 Another way to move to the menu subtopic lines and between them is
666 to type @key{TAB}. Each time you type a @key{TAB}, you move to the
667 next subtopic line. To move to a previous subtopic line in the
668 stand-alone reader, type @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}---that is, press and hold
669 the @key{META} key and then press @key{TAB}. (On some keyboards, the
670 @key{META} key might be labeled @samp{Alt}.) In Emacs Info, type
671 @kbd{S-@key{TAB}} to move to a previous subtopic line (press and hold
672 the @key{Shift} key and then press @key{TAB}).
673
674 Once you move cursor to a subtopic line, press @key{RET} to go to
675 that subtopic's node.
676
677 @cindex mouse support in Info mode
678 @kindex Mouse-2 @r{(Info mode)}
679 If your terminal supports a mouse, you have yet another way of going
680 to a subtopic. Move your mouse pointer to the subtopic line,
681 somewhere between the beginning @samp{*} and the colon @samp{:} which
682 ends the subtopic's brief name. You will see the subtopic's name
683 change its appearance (usually, its background color will change), and
684 the shape of the mouse pointer will change if your platform supports
685 that. After a while, if you leave the mouse on that spot, a small
686 window will pop up, saying ``Mouse-2: go to that node,'' or the same
687 message may appear at the bottom of the screen.
688
689 @kbd{Mouse-2} is the second button of your mouse counting from the
690 left---the middle button on a 3-button mouse. (On a 2-button mouse,
691 you may have to press both buttons together to ``press the middle
692 button''.) The message tells you pressing @kbd{Mouse-2} with the
693 current position of the mouse pointer (on subtopic in the menu) will
694 go to that subtopic.
695
696 @findex Info-mouse-follow-nearest-node
697 More generally, @kbd{Mouse-2} in an Info buffer finds the nearest
698 link to another node and goes there. For example, near a cross
699 reference it acts like @kbd{f}, in a menu it acts like @kbd{m}, on the
700 node's header line it acts like @kbd{n}, @kbd{p}, or @kbd{u}, etc. At
701 end of the node's text @kbd{Mouse-2} moves to the next node, or up if
702 there's no next node.
703
704 @format
705 >> Type @kbd{n} to see more commands.
706 @end format
707
708 @node Help-FOO, , , Help-M
709 @subsection The @kbd{u} command
710
711 Congratulations! This is the node @samp{Help-FOO}. It has an @samp{Up}
712 pointer @samp{Help-M}, the node you just came from via the @kbd{m}
713 command. This is the usual convention---the nodes you reach from a menu
714 have @samp{Up} nodes that lead back to the menu. Menus move Down in the
715 tree, and @samp{Up} moves Up. @samp{Previous}, on the other hand, is
716 usually used to ``stay on the same level but go backwards''.
717
718 @kindex u @r{(Info mode)}
719 @findex Info-up
720 You can go back to the node @samp{Help-M} by typing the command
721 @kbd{u} for ``Up''. This puts you at the menu subtopic line pointing
722 to the subnode that the @kbd{u} command brought you from. (Some Info
723 readers may put you at the @emph{front} of the node instead---to get
724 back to where you were reading, you have to type some @key{SPC}s.)
725
726 Another way to go Up is to click @kbd{Mouse-2} on the @samp{Up}
727 pointer shown in the header line (provided that you have a mouse).
728
729 @format
730 >> Now type @kbd{u} to move back up to @samp{Help-M}.
731 @end format
732
733 @node Help-Xref, Help-Int, Help-M, Getting Started
734 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
735 @section Following Cross-References
736
737 @cindex cross references in Info documents
738 In Info documentation, you will see many @dfn{cross references}.
739 Cross references look like this: @xref{Help-Cross, Cross}. That text
740 is a real, live cross reference, whose name is @samp{Cross} and which
741 points to the node named @samp{Help-Cross}. (The node name is hidden
742 in Emacs. Do @kbd{M-x visible-mode} to show or hide it.)
743
744 @kindex f @r{(Info mode)}
745 @findex Info-follow-reference
746 You can follow a cross reference by moving the cursor to it and
747 press @key{RET}, just as in a menu. In Emacs, you can also click
748 @kbd{Mouse-1} on a cross reference to follow it; you can see that the
749 cross reference is mouse-sensitive by moving the mouse pointer to the
750 reference and watching how the underlying text and the mouse pointer
751 change in response.
752
753 Another way to follow a cross reference is to type @kbd{f} and then
754 specify the name of the cross reference (in this case, @samp{Cross})
755 as an argument. For this command, it does not matter where the cursor
756 was. If the cursor is on or near a cross reference, @kbd{f} suggests
757 that reference name in parentheses as the default; typing @key{RET}
758 will follow that reference. However, if you type a different
759 reference name, @kbd{f} will follow the other reference which has that
760 name.
761
762 @format
763 >> Type @kbd{f}, followed by @kbd{Cross}, and then @key{RET}.
764 @end format
765
766 As you enter the reference name, you can use the @key{DEL} (or
767 @key{BACKSPACE}) key to edit your input. If you change your mind
768 about following any reference, you can use @kbd{Control-g} to cancel
769 the command. Completion is available in the @kbd{f} command; you can
770 complete among all the cross reference names in the current node by
771 typing a @key{TAB}.
772
773 To get a list of all the cross references in the current node, you
774 can type @kbd{?} after an @kbd{f}. The @kbd{f} continues to await a
775 cross reference name even after displaying the list, so if you don't
776 actually want to follow a reference, you should type a @kbd{Control-g}
777 to cancel the @kbd{f}.
778
779 @format
780 >> Type @kbd{f?} to get a list of the cross references in this node. Then
781 type a @kbd{Control-g} and see how the @samp{f} gives up.
782 @end format
783
784 The @key{TAB}, @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} and @kbd{S-@key{TAB}} keys,
785 which move between menu items in a menu, also move between cross
786 references outside of menus.
787
788 Sometimes a cross reference (or a node) can lead to another file (in
789 other words another ``manual''), or, on occasion, even a file on a
790 remote machine (although Info files distributed with Emacs or the
791 stand-alone Info avoid using remote links). Such a cross reference
792 looks like this: @xref{Top,, Overview of Texinfo, texinfo, Texinfo:
793 The GNU Documentation Format}. (After following this link, type
794 @kbd{l} to get back to this node.) Here the name @samp{texinfo}
795 between parentheses refers to the file name. This file name appears
796 in cross references and node names if it differs from the current
797 file, so you can always know that you are going to be switching to
798 another manual and which one.
799
800 However, Emacs normally hides some other text in cross-references.
801 If you put your mouse over the cross reference, then the information
802 appearing in a separate box (tool tip) or in the echo area will show
803 the full cross-reference including the file name and the node name of
804 the cross reference. If you have a mouse, just leave it over the
805 cross reference @xref{Top,, Overview of Texinfo, texinfo, Texinfo:
806 The GNU Documentation Format}, and watch what happens. If you
807 always like to have that information visible without having to move
808 your mouse over the cross reference, use @kbd{M-x visible-mode}, or
809 set @code{Info-hide-note-references} to a value other than @code{t}
810 (@pxref{Emacs Info Variables}).
811
812 @format
813 >> Now type @kbd{n} to learn more commands.
814 @end format
815
816 @node Help-Int, Help-Q, Help-Xref, Getting Started
817 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
818 @section Some intermediate Info commands
819
820 The introductory course is almost over; please continue
821 a little longer to learn some intermediate-level commands.
822
823 Most Info files have an index, which is actually a large node
824 containing little but a menu. The menu has one menu item for each
825 topic listed in the index. (As a special feature, menus for indices
826 may also include the line number within the node of the index entry.
827 This allows Info readers to go to the exact line of an entry, not just
828 the start of the containing node.)
829
830 You can get to the index from the main menu of the file with the
831 @kbd{m} command and the name of the index node; then you can use the
832 @kbd{m} command again in the index node to go to the node that
833 describes the topic you want.
834
835 There is also a short-cut Info command, @kbd{i}, which does all of
836 that for you. It searches the index for a given topic (a string) and
837 goes to the node which is listed in the index for that topic.
838 @xref{Search Index}, for a full explanation.
839
840 @kindex l @r{(Info mode)}
841 @findex Info-history-back
842 @cindex going back in Info history
843 If you have been moving around to different nodes and wish to
844 retrace your steps, the @kbd{l} command (@kbd{l} for @dfn{last}) will
845 do that, one node-step at a time. As you move from node to node, Info
846 records the nodes where you have been in a special history list. The
847 @kbd{l} command revisits nodes in the history list; each successive
848 @kbd{l} command moves one step back through the history.
849
850 @format
851 >> Try typing @kbd{p p n} and then three @kbd{l}'s, pausing in between
852 to see what each @kbd{l} does. You should wind up right back here.
853 @end format
854
855 Note the difference between @kbd{l} and @kbd{p}: @kbd{l} moves to
856 where @emph{you} last were, whereas @kbd{p} always moves to the node
857 which the header says is the @samp{Previous} node (from this node, the
858 @samp{Prev} link leads to @samp{Help-Xref}).
859
860 @kindex r @r{(Info mode)}
861 @findex Info-history-forward
862 @cindex going forward in Info history
863 You can use the @kbd{r} command (@code{Info-history-forward} in Emacs)
864 to revisit nodes in the history list in the forward direction, so that
865 @kbd{r} will return you to the node you came from by typing @kbd{l}.
866
867 @kindex L @r{(Info mode)}
868 @findex Info-history
869 @cindex history list of visited nodes
870 The @kbd{L} command (@code{Info-history} in Emacs) creates a virtual
871 node that contains a list of all nodes you visited. You can select
872 a previously visited node from this menu to revisit it.
873
874 @kindex d @r{(Info mode)}
875 @findex Info-directory
876 @cindex go to Directory node
877 The @kbd{d} command (@code{Info-directory} in Emacs) gets you
878 instantly to the Directory node. This node, which is the first one
879 you saw when you entered Info, has a menu which leads (directly or
880 indirectly, through other menus), to all the nodes that exist. The
881 Directory node lists all the manuals and other Info documents that
882 are, or could be, installed on your system.
883
884 @format
885 >> Try doing a @kbd{d}, then do an @kbd{l} to return here (yes,
886 @emph{do} return).
887 @end format
888
889 @kindex t @r{(Info mode)}
890 @findex Info-top-node
891 @cindex go to Top node
892 The @kbd{t} command moves to the @samp{Top} node of the manual.
893 This is useful if you want to browse the manual's main menu, or select
894 some specific top-level menu item. The Emacs command run by @kbd{t}
895 is @code{Info-top-node}.
896
897 @format
898 >> Now type @kbd{n} to see the last node of the course.
899 @end format
900
901 @xref{Advanced}, for more advanced Info features.
902
903 @c If a menu appears at the end of this node, remove it.
904 @c It is an accident of the menu updating command.
905
906 @node Help-Q, , Help-Int, Getting Started
907 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
908 @section Quitting Info
909
910 @kindex q @r{(Info mode)}
911 @findex Info-exit
912 @cindex quitting Info mode
913 To get out of Info, back to what you were doing before, type @kbd{q}
914 for @dfn{Quit}. This runs @code{Info-exit} in Emacs.
915
916 This is the end of the basic course on using Info. You have learned
917 how to move in an Info document, and how to follow menus and cross
918 references. This makes you ready for reading manuals top to bottom,
919 as new users should do when they learn a new package.
920
921 Another set of Info commands is useful when you need to find
922 something quickly in a manual---that is, when you need to use a manual
923 as a reference rather than as a tutorial. We urge you to learn
924 these search commands as well. If you want to do that now, follow this
925 cross reference to @ref{Advanced}.
926
927 Yet another set of commands are meant for experienced users; you can
928 find them by looking in the Directory node for documentation on Info.
929 Finding them will be a good exercise in using Info in the usual
930 manner.
931
932 @format
933 >> Type @kbd{d} to go to the Info directory node; then type
934 @kbd{mInfo} and Return, to get to the node about Info and
935 see what other help is available.
936 @end format
937
938
939 @node Advanced
940 @chapter Advanced Info Commands
941
942 This chapter describes various advanced Info commands. (If you
943 are using a stand-alone Info reader, there are additional commands
944 specific to it, which are documented in several chapters of @ref{Top,,
945 GNU Info, info-stnd, GNU Info}.)
946
947 @kindex C-q @r{(Info mode)}
948 One advanced command useful with most of the others described here
949 is @kbd{C-q}, which ``quotes'' the next character so that it is
950 entered literally (@pxref{Inserting Text,,,emacs,The GNU Emacs
951 Manual}). For example, pressing @kbd{?} ordinarily brings up a list
952 of completion possibilities. If you want to (for example) search for
953 an actual @samp{?} character, the simplest way is to insert it using
954 @kbd{C-q ?}. This works the same in Emacs and stand-alone Info.
955
956 @menu
957 * Search Text:: How to search Info documents.
958 * Search Index:: How to search the indices for specific subjects.
959 * Go to node:: How to go to a node by name.
960 * Choose menu subtopic:: How to choose a menu subtopic by its number.
961 * Create Info buffer:: How to create a new Info buffer in Emacs.
962 * Emacs Info Variables:: Variables modifying the behavior of Emacs Info.
963 @end menu
964
965
966 @node Search Text, Search Index, , Advanced
967 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
968 @section @kbd{s} searches Info documents
969
970 @cindex searching Info documents
971 @cindex Info document as a reference
972 The commands which move between and inside nodes allow you to read
973 the entire manual or its large portions. But what if you need to find
974 some information in the manual as fast as you can, and you don't know
975 or don't remember in what node to look for it? This need arises when
976 you use a manual as a @dfn{reference}, or when it is impractical to
977 read the entire manual before you start using the programs it
978 describes.
979
980 Info has powerful searching facilities that let you find things
981 quickly. You can search either the manual text or its indices.
982
983 @kindex s @r{(Info mode)}
984 @findex Info-search
985 The @kbd{s} command allows you to search a whole Info file for a string.
986 It switches to the next node if and when that is necessary. You
987 type @kbd{s} followed by the string to search for, terminated by
988 @key{RET}. To search for the same string again, just @kbd{s} followed
989 by @key{RET} will do. The file's nodes are scanned in the order
990 they are in the file, which has no necessary relationship to the
991 order that they may be in the tree structure of menus and @samp{next}
992 pointers. But normally the two orders are not very different. In any
993 case, you can always look at the mode line to find out what node you have
994 reached, if the header is not visible (this can happen, because @kbd{s}
995 puts your cursor at the occurrence of the string, not at the beginning
996 of the node).
997
998 @kindex C-s @r{(Info mode)}
999 @kindex C-r @r{(Info mode)}
1000 @findex isearch
1001 Instead of using @kbd{s} in Emacs Info and in the stand-alone Info,
1002 you can use an incremental search started with @kbd{C-s} or @kbd{C-r}.
1003 It can search through multiple Info nodes. @xref{Incremental Search,,,
1004 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. In Emacs, you can disable this behavior
1005 by setting the variable @code{Info-isearch-search} to @code{nil}
1006 (@pxref{Emacs Info Variables}).
1007
1008 @node Search Index, Go to node, Search Text, Advanced
1009 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1010 @section @kbd{i} searches the indices for specific subjects
1011
1012 @cindex searching Info indices
1013 @kindex i @r{(Info mode)}
1014 @findex Info-index
1015 Since most topics in the manual should be indexed, you should try
1016 the index search first before the text search. The @kbd{i} command
1017 prompts you for a subject and then looks up that subject in the
1018 indices. If it finds an index entry with the subject you typed, it
1019 goes to the node to which that index entry points. You should browse
1020 through that node to see whether the issue you are looking for is
1021 described there. If it isn't, type @kbd{,} one or more times to go
1022 through additional index entries which match your subject.
1023
1024 The @kbd{i} command and subsequent @kbd{,} commands find all index
1025 entries which include the string you typed @emph{as a substring}.
1026 For each match, Info shows in the echo area the full index entry it
1027 found. Often, the text of the full index entry already gives you
1028 enough information to decide whether it is relevant to what you are
1029 looking for, so we recommend that you read what Info shows in the echo
1030 area before looking at the node it displays.
1031
1032 Since @kbd{i} looks for a substring, you can search for subjects even
1033 if you are not sure how they are spelled in the index. For example,
1034 suppose you want to find something that is pertinent to commands which
1035 complete partial input (e.g., when you type @key{TAB}). If you want
1036 to catch index entries that refer to ``complete,'' ``completion,'' and
1037 ``completing,'' you could type @kbd{icomplet@key{RET}}.
1038
1039 Info documents which describe programs should index the commands,
1040 options, and key sequences that the program provides. If you are
1041 looking for a description of a command, an option, or a key, just type
1042 their names when @kbd{i} prompts you for a topic. For example, if you
1043 want to read the description of what the @kbd{C-l} key does, type
1044 @kbd{iC-l@key{RET}} literally.
1045
1046 @findex Info-virtual-index
1047 @kindex I @r{(Info mode)}
1048 Emacs provides the command @code{Info-virtual-index}, bound to the
1049 @kbd{I} key. This behaves like @kbd{i}, but constructs a virtual
1050 info node displaying the results of an index search, making it easier
1051 to select the one you want.
1052
1053 @findex info-apropos
1054 @findex index-apropos
1055 If you aren't sure which manual documents the topic you are looking
1056 for, try the @kbd{M-x info-apropos} command in Emacs, or the @kbd{M-x
1057 index-apropos} command in the stand-alone reader. It prompts for
1058 a string and then looks up that string in all the indices of all the
1059 Info documents installed on your system.
1060
1061 @node Go to node, Choose menu subtopic, Search Index, Advanced
1062 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1063 @section @kbd{g} goes to a node by name
1064
1065 @kindex g @r{(Info mode)}
1066 @findex Info-goto-node
1067 @cindex go to a node by name
1068 If you know a node's name, you can go there by typing @kbd{g}, the
1069 name, and @key{RET}. Thus, @kbd{gTop@key{RET}} would go to the node
1070 called @samp{Top} in this file. (This is equivalent to @kbd{t}, see
1071 @ref{Help-Int}.) @kbd{gGo to node@key{RET}} would come back here.
1072
1073 Unlike @kbd{m}, @kbd{g} does not allow the use of abbreviations.
1074 But it does allow completion, so you can type @key{TAB} to complete a
1075 partial node name.
1076
1077 @cindex go to another Info file
1078 To go to a node in another file, you can include the file name in the
1079 node name by putting it at the front, in parentheses. Thus,
1080 @kbd{g(dir)Top@key{RET}} would go to the Info Directory node, which is
1081 the node @samp{Top} in the Info file @file{dir}. Likewise,
1082 @kbd{g(emacs)Top@key{RET}} (or just @kbd{g(emacs)@key{RET}}) goes to the
1083 top node of the Emacs manual.
1084
1085 The node name @samp{*} specifies the whole file. So you can look at
1086 all of the current file by typing @kbd{g*@key{RET}} or all of any
1087 other file with @kbd{g(@var{filename})*@key{RET}}.
1088
1089 @node Choose menu subtopic, Create Info buffer, Go to node, Advanced
1090 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1091 @section @kbd{1}--@kbd{9} choose a menu subtopic by its number
1092
1093 @kindex 1 @r{through} 9 @r{(Info mode)}
1094 @findex Info-nth-menu-item
1095 @cindex select @var{n}'th menu item
1096 If you begrudge each character of type-in which your system requires,
1097 you might like to use the commands @kbd{1}, @kbd{2}, @kbd{3}, @kbd{4},
1098 @dots{}, @kbd{9}. They are short for the @kbd{m} command together
1099 with a name of a menu subtopic. @kbd{1} goes through the first item
1100 in the current node's menu; @kbd{2} goes through the second item, etc.
1101 In the stand-alone reader, @kbd{0} goes through the last menu item;
1102 this is so you need not count how many entries are there.
1103
1104 If your display supports multiple fonts, colors or underlining, and
1105 you are using Emacs's Info mode to read Info files, the third, sixth
1106 and ninth menu items have a @samp{*} that stands out, either in color
1107 or in some other attribute, such as underline; this makes it easy to
1108 see at a glance which number to use for an item.
1109
1110 Some terminals don't support either multiple fonts, colors or
1111 underlining. If you need to actually count items, it is better to use
1112 @kbd{m} instead, and specify the name, or use @key{TAB} to quickly
1113 move between menu items.
1114
1115 @node Create Info buffer, Emacs Info Variables, Choose menu subtopic, Advanced
1116 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1117 @section @kbd{M-n} creates a new independent Info buffer in Emacs
1118
1119 @kindex M-n @r{(Info mode)}
1120 @findex clone-buffer
1121 @cindex multiple Info buffers
1122 If you are reading Info in Emacs, you can select a new independent
1123 Info buffer in a new Emacs window by typing @kbd{M-n}. The new buffer
1124 starts out as an exact copy of the old one, but you will be able to
1125 move independently between nodes in the two buffers. (In Info mode,
1126 @kbd{M-n} runs the Emacs command @code{clone-buffer}.)
1127
1128 In Emacs Info, you can also produce new Info buffers by giving a
1129 numeric prefix argument to the @kbd{m} and @kbd{g} commands. @kbd{C-u
1130 m} and @kbd{C-u g} go to a new node in exactly the same way that
1131 @kbd{m} and @kbd{g} do, but they do so in a new Info buffer which they
1132 select in another window.
1133
1134 Another way to produce new Info buffers in Emacs is to use a numeric
1135 prefix argument for the @kbd{C-h i} command (@code{info}) which
1136 switches to the Info buffer with that number. Thus, @kbd{C-u 2 C-h i}
1137 switches to the buffer @samp{*info*<2>}, creating it if necessary.
1138
1139 @findex info-display-manual
1140 If you have created many Info buffers in Emacs, you might find it
1141 difficult to remember which buffer is showing which manual. You can
1142 use the command @kbd{M-x info-display-manual} to show an Info manual
1143 by name, reusing an existing buffer if there is one.
1144
1145 @node Emacs Info Variables, , Create Info buffer, Advanced
1146 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1147 @section Emacs Info-mode Variables
1148
1149 The following variables may modify the behavior of Info-mode in Emacs;
1150 you may wish to set one or several of these variables interactively,
1151 or in your init file. @xref{Examining, Examining and Setting
1152 Variables, Examining and Setting Variables, emacs, The GNU Emacs
1153 Manual}. The stand-alone Info reader program has its own set of
1154 variables, described in @ref{Variables,, Manipulating Variables,
1155 info-stnd, GNU Info}.
1156
1157 @vtable @code
1158 @item Info-directory-list
1159 The list of directories to search for Info files. Each element is a
1160 string (directory name) or @code{nil} (try default directory). If not
1161 initialized Info uses the environment variable @env{INFOPATH} to
1162 initialize it, or @code{Info-default-directory-list} if there is no
1163 @env{INFOPATH} variable in the environment.
1164
1165 If you wish to customize the Info directory search list for both Emacs
1166 Info and stand-alone Info, it is best to set the @env{INFOPATH}
1167 environment variable, since that applies to both programs.
1168
1169 @item Info-additional-directory-list
1170 A list of additional directories to search for Info documentation files.
1171 These directories are not searched for merging the @file{dir} file.
1172
1173 @item Info-mode-hook
1174 Hooks run when @code{Info-mode} is called. By default, it contains
1175 the hook @code{turn-on-font-lock} which enables highlighting of Info
1176 files. You can change how the highlighting looks by customizing the
1177 faces @code{info-node}, @code{info-xref}, @code{info-xref-visited},
1178 @code{info-header-xref}, @code{info-header-node}, @code{info-menu-header},
1179 @code{info-menu-star}, and @code{info-title-@var{n}} (where @var{n}
1180 is the level of the section, a number between 1 and 4). To customize
1181 a face, type @kbd{M-x customize-face @key{RET} @var{face} @key{RET}},
1182 where @var{face} is one of the face names listed here.
1183
1184 @item Info-fontify-maximum-menu-size
1185 Maximum size of menu to fontify if @code{font-lock-mode} is non-@code{nil}.
1186
1187 @item Info-fontify-visited-nodes
1188 If non-@code{nil}, menu items and cross-references pointing to visited
1189 nodes are displayed in the @code{info-xref-visited} face.
1190
1191 @item Info-use-header-line
1192 If non-@code{nil}, Emacs puts in the Info buffer a header line showing
1193 the @samp{Next}, @samp{Prev}, and @samp{Up} links. A header line does
1194 not scroll with the rest of the buffer, making these links always
1195 visible.
1196
1197 @item Info-hide-note-references
1198 As explained in earlier nodes, the Emacs version of Info normally
1199 hides some text in menus and cross-references. You can completely
1200 disable this feature, by setting this option to @code{nil}. Setting
1201 it to a value that is neither @code{nil} nor @code{t} produces an
1202 intermediate behavior, hiding a limited amount of text, but showing
1203 all text that could potentially be useful.
1204
1205 @item Info-scroll-prefer-subnodes
1206 If set to a non-@code{nil} value, @key{SPC} and @key{BACKSPACE} (or
1207 @key{DEL}, or @key{S-SPC}) keys in a menu visit subnodes of the
1208 current node before scrolling to its end or beginning, respectively.
1209 For example, if the node's menu appears on the screen, the next
1210 @key{SPC} moves to a subnode indicated by the following menu item.
1211 Setting this option to @code{nil} results in behavior similar to the
1212 stand-alone Info reader program, which visits the first subnode from
1213 the menu only when you hit the end of the current node. The default
1214 is @code{nil}.
1215
1216 @item Info-isearch-search
1217 If non-@code{nil}, isearch in Info searches through multiple nodes.
1218
1219 @item Info-enable-active-nodes
1220 When set to a non-@code{nil} value, allows Info to execute Lisp code
1221 associated with nodes. The Lisp code is executed when the node is
1222 selected. The Lisp code to be executed should follow the node
1223 delimiter (the @samp{DEL} character) and an @samp{execute: } tag, like
1224 this:
1225
1226 @example
1227 ^_execute: (message "This is an active node!")
1228 @end example
1229 @end vtable
1230
1231
1232 @node Expert Info
1233 @chapter Info for Experts
1234 @cindex Texinfo
1235
1236 This chapter explains how to write an Info file by hand. However,
1237 in most cases, writing a Texinfo file is better, since you can use it
1238 to make a printed manual or produce other formats, such as HTML and
1239 DocBook, as well as for generating Info files.
1240
1241 The @code{makeinfo} command converts a Texinfo file into an Info file;
1242 @code{texinfo-format-region} and @code{texinfo-format-buffer} are GNU
1243 Emacs functions that do the same.
1244
1245 @xref{Top,, Overview of Texinfo, texinfo, Texinfo: The GNU
1246 Documentation Format}, for how to write a Texinfo file.
1247
1248 @xref{Creating an Info File,,, texinfo, Texinfo: The GNU Documentation
1249 Format}, for how to create an Info file from a Texinfo file.
1250
1251 @xref{Installing an Info File,,, texinfo, Texinfo: The GNU
1252 Documentation Format}, for how to install an Info file after you
1253 have created one.
1254
1255 However, if you want to edit an Info file manually and install it manually,
1256 here is how.
1257
1258 @menu
1259 * Add:: Describes how to add new nodes to the hierarchy.
1260 Also tells what nodes look like.
1261 * Menus:: How to add to or create menus in Info nodes.
1262 * Cross-refs:: How to add cross-references to Info nodes.
1263 * Tags:: How to make tags tables for Info files.
1264 * Checking:: Checking an Info File.
1265 @end menu
1266
1267 @node Add, Menus, , Expert Info
1268 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1269 @section Adding a new node to Info
1270
1271 To add a new topic to the list in the Info directory, you must:
1272
1273 @enumerate
1274 @item
1275 Create some nodes, in some file, to document that topic.
1276 @item
1277 Put that topic in the menu in the directory. @xref{Menus, Menu}.
1278 @end enumerate
1279
1280 @cindex node delimiters
1281 The new node can live in an existing documentation file, or in a new
1282 one. It must have a @samp{^_} character before it (invisible to the
1283 user; this node has one but you cannot see it), and it ends with either
1284 a @samp{^_}, a @samp{^L} (``formfeed''), or the end of file.@footnote{If
1285 you put in a @samp{^L} to end a new node, be sure that there is a
1286 @samp{^_} after it to start the next one, since @samp{^L} cannot
1287 @emph{start} a node. Also, a nicer way to make a node boundary be a
1288 page boundary as well is to put a @samp{^L} @emph{right after} the
1289 @samp{^_}.}
1290
1291 The @samp{^_} starting a node must be followed by a newline or a
1292 @samp{^L} newline, after which comes the node's header line. The
1293 header line must give the node's name (by which Info finds it), and
1294 state the names of the @samp{Next}, @samp{Previous}, and @samp{Up}
1295 nodes (if there are any). As you can see, this node's @samp{Up} node
1296 is the node @samp{Expert Info}. The @samp{Next} node is @samp{Menus}.
1297
1298 @cindex node header line format
1299 @cindex format of node headers
1300 The keywords @dfn{Node}, @dfn{Next}, @dfn{Previous}, and @dfn{Up}
1301 may appear in any order, anywhere in the header line, but the
1302 recommended order is the one in this sentence. Each keyword must be
1303 followed by a colon, spaces and tabs, and then the appropriate name.
1304 The name may be terminated with a tab, a comma, or a newline. A space
1305 does not end it; node names may contain spaces. The case of letters
1306 in the names is insignificant.
1307
1308 @cindex node name format
1309 @cindex Directory node
1310 A node name has two forms. A node in the current file is named by
1311 what appears after the @samp{Node: } in that node's first line. For
1312 example, this node's name is @samp{Add}. A node in another file is
1313 named by @samp{(@var{filename})@var{node-within-file}}, as in
1314 @samp{(info)Add} for this node. If the file name starts with @samp{./},
1315 then it is relative to the current directory; otherwise, it is
1316 relative starting from the standard directory for Info files of your
1317 site. The name @samp{(@var{filename})Top} can be abbreviated to just
1318 @samp{(@var{filename})}. By convention, the name @samp{Top} is used
1319 for the ``highest'' node in any single file---the node whose @samp{Up}
1320 points out of the file. The @samp{Directory} node is @file{(dir)}, it
1321 points to a file @file{dir} which holds a large menu listing all the
1322 Info documents installed on your site. The @samp{Top} node of a
1323 document file listed in the @samp{Directory} should have an @samp{Up:
1324 (dir)} in it.
1325
1326 @cindex unstructured documents
1327 The node name @kbd{*} is special: it refers to the entire file.
1328 Thus, @kbd{g*} shows you the whole current file. The use of the
1329 node @kbd{*} is to make it possible to make old-fashioned,
1330 unstructured files into nodes of the tree.
1331
1332 The @samp{Node:} name, in which a node states its own name, must not
1333 contain a file name, since when Info searches for a node, it does not
1334 expect a file name to be there. The @samp{Next}, @samp{Previous} and
1335 @samp{Up} names may contain them. In this node, since the @samp{Up}
1336 node is in the same file, it was not necessary to use one.
1337
1338 Note that the nodes in this file have a file name in the header
1339 line. The file names are ignored by Info, but they serve as comments
1340 to help identify the node for the user.
1341
1342 @node Menus, Cross-refs, Add, Expert Info
1343 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1344 @section How to Create Menus
1345
1346 Any node in the Info hierarchy may have a @dfn{menu}---a list of subnodes.
1347 The @kbd{m} command searches the current node's menu for the topic which it
1348 reads from the terminal.
1349
1350 @cindex menu and menu entry format
1351 A menu begins with a line starting with @w{@samp{* Menu:}}. The
1352 rest of the line is a comment. After the starting line, every line
1353 that begins with a @samp{* } lists a single topic. The name of the
1354 topic---what the user must type at the @kbd{m}'s command prompt to
1355 select this topic---comes right after the star and space, and is
1356 followed by a colon, spaces and tabs, and the name of the node which
1357 discusses that topic. The node name, like node names following
1358 @samp{Next}, @samp{Previous} and @samp{Up}, may be terminated with a
1359 tab, comma, or newline; it may also be terminated with a period.
1360
1361 If the node name and topic name are the same, then rather than
1362 giving the name twice, the abbreviation @samp{* @var{name}::} may be
1363 used (and should be used, whenever possible, as it reduces the visual
1364 clutter in the menu).
1365
1366 It is considerate to choose the topic names so that they differ
1367 from each other very near the beginning---this allows the user to type
1368 short abbreviations. In a long menu, it is a good idea to capitalize
1369 the beginning of each item name which is the minimum acceptable
1370 abbreviation for it (a long menu is more than 5 or so entries).
1371
1372 The nodes listed in a node's menu are called its ``subnodes,'' and it
1373 is their ``superior''. They should each have an @samp{Up:} pointing at
1374 the superior. It is often useful to arrange all or most of the subnodes
1375 in a sequence of @samp{Next} and @samp{Previous} pointers so that
1376 someone who wants to see them all need not keep revisiting the Menu.
1377
1378 The Info Directory is simply the menu of the node @samp{(dir)Top}---that
1379 is, node @samp{Top} in file @file{.../info/dir}. You can put new entries
1380 in that menu just like any other menu. The Info Directory is @emph{not} the
1381 same as the file directory called @file{info}. It happens that many of
1382 Info's files live in that file directory, but they do not have to; and
1383 files in that directory are not automatically listed in the Info
1384 Directory node.
1385
1386 Also, although the Info node graph is claimed to be a ``hierarchy,''
1387 in fact it can be @emph{any} directed graph. Shared structures and
1388 pointer cycles are perfectly possible, and can be used if they are
1389 appropriate to the meaning to be expressed. There is no need for all
1390 the nodes in a file to form a connected structure. In fact, this file
1391 has two connected components. You are in one of them, which is under
1392 the node @samp{Top}; the other contains the node @samp{Help} which the
1393 @kbd{h} command goes to. In fact, since there is no garbage
1394 collector on the node graph, nothing terrible happens if a substructure
1395 is not pointed to, but such a substructure is rather useless since nobody
1396 can ever find out that it exists.
1397
1398 @node Cross-refs, Tags, Menus, Expert Info
1399 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1400 @section Creating Cross References
1401
1402 @cindex cross reference format
1403 A cross reference can be placed anywhere in the text, unlike a menu
1404 item which must go at the front of a line. A cross reference looks
1405 like a menu item except that it has @samp{*note} instead of @samp{*}.
1406 It @emph{cannot} be terminated by a @samp{)}, because @samp{)}'s are
1407 so often part of node names. If you wish to enclose a cross reference
1408 in parentheses, terminate it with a period first. Here are two
1409 examples of cross references pointers:
1410
1411 @example
1412 *Note details: commands. (See *note 3: Full Proof.)
1413 @end example
1414
1415 @noindent
1416 @emph{These are just examples.} The places they ``lead to'' do not
1417 really exist!
1418
1419 @menu
1420 * Help-Cross:: Target of a cross-reference.
1421 @end menu
1422
1423
1424 @node Help-Cross, , , Cross-refs
1425 @subsection The node reached by the cross reference in Info
1426
1427 This is the node reached by the cross reference named @samp{Cross}.
1428
1429 While this node is specifically intended to be reached by a cross
1430 reference, most cross references lead to nodes that ``belong''
1431 someplace else far away in the structure of an Info document. So you
1432 cannot expect this node to have a @samp{Next}, @samp{Previous} or
1433 @samp{Up} links pointing back to where you came from. In general, the
1434 @kbd{l} (el) command is the only way to get back there.
1435
1436 @format
1437 >> Type @kbd{l} to return to the node where the cross reference was.
1438 @end format
1439
1440 @node Tags, Checking, Cross-refs, Expert Info
1441 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
1442 @section Tags Tables for Info Files
1443
1444 @cindex tags tables in Info files
1445 You can speed up the access to nodes of a large Info file by giving
1446 it a tags table. Unlike the tags table for a program, the tags table for
1447 an Info file lives inside the file itself and is used
1448 automatically whenever Info reads in the file.
1449
1450 @findex Info-tagify
1451 To make a tags table, go to a node in the file using Emacs Info mode and type
1452 @kbd{M-x Info-tagify}. Then you must use @kbd{C-x C-s} to save the
1453 file. Info files produced by the @code{makeinfo} command that is part
1454 of the Texinfo package always have tags tables to begin with.
1455
1456 @cindex stale tags tables
1457 @cindex update Info tags table
1458 Once the Info file has a tags table, you must make certain it is up
1459 to date. If you edit an Info file directly (as opposed to editing its
1460 Texinfo source), and, as a result of deletion of text, any node moves back
1461 more than a thousand characters in the file from the position
1462 recorded in the tags table, Info will no longer be able to find that
1463 node. To update the tags table, use the @code{Info-tagify} command
1464 again.
1465
1466 An Info file tags table appears at the end of the file and looks like
1467 this:
1468
1469 @example
1470 ^_^L
1471 Tag Table:
1472 File: info, Node: Cross-refs^?21419
1473 File: info, Node: Tags^?22145
1474 ^_
1475 End Tag Table
1476 @end example
1477
1478 @noindent
1479 Note that it contains one line per node, and this line contains
1480 the beginning of the node's header (ending just after the node name),
1481 a @samp{DEL} character, and the character position in the file of the
1482 beginning of the node.
1483
1484 @node Checking, , Tags, Expert Info
1485 @section Checking an Info File
1486
1487 When creating an Info file, it is easy to forget the name of a node when
1488 you are making a pointer to it from another node. If you put in the
1489 wrong name for a node, this is not detected until someone tries to go
1490 through the pointer using Info. Verification of the Info file is an
1491 automatic process which checks all pointers to nodes and reports any
1492 pointers which are invalid. Every @samp{Next}, @samp{Previous}, and
1493 @samp{Up} is checked, as is every menu item and every cross reference. In
1494 addition, any @samp{Next} which does not have a @samp{Previous} pointing
1495 back is reported. Only pointers within the file are checked, because
1496 checking pointers to other files would be terribly slow. But those are
1497 usually few.
1498
1499 @findex Info-validate
1500 To check an Info file, do @kbd{M-x Info-validate} while looking at any
1501 node of the file with Emacs Info mode.
1502
1503 @node GNU Free Documentation License
1504 @appendix GNU Free Documentation License
1505 @include doclicense.texi
1506
1507 @node Index
1508 @unnumbered Index
1509
1510 This is an alphabetical listing of all the commands, variables, and
1511 topics discussed in this document.
1512
1513 @printindex cp
1514
1515 @bye