This is info.info, produced by texi2any version 6.0 from info.texi. This file describes how to use Info, the menu-driven GNU documentation system. Copyright © 1989, 1992, 1996–2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”. (a) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and modify this GNU manual.” INFO-DIR-SECTION Texinfo documentation system START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * Info: (info). How to use the documentation browsing system. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY  File: info.info, Node: Top, Next: Getting Started, Up: (dir) Info: An Introduction ********************* The GNU Project distributes most of its manuals in the “Info format”, which you read using an “Info reader”. You are probably using an Info reader to read this now. There are two primary Info readers: ‘info’, a stand-alone program designed just to read Info files (*note What is Info?: (info-stnd)Top.), and the ‘info’ package in GNU Emacs, a general-purpose editor. At present, only the Emacs reader supports using a mouse. If you are new to the Info reader and want to learn how to use it, type the command ‘h’ now. It brings you to a programmed instruction sequence. To read about advanced Info commands, type ‘n’ twice. This brings you to ‘Advanced Info Commands’, skipping over the ‘Getting Started’ chapter. Type ‘H’ to see a summary of all available commands. This file describes how to use Info, the menu-driven GNU documentation system. Copyright © 1989, 1992, 1996–2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”. (a) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and modify this GNU manual.” * Menu: * Getting Started:: Getting started using an Info reader. * Advanced:: Advanced Info commands. * Further Reading:: Where to learn more about Info files. * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation. * Index:: An index of topics, commands, and variables.  File: info.info, Node: Getting Started, Next: Advanced, Prev: Top, Up: Top 1 Getting Started ***************** This first part of this Info manual describes how to get around inside of Info. The second part of the manual describes various advanced Info commands. The third part contains references to other sources, which explain how to generate Info files from Texinfo files. * Menu: * Help-Small-Screen:: Starting Info on a Small Screen. * Help:: How to use Info. * Help-P:: Returning to the Previous node. * Help-^L:: The Space, DEL, B and ^L commands. * Help-Inv:: Invisible text in Emacs Info. * Help-M:: Menus. * Help-Xref:: Following cross-references. * Help-Int:: Some intermediate Info commands. * Help-Q:: Quitting Info.  File: info.info, Node: Help-Small-Screen, Next: Help, Up: Getting Started 1.1 Starting Info on a Small Screen =================================== Since your terminal has a relatively small number of lines on its screen, it is necessary to give you special advice at the beginning. If the entire text you are looking at fits on the screen, the text ‘All’ will be displayed near the bottom of the screen, on the mode line (usually, the line in inverse video). If you see the text ‘Top’ instead, it means that there is more text below that does not fit. To move forward through the text and see another screenful, press , the Space bar. To move back up, press the key labeled ‘Backspace’ or ‘DEL’ (on some keyboards, this key might be labeled ‘Delete’). In a graphical Emacs, you can also use ‘S-’ (press and hold the key and then press ) to move backwards, but this does not work in the stand-alone Info reader (nor in Emacs, if you are using it in a text-mode terminal). Here are 40 lines of junk, so you can try and and see what they do. At the end are instructions of what you should do next. This is line 20 This is line 21 This is line 22 This is line 23 This is line 24 This is line 25 This is line 26 This is line 27 This is line 28 This is line 29 This is line 30 This is line 31 This is line 32 This is line 33 This is line 34 This is line 35 This is line 36 This is line 37 This is line 38 This is line 39 This is line 40 This is line 41 This is line 42 This is line 43 This is line 44 This is line 45 This is line 46 This is line 47 This is line 48 This is line 49 This is line 50 This is line 51 This is line 52 This is line 53 This is line 54 This is line 55 This is line 56 This is line 57 This is line 58 This is line 59 If you have managed to get here, go back to the beginning with (or ), and come back here again, then you understand about the ‘Space’ and ‘Backspace’ keys. So now type an ‘n’—just one character; don’t type the quotes and don’t type the Return key afterward—to get to the normal start of the course.  File: info.info, Node: Help, Next: Help-P, Prev: Help-Small-Screen, Up: Getting Started 1.2 How to use Info =================== You are talking to the program Info, for reading documentation. There are two ways to use Info: from within Emacs or as a stand-alone reader that you can invoke from a shell using the command ‘info’. Right now you are looking at one “Node” of Information. A node contains text describing a specific topic at a specific level of detail. This node’s topic is “how to use Info”. The mode line says that this is node ‘Help’ in the file ‘info’. The top line of a node is its “header”. This node’s header (look at it now) says that the ‘Next’ node after this one is the node called ‘Help-P’. An advanced Info command lets you go to any node whose name you know. In the stand-alone Info reader program, the header line shows the names of this node and the Info file as well. In Emacs, the header line is displayed with a special typeface, and remains at the top of the window all the time even if you scroll through the node. Besides a ‘Next’, a node can have a ‘Previous’ link, or an ‘Up’ link, or both. As you can see, this node has all of these links. Now it is time to move on to the ‘Next’ node, named ‘Help-P’. >> Type ‘n’ to move there. Type just one character; do not type the quotes and do not type a afterward. ‘>>’ in the margin means it is really time to try a command. >> If you are in Emacs and have a mouse, and if you already practiced typing ‘n’ to get to the next node, click now with the left mouse button on the ‘Next’ link to do the same “the mouse way”.  File: info.info, Node: Help-P, Next: Help-^L, Prev: Help, Up: Getting Started 1.3 Returning to the Previous node ================================== This node is called ‘Help-P’. The ‘Previous’ node, as you see, is ‘Help’, which is the one you just came from using the ‘n’ command. Another ‘n’ command now would take you to the next node, ‘Help-^L’. >> But do not type ‘n’ yet. First, try the ‘p’ command, or (in Emacs) click on the ‘Prev’ link. That takes you to the ‘Previous’ node. Then use ‘n’ to return here. If you read this in Emacs, you will see an ‘Info’ item in the menu bar, close to its right edge. Clicking the mouse on the ‘Info’ menu-bar item opens a menu of commands which include ‘Next’ and ‘Previous’ (and also some others which you didn’t yet learn about). This all probably seems insultingly simple so far, but _please don’t_ start skimming. Things will get complicated soon enough! Also, please do not try a new command until you are told it is time to. You could make Info skip past an important warning that was coming up. >> Now do an ‘n’, or (in Emacs) click the middle mouse button on the ‘Next’ link, to get to the node ‘Help-^L’ and learn more.  File: info.info, Node: Help-^L, Next: Help-Inv, Prev: Help-P, Up: Getting Started 1.4 The Space, DEL, B and ^L commands ===================================== This node’s mode line tells you that you are now at node ‘Help-^L’, and the header line tells you that ‘p’ would get you back to ‘Help-P’. The node’s title is highlighted and may be underlined as well; it says what the node is about. This is a big node and it does not all fit on your display screen. You can tell that there is more that is not visible because you can see the text ‘Top’ rather than ‘All’ near the bottom of the screen. The , (or )(1) and ‘b’ commands exist to allow you to “move around” in a node that does not all fit on the screen at once. moves forward, to show what was below the bottom of the screen. or moves backward, to show what was above the top of the screen (there is not anything above the top until you have typed some spaces). >> Now try typing a (afterward, type a to return here). When you type the , the two lines that were at the bottom of the screen appear at the top, followed by more lines. or takes the two lines from the top and moves them to the bottom, _usually_, but if there are not a full screen’s worth of lines above them they may not make it all the way to the bottom. If you are reading this in Emacs, note that the header line is always visible, never scrolling off the display. That way, you can always see the ‘Next’, ‘Prev’, and ‘Up’ links, and you can conveniently go to one of these links at any time by clicking the middle mouse button on the link. and not only move forward and backward through the current node. They also move between nodes. at the end of a node moves to the next node; (or ) at the beginning of a node moves to the previous node. In effect, these commands scroll through all the nodes in an Info file as a single logical sequence. You can read an entire manual top to bottom by just typing , and move backward through the entire manual from bottom to top by typing (or ). In this sequence, a node’s subnodes appear following their parent. If a node has a menu, takes you into the subnodes listed in the menu, one by one. Once you reach the end of a node, and have seen all of its subnodes, takes you to the next node or to the parent’s next node. Many keyboards nowadays have two scroll keys labeled ‘PageUp’ and ‘PageDown’ (or maybe ‘Prior’ and ‘Next’). If your keyboard has these keys, you can use them to move forward and backward through the text of one node, like and (or ). However, and keys never scroll beyond the beginning or the end of the current node. If your screen is ever garbaged, you can tell Info to display it again by typing ‘C-l’ (‘Control-L’—that is, hold down and type ‘L’ or ‘l’). >> Type ‘C-l’ now. To move back to the beginning of the node you are on, you can type the key (or ) many times. You can also type ‘b’ just once. ‘b’ stands for “beginning.” >> Try that now. (We have put in enough verbiage to push this past the first screenful, but screens are so big nowadays that perhaps it isn’t enough. You may need to shrink your Emacs or Info window.) Then come back, by typing one or more times. You have just learned a considerable number of commands. If you want to use one but have trouble remembering which, you should type ‘?’, which displays a brief list of commands. When you are finished looking at the list, make it go away by typing repeatedly. >> Type a now. Press to see consecutive screenfuls of the list until finished. Then type several times. If you are using Emacs, the help will then go away automatically. If you are using the stand-alone Info reader, type ‘x’ to return here. From now on, you will encounter large nodes without warning, and will be expected to know how to use and to move around in them without being told. Since not all terminals have the same size screen, it would be impossible to warn you anyway. >> Now type ‘n’, or click the middle mouse button on the ‘Next’ link, to visit the next node. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) The key which we call “Backspace or DEL” in this manual is labeled differently on different keyboards. Look for a key which is a little ways above the or key and which you normally use outside Emacs to erase the character before the cursor, i.e., the character you typed last. It might be labeled ‘Backspace’ or ‘<-’ or ‘DEL’, or sometimes ‘Delete’.  File: info.info, Node: Help-Inv, Next: Help-M, Prev: Help-^L, Up: Getting Started 1.5 Invisible text in Emacs Info ================================ Before discussing menus, we need to make some remarks that are only relevant to users reading Info using Emacs. Users of the stand-alone version can skip this node by typing ‘]’ now. In Emacs, certain text that appears in the stand-alone version is normally hidden, technically because it has the ‘invisibility’ property. Invisible text is really a part of the text. It becomes visible (by default) after killing and yanking, it appears in printed output, it gets saved to file just like any other text, and so on. Thus it is useful to know it is there. You can make invisible text visible by using the command ‘M-x visible-mode’. Visible mode is a minor mode, so using the command a second time will make the text invisible again. Watch the effects of the command on the “menu” below and the top line of this node. If you prefer to _always_ see the invisible text, you can set ‘Info-hide-note-references’ to ‘nil’. Enabling Visible mode permanently is not a real alternative, because Emacs Info also uses (although less extensively) another text property that can change the text being displayed, the ‘display’ property. Only the invisibility property is affected by Visible mode. When, in this tutorial, we refer to the ‘Emacs’ behavior, we mean the _default_ Emacs behavior. Now type ‘]’, to learn about the ‘]’ and ‘[’ commands. * Menu: * ]: Help-]. Node telling about ]. * stuff: Help-]. Same node. * Help-]:: Yet again, same node.  File: info.info, Node: Help-], Up: Help-Inv 1.5.1 The ‘]’ and ‘[’ commands ------------------------------ If you type ‘n’ now, you get an error message saying that this node has no next node. Similarly, if you type ‘p’, the error message tells you that there is no previous node. (The exact message depends on the Info reader you use.) This is because ‘n’ and ‘p’ carry you to the next and previous node _at the same level_. The present node is contained in a menu (see next) of the node you came from, and hence is considered to be at a lower level. It is the only node in the previous node’s menu (even though it was listed three times). Hence it has no next or previous node that ‘n’ or ‘p’ could move to. If you systematically move through a manual by typing ‘n’, you run the risk of skipping many nodes. You do not run this risk if you systematically use ‘’, because, when you scroll to the bottom of a node and type another ‘’, then this carries you to the following node in the manual _regardless of level_. If you immediately want to go to that node, without having to scroll to the bottom of the screen first, you can type ‘]’. Similarly, ‘’ carries you to the preceding node regardless of level, after you scrolled to the beginning of the present node. If you want to go to the preceding node immediately, you can type ‘[’. For instance, typing this sequence will come back here in three steps: ‘[ n [’. To do the same backward, type ‘] p ]’. Now type ‘]’ to go to the next node and learn about menus.  File: info.info, Node: Help-M, Next: Help-Xref, Prev: Help-Inv, Up: Getting Started 1.6 Menus and the ‘m’ command ============================= With only the ‘n’ (next), ‘p’ (previous), ‘’, ‘’, ‘]’ and ‘[’ commands for moving between nodes, nodes are restricted to a linear sequence. Menus allow a branching structure. A menu is a list of other nodes you can move to. It is actually just part of the text of the node formatted specially so that Info can interpret it. The beginning of a menu is always identified by a line which starts with ‘* Menu:’. A node contains a menu if and only if it has a line in it which starts that way. The only menu you can use at any moment is the one in the node you are in. To use a menu in any other node, you must move to that node first. After the start of the menu, each line that starts with a ‘*’ identifies one subtopic. The line usually contains a brief name for the subtopic (followed by a ‘:’, normally hidden in Emacs), the name of the node that talks about that subtopic (again, normally hidden in Emacs), and optionally some further description of the subtopic. Lines in the menu that do not start with a ‘*’ have no special meaning—they are only for the human reader’s benefit and do not define additional subtopics. Here is an example: * Foo: Node about FOO. This tells about FOO. The subtopic name is Foo, and the node describing it is ‘Node about FOO’. The rest of the line is just for the reader’s Information. [[ But this line is not a real menu item, simply because there is no line above it which starts with ‘* Menu:’. Also, in a real menu item, the ‘*’ would appear at the very start of the line. This is why the “normally hidden” text in Emacs, namely ‘: Node about FOO.’, is actually visible in this example, even when Visible mode is off.]] When you use a menu to go to another node (in a way that will be described soon), what you specify is the subtopic name, the first thing in the menu line. Info uses it to find the menu line, extracts the node name from it, and goes to that node. The reason that there is both a subtopic name and a node name is that the node name must be meaningful to the computer and may therefore have to be ugly looking. The subtopic name can be chosen just to be convenient for the user to specify. Often the node name is convenient for the user to specify and so both it and the subtopic name are the same. There is an abbreviation for this: * Foo:: This tells about FOO. This means that the subtopic name and node name are the same; they are both ‘Foo’. (The ‘::’ is normally hidden in Emacs.) >> Now use to find the menu in this node, then come back to the front with a ‘b’ and some s. As you see, a menu is actually visible in its node. If you cannot find a menu in a node by looking at it, then the node does not have a menu and the ‘m’ command is not available. If you keep typing once the menu appears on the screen, it will move to another node (the first one in the menu). If that happens, type to come back. The command to go to one of the subnodes is ‘m’. This is very different from the commands you have used: it is a command that prompts you for more input. The Info commands you know do not need additional input; when you type one of them, Info processes it instantly and then is ready for another command. The ‘m’ command is different: it needs to know the “name of the subtopic”. Once you have typed ‘m’, Info tries to read the subtopic name. Now, in the stand-alone Info, look for the line containing many dashes near the bottom of the screen. (This is the stand-alone equivalent for the mode line in Emacs.) There is one more line beneath that one, but usually it is blank. (In Emacs, this is the echo area.) When it is blank, Info is ready for a command, such as ‘n’ or ‘b’ or or ‘m’. If that line contains text ending in a colon, it means Info is reading more input for the last command. You can’t type an Info command then, because Info is trying to read input, not commands. You must either give the input and finish the command you started, or type ‘Control-g’ to cancel the command. When you have done one of those things, the input entry line becomes blank again. Then you can type Info commands again. The command to go to a subnode via a menu is ‘m’. After you type the ‘m’, the line at the bottom of the screen says ‘Menu item: ’. You must then type the name of the subtopic you want, and end it with a . You can abbreviate the subtopic name. If the abbreviation is not unique, the first matching subtopic is chosen. Some menus put the shortest possible abbreviation for each subtopic name in capital letters, so you can see how much you need to type. It does not matter whether you use upper case or lower case when you type the subtopic. You should not put any spaces at the end, or inside of the item name, except for one space where a space appears in the item in the menu. You can also use the “completion” feature to help enter the subtopic name. If you type the key after entering part of a name, it will fill in more of the name—as much as Info can deduce from the part you have entered. If you move the cursor to one of the menu subtopic lines, then you do not need to type the argument: you just type a , and it stands for the subtopic of the line you are on. You can also click the middle mouse button directly on the subtopic line to go there. Here is a menu to give you a chance to practice. This menu gives you three ways of going to one place, Help-FOO: * Menu: * Foo: Help-FOO. A node you can visit for fun. * Bar: Help-FOO. We have made two ways to get to the same place. * Help-FOO:: And yet another! (Turn Visible mode on if you are using Emacs.) >> Now type just an ‘m’ and see what happens: Now you are “inside” an ‘m’ command. Commands cannot be used now; the next thing you will type must be the name of a subtopic. You can change your mind about doing the ‘m’ by typing ‘Control-g’. >> Try that now; notice the bottom line clear. >> Then type another ‘m’. >> Now type ‘BAR’, the item name. Do not type yet. While you are typing the item name, you can use the (or ) key to cancel one character at a time if you make a mistake. >> Press to cancel the ‘R’. You could type another ‘R’ to replace it. But you do not have to, since ‘BA’ is a valid abbreviation. >> Now you are ready to go. Type a . After visiting ‘Help-FOO’, you should return here. Another way to move to the menu subtopic lines and between them is to type . Each time you type a , you move to the next subtopic line. To move to a previous subtopic line in the stand-alone reader, type ‘M-’—that is, press and hold the key and then press . (On some keyboards, the key might be labeled ‘Alt’.) In Emacs Info, type ‘S-’ to move to a previous subtopic line (press and hold the key and then press ). Once you move cursor to a subtopic line, press to go to that subtopic’s node. If your terminal supports a mouse, you have yet another way of going to a subtopic. Move your mouse pointer to the subtopic line, somewhere between the beginning ‘*’ and the colon ‘:’ which ends the subtopic’s brief name. You will see the subtopic’s name change its appearance (usually, its background color will change), and the shape of the mouse pointer will change if your platform supports that. After a while, if you leave the mouse on that spot, a small window will pop up, saying “Mouse-2: go to that node,” or the same message may appear at the bottom of the screen. ‘Mouse-2’ is the second button of your mouse counting from the left—the middle button on a 3-button mouse. (On a 2-button mouse, you may have to press both buttons together to “press the middle button”.) The message tells you pressing ‘Mouse-2’ with the current position of the mouse pointer (on subtopic in the menu) will go to that subtopic. More generally, ‘Mouse-2’ in an Info buffer finds the nearest link to another node and goes there. For example, near a cross reference it acts like ‘f’, in a menu it acts like ‘m’, on the node’s header line it acts like ‘n’, ‘p’, or ‘u’, etc. At end of the node’s text ‘Mouse-2’ moves to the next node, or up if there’s no next node. >> Type ‘n’ to see more commands.  File: info.info, Node: Help-FOO, Up: Help-M 1.6.1 The ‘u’ command --------------------- Congratulations! This is the node ‘Help-FOO’. It has an ‘Up’ pointer ‘Help-M’, the node you just came from via the ‘m’ command. This is the usual convention—the nodes you reach from a menu have ‘Up’ nodes that lead back to the menu. Menus move Down in the tree, and ‘Up’ moves Up. ‘Previous’, on the other hand, is usually used to “stay on the same level but go backwards”. You can go back to the node ‘Help-M’ by typing the command ‘u’ for “Up”. This puts you at the menu subtopic line pointing to the subnode that the ‘u’ command brought you from. (Some Info readers may put you at the _front_ of the node instead—to get back to where you were reading, you have to type some s.) Another way to go Up is to click ‘Mouse-2’ on the ‘Up’ pointer shown in the header line (provided that you have a mouse). >> Now type ‘u’ to move back up to ‘Help-M’.  File: info.info, Node: Help-Xref, Next: Help-Int, Prev: Help-M, Up: Getting Started 1.7 Following Cross-References ============================== In Info documentation, you will see many “cross references”. Cross references look like this: *Note Cross: Help-Cross. That text is a real, live cross reference, whose name is ‘Cross’ and which points to the node named ‘Help-Cross’. (The node name is hidden in Emacs. Do ‘M-x visible-mode’ to show or hide it.) You can follow a cross reference by moving the cursor to it and press , just as in a menu. In Emacs, you can also click ‘Mouse-1’ on a cross reference to follow it; you can see that the cross reference is mouse-sensitive by moving the mouse pointer to the reference and watching how the underlying text and the mouse pointer change in response. Another way to follow a cross reference is to type ‘f’ and then specify the name of the cross reference (in this case, ‘Cross’) as an argument. For this command, it does not matter where the cursor was. If the cursor is on or near a cross reference, ‘f’ suggests that reference name in parentheses as the default; typing will follow that reference. However, if you type a different reference name, ‘f’ will follow the other reference which has that name. >> Type ‘f’, followed by ‘Cross’, and then . As you enter the reference name, you can use the (or ) key to edit your input. If you change your mind about following any reference, you can use ‘Control-g’ to cancel the command. Completion is available in the ‘f’ command; you can complete among all the cross reference names in the current node by typing a . To get a list of all the cross references in the current node, you can type ‘?’ after an ‘f’. The ‘f’ continues to await a cross reference name even after displaying the list, so if you don’t actually want to follow a reference, you should type a ‘Control-g’ to cancel the ‘f’. >> Type ‘f?’ to get a list of the cross references in this node. Then type a ‘Control-g’ and see how the ‘f’ gives up. The , ‘M-’ and ‘S-’ keys, which move between menu items in a menu, also move between cross references outside of menus. Sometimes a cross reference (or a node) can lead to another file (in other words another “manual”), or, on occasion, even a file on a remote machine (although Info files distributed with Emacs or the stand-alone Info avoid using remote links). Such a cross reference looks like this: *Note Overview of Texinfo: (texinfo)Top. (After following this link, type ‘l’ to get back to this node.) Here the name ‘texinfo’ between parentheses refers to the file name. This file name appears in cross references and node names if it differs from the current file, so you can always know that you are going to be switching to another manual and which one. However, Emacs normally hides some other text in cross-references. If you put your mouse over the cross reference, then the information appearing in a separate box (tool tip) or in the echo area will show the full cross-reference including the file name and the node name of the cross reference. If you have a mouse, just leave it over the cross reference *Note Overview of Texinfo: (texinfo)Top, and watch what happens. If you always like to have that information visible without having to move your mouse over the cross reference, use ‘M-x visible-mode’, or set ‘Info-hide-note-references’ to a value other than ‘t’ (*note Emacs Info Variables::). >> Now type ‘n’ to learn more commands. * Menu: * Help-Cross:: Target of a cross-reference.  File: info.info, Node: Help-Cross, Up: Help-Xref 1.7.1 The node reached by the cross reference in Info ----------------------------------------------------- This is the node reached by the cross reference named ‘Cross’. While this node is specifically intended to be reached by a cross reference, most cross references lead to nodes that “belong” someplace else far away in the structure of an Info document. So you cannot expect this node to have a ‘Next’, ‘Previous’ or ‘Up’ links pointing back to where you came from. In general, the ‘l’ (el) command is the only way to get back there. >> Type ‘l’ to return to the node where the cross reference was.  File: info.info, Node: Help-Int, Next: Help-Q, Prev: Help-Xref, Up: Getting Started 1.8 Some intermediate Info commands =================================== The introductory course is almost over; please continue a little longer to learn some intermediate-level commands. Most Info files have an index, which is actually a large node containing little but a menu. The menu has one menu item for each topic listed in the index. (As a special feature, menus for indices may also include the line number within the node of the index entry. This allows Info readers to go to the exact line of an entry, not just the start of the containing node.) You can get to the index from the main menu of the file with the ‘m’ command and the name of the index node; then you can use the ‘m’ command again in the index node to go to the node that describes the topic you want. There is also a short-cut Info command, ‘i’, which does all of that for you. It searches the index for a given topic (a string) and goes to the node which is listed in the index for that topic. *Note Search Index::, for a full explanation. If you have been moving around to different nodes and wish to retrace your steps, the ‘l’ command (‘l’ for “last”) will do that, one node-step at a time. As you move from node to node, Info records the nodes where you have been in a special history list. The ‘l’ command revisits nodes in the history list; each successive ‘l’ command moves one step back through the history. >> Try typing ‘p p n’ and then three ‘l’’s, pausing in between to see what each ‘l’ does. You should wind up right back here. Note the difference between ‘l’ and ‘p’: ‘l’ moves to where _you_ last were, whereas ‘p’ always moves to the node which the header says is the ‘Previous’ node (from this node, the ‘Prev’ link leads to ‘Help-Xref’). You can use the ‘r’ command (‘Info-history-forward’ in Emacs) to revisit nodes in the history list in the forward direction, so that ‘r’ will return you to the node you came from by typing ‘l’. The ‘L’ command (‘Info-history’ in Emacs) creates a virtual node that contains a list of all nodes you visited. You can select a previously visited node from this menu to revisit it. The ‘d’ command (‘Info-directory’ in Emacs) gets you instantly to the Directory node. This node, which is the first one you saw when you entered Info, has a menu which leads (directly or indirectly, through other menus), to all the nodes that exist. The Directory node lists all the manuals and other Info documents that are, or could be, installed on your system. >> Try doing a ‘d’, then do an ‘l’ to return here (yes, _do_ return). The ‘t’ command moves to the ‘Top’ node of the manual. This is useful if you want to browse the manual’s main menu, or select some specific top-level menu item. The Emacs command run by ‘t’ is ‘Info-top-node’. >> Now type ‘n’ to see the last node of the course. *Note Advanced::, for more advanced Info features.  File: info.info, Node: Help-Q, Prev: Help-Int, Up: Getting Started 1.9 Quitting Info ================= To get out of Info, back to what you were doing before, type ‘q’ for “Quit”. This runs ‘Info-exit’ in Emacs. This is the end of the basic course on using Info. You have learned how to move in an Info document, and how to follow menus and cross references. This makes you ready for reading manuals top to bottom, as new users should do when they learn a new package. Another set of Info commands is useful when you need to find something quickly in a manual—that is, when you need to use a manual as a reference rather than as a tutorial. We urge you to learn these search commands as well. If you want to do that now, follow this cross reference to *note Advanced::. Yet another set of commands are meant for experienced users; you can find them by looking in the Directory node for documentation on Info. Finding them will be a good exercise in using Info in the usual manner. >> Type ‘d’ to go to the Info directory node; then type ‘mInfo’ and Return, to get to the node about Info and see what other help is available.  File: info.info, Node: Advanced, Next: Further Reading, Prev: Getting Started, Up: Top 2 Advanced Info Commands ************************ This chapter describes various advanced Info commands. (If you are using a stand-alone Info reader, there are additional commands specific to it, which are documented in several chapters of *note GNU Info: (info-stnd)Top.) One advanced command useful with most of the others described here is ‘C-q’, which “quotes” the next character so that it is entered literally (*note (emacs)Inserting Text::). For example, pressing ‘?’ ordinarily brings up a list of completion possibilities. If you want to (for example) search for an actual ‘?’ character, the simplest way is to insert it using ‘C-q ?’. This works the same in Emacs and stand-alone Info. * Menu: * Search Text:: How to search Info documents. * Search Index:: How to search the indices for specific subjects. * Go to node:: How to go to a node by name. * Choose menu subtopic:: How to choose a menu subtopic by its number. * Create Info buffer:: How to create a new Info buffer in Emacs. * Emacs Info Variables:: Variables modifying the behavior of Emacs Info.  File: info.info, Node: Search Text, Next: Search Index, Up: Advanced 2.1 ‘s’ searches Info documents =============================== The commands which move between and inside nodes allow you to read the entire manual or its large portions. But what if you need to find some information in the manual as fast as you can, and you don’t know or don’t remember in what node to look for it? This need arises when you use a manual as a “reference”, or when it is impractical to read the entire manual before you start using the programs it describes. Info has powerful searching facilities that let you find things quickly. You can search either the manual text or its indices. The ‘s’ command allows you to search a whole Info file for a string. It switches to the next node if and when that is necessary. You type ‘s’ followed by the string to search for, terminated by . To search for the same string again, just ‘s’ followed by will do. The file’s nodes are scanned in the order they are in the file, which has no necessary relationship to the order that they may be in the tree structure of menus and ‘next’ pointers. But normally the two orders are not very different. In any case, you can always look at the mode line to find out what node you have reached, if the header is not visible (this can happen, because ‘s’ puts your cursor at the occurrence of the string, not at the beginning of the node). Instead of using ‘s’ in Emacs Info and in the stand-alone Info, you can use an incremental search started with ‘C-s’ or ‘C-r’. It can search through multiple Info nodes. *Note (emacs)Incremental Search::. In Emacs, you can disable this behavior by setting the variable ‘Info-isearch-search’ to ‘nil’ (*note Emacs Info Variables::).  File: info.info, Node: Search Index, Next: Go to node, Prev: Search Text, Up: Advanced 2.2 ‘i’ searches the indices for specific subjects ================================================== Since most topics in the manual should be indexed, you should try the index search first before the text search. The ‘i’ command prompts you for a subject and then looks up that subject in the indices. If it finds an index entry with the subject you typed, it goes to the node to which that index entry points. You should browse through that node to see whether the issue you are looking for is described there. If it isn’t, type ‘,’ one or more times to go through additional index entries which match your subject. The ‘i’ command and subsequent ‘,’ commands find all index entries which include the string you typed _as a substring_. For each match, Info shows in the echo area the full index entry it found. Often, the text of the full index entry already gives you enough information to decide whether it is relevant to what you are looking for, so we recommend that you read what Info shows in the echo area before looking at the node it displays. Since ‘i’ looks for a substring, you can search for subjects even if you are not sure how they are spelled in the index. For example, suppose you want to find something that is pertinent to commands which complete partial input (e.g., when you type ). If you want to catch index entries that refer to “complete,” “completion,” and “completing,” you could type ‘icomplet’. Info documents which describe programs should index the commands, options, and key sequences that the program provides. If you are looking for a description of a command, an option, or a key, just type their names when ‘i’ prompts you for a topic. For example, if you want to read the description of what the ‘C-l’ key does, type ‘iC-l’ literally. Emacs provides the command ‘Info-virtual-index’, bound to the ‘I’ key. This behaves like ‘i’, but constructs a virtual info node displaying the results of an index search, making it easier to select the one you want. If you aren’t sure which manual documents the topic you are looking for, try the ‘M-x info-apropos’ command in Emacs, or the ‘M-x index-apropos’ command in the stand-alone reader. It prompts for a string and then looks up that string in all the indices of all the Info documents installed on your system.  File: info.info, Node: Go to node, Next: Choose menu subtopic, Prev: Search Index, Up: Advanced 2.3 ‘g’ goes to a node by name ============================== If you know a node’s name, you can go there by typing ‘g’, the name, and . Thus, ‘gTop’ would go to the node called ‘Top’ in this file. (This is equivalent to ‘t’, see *note Help-Int::.) ‘gGo to node’ would come back here. Unlike ‘m’, ‘g’ does not allow the use of abbreviations. But it does allow completion, so you can type to complete a partial node name. To go to a node in another file, you can include the file name in the node name by putting it at the front, in parentheses. Thus, ‘g(dir)Top’ would go to the Info Directory node, which is the node ‘Top’ in the Info file ‘dir’. Likewise, ‘g(emacs)Top’ (or just ‘g(emacs)’) goes to the top node of the Emacs manual. The node name ‘*’ specifies the whole file. So you can look at all of the current file by typing ‘g*’ or all of any other file with ‘g(FILENAME)*’.  File: info.info, Node: Choose menu subtopic, Next: Create Info buffer, Prev: Go to node, Up: Advanced 2.4 ‘1’–‘9’ choose a menu subtopic by its number ================================================ If you begrudge each character of type-in which your system requires, you might like to use the commands ‘1’, ‘2’, ‘3’, ‘4’, …, ‘9’. They are short for the ‘m’ command together with a name of a menu subtopic. ‘1’ goes through the first item in the current node’s menu; ‘2’ goes through the second item, etc. In the stand-alone reader, ‘0’ goes through the last menu item; this is so you need not count how many entries are there. If your display supports multiple fonts, colors or underlining, and you are using Emacs’s Info mode to read Info files, the third, sixth and ninth menu items have a ‘*’ that stands out, either in color or in some other attribute, such as underline; this makes it easy to see at a glance which number to use for an item. Some terminals don’t support either multiple fonts, colors or underlining. If you need to actually count items, it is better to use ‘m’ instead, and specify the name, or use to quickly move between menu items.  File: info.info, Node: Create Info buffer, Next: Emacs Info Variables, Prev: Choose menu subtopic, Up: Advanced 2.5 ‘M-n’ creates a new independent Info buffer in Emacs ======================================================== If you are reading Info in Emacs, you can select a new independent Info buffer in a new Emacs window by typing ‘M-n’. The new buffer starts out as an exact copy of the old one, but you will be able to move independently between nodes in the two buffers. (In Info mode, ‘M-n’ runs the Emacs command ‘clone-buffer’.) In Emacs Info, you can also produce new Info buffers by giving a numeric prefix argument to the ‘m’ and ‘g’ commands. ‘C-u m’ and ‘C-u g’ go to a new node in exactly the same way that ‘m’ and ‘g’ do, but they do so in a new Info buffer which they select in another window. Another way to produce new Info buffers in Emacs is to use a numeric prefix argument for the ‘C-h i’ command (‘info’) which switches to the Info buffer with that number. Thus, ‘C-u 2 C-h i’ switches to the buffer ‘*info*<2>’, creating it if necessary. If you have created many Info buffers in Emacs, you might find it difficult to remember which buffer is showing which manual. You can use the command ‘M-x info-display-manual’ to show an Info manual by name, reusing an existing buffer if there is one.  File: info.info, Node: Emacs Info Variables, Prev: Create Info buffer, Up: Advanced 2.6 Emacs Info-mode Variables ============================= The following variables may modify the behavior of Info-mode in Emacs; you may wish to set one or several of these variables interactively, or in your init file. *Note Examining and Setting Variables: (emacs)Examining. The stand-alone Info reader program has its own set of variables, described in *note Manipulating Variables: (info-stnd)Variables. ‘Info-directory-list’ The list of directories to search for Info files. Each element is a string (directory name) or ‘nil’ (try default directory). If not initialized Info uses the environment variable ‘INFOPATH’ to initialize it, or ‘Info-default-directory-list’ if there is no ‘INFOPATH’ variable in the environment. If you wish to customize the Info directory search list for both Emacs Info and stand-alone Info, it is best to set the ‘INFOPATH’ environment variable, since that applies to both programs. ‘Info-additional-directory-list’ A list of additional directories to search for Info documentation files. These directories are not searched for merging the ‘dir’ file. ‘Info-mode-hook’ Hooks run when ‘Info-mode’ is called. By default, it contains the hook ‘turn-on-font-lock’ which enables highlighting of Info files. You can change how the highlighting looks by customizing the faces ‘info-node’, ‘info-xref’, ‘info-xref-visited’, ‘info-header-xref’, ‘info-header-node’, ‘info-menu-header’, ‘info-menu-star’, and ‘info-title-N’ (where N is the level of the section, a number between 1 and 4). To customize a face, type ‘M-x customize-face FACE ’, where FACE is one of the face names listed here. ‘Info-fontify-maximum-menu-size’ Maximum size of menu to fontify if ‘font-lock-mode’ is non-‘nil’. ‘Info-fontify-visited-nodes’ If non-‘nil’, menu items and cross-references pointing to visited nodes are displayed in the ‘info-xref-visited’ face. ‘Info-use-header-line’ If non-‘nil’, Emacs puts in the Info buffer a header line showing the ‘Next’, ‘Prev’, and ‘Up’ links. A header line does not scroll with the rest of the buffer, making these links always visible. ‘Info-hide-note-references’ As explained in earlier nodes, the Emacs version of Info normally hides some text in menus and cross-references. You can completely disable this feature, by setting this option to ‘nil’. Setting it to a value that is neither ‘nil’ nor ‘t’ produces an intermediate behavior, hiding a limited amount of text, but showing all text that could potentially be useful. ‘Info-scroll-prefer-subnodes’ If set to a non-‘nil’ value, and (or , or ‘S-’) keys in a menu visit subnodes of the current node before scrolling to its end or beginning, respectively. For example, if the node’s menu appears on the screen, the next moves to a subnode indicated by the following menu item. Setting this option to ‘nil’ results in behavior similar to the stand-alone Info reader program, which visits the first subnode from the menu only when you hit the end of the current node. The default is ‘nil’. ‘Info-isearch-search’ If non-‘nil’, isearch in Info searches through multiple nodes. ‘Info-enable-active-nodes’ When set to a non-‘nil’ value, allows Info to execute Lisp code associated with nodes. The Lisp code is executed when the node is selected. The Lisp code to be executed should follow the node delimiter (the ‘DEL’ character) and an ‘execute: ’ tag, like this: ^_execute: (message "This is an active node!")  File: info.info, Node: Further Reading, Next: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Advanced, Up: Top 3 Further Reading ***************** Info files are created from Texinfo source files. You can use the same source file to make a printed manual or produce other formats, such as HTML and DocBook. The ‘makeinfo’ command converts a Texinfo file into an Info file; ‘texinfo-format-region’ and ‘texinfo-format-buffer’ are GNU Emacs functions that do the same. *Note Overview of Texinfo: (texinfo)Top, for how to write a Texinfo file. *Note (texinfo)Creating an Info File::, for how to create an Info file from a Texinfo file. *Note (texinfo)Installing an Info File::, for how to install an Info file after you have created one.  File: info.info, Node: GNU Free Documentation License, Next: Index, Prev: Further Reading, Up: Top Appendix A GNU Free Documentation License ***************************************** Version 1.3, 3 November 2008 Copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 0. PREAMBLE The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other functional and useful document “free” in the sense of freedom: to assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it, with or without modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not being considered responsible for modifications made by others. This License is a kind of “copyleft”, which means that derivative works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft license designed for free software. We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free software, because free software needs free documentation: a free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference. 1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium, that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration, to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The “Document”, below, refers to any such manual or work. 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If the Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document specifies that a proxy can decide which future versions of this License can be used, that proxy’s public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you to choose that version for the Document. 11. RELICENSING “Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site” (or “MMC Site”) means any World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server. A “Massive Multiauthor Collaboration” (or “MMC”) contained in the site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC site. “CC-BY-SA” means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco, California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license published by that same organization. “Incorporate” means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or in part, as part of another Document. An MMC is “eligible for relicensing” if it is licensed under this License, and if all works that were first published under this License somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently incorporated in whole or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover texts or invariant sections, and (2) were thus incorporated prior to November 1, 2008. The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the site under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1, 2009, provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing. ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents ==================================================== To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of the License in the document and put the following copyright and license notices just after the title page: Copyright (C) YEAR YOUR NAME. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover Texts, replace the “with…Texts.” line with this: with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts being LIST. If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the situation. If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit their use in free software.  File: info.info, Node: Index, Prev: GNU Free Documentation License, Up: Top Index ***** This is an alphabetical listing of all the commands, variables, and topics discussed in this document. [index] * Menu: * 1 through 9 (Info mode): Choose menu subtopic. (line 6) * ? (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 74) * abbreviating Info subnodes: Help-M. (line 89) * b (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 65) * BACKSPACE (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 15) * C-l (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 59) * C-q (Info mode): Advanced. (line 11) * C-r (Info mode): Search Text. (line 28) * C-s (Info mode): Search Text. (line 28) * clone-buffer: Create Info buffer. (line 6) * completion of Info node names: Help-M. (line 97) * cross references in Info documents: Help-Xref. (line 6) * d (Info mode): Help-Int. (line 49) * DEL (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 15) * f (Info mode): Help-Xref. (line 12) * g (Info mode): Go to node. (line 6) * go to a node by name: Go to node. (line 6) * go to another Info file: Go to node. (line 14) * go to Directory node: Help-Int. (line 49) * go to Top node: Help-Int. (line 59) * going back in Info history: Help-Int. (line 26) * going forward in Info history: Help-Int. (line 41) * header of Info node: Help. (line 16) * history list of visited nodes: Help-Int. (line 45) * i (Info mode): Search Index. (line 6) * I (Info mode): Search Index. (line 37) * index-apropos: Search Index. (line 42) * Info document as a reference: Search Text. (line 6) * Info documents as tutorials: Help-^L. (line 37) * Info menus: Help-M. (line 6) * Info-additional-directory-list: Emacs Info Variables. (line 24) * info-apropos: Search Index. (line 42) * Info-directory: Help-Int. (line 49) * Info-directory-list: Emacs Info Variables. (line 13) * info-display-manual: Create Info buffer. (line 22) * Info-enable-active-nodes: Emacs Info Variables. (line 72) * Info-exit: Help-Q. (line 6) * Info-follow-reference: Help-Xref. (line 12) * Info-fontify-maximum-menu-size: Emacs Info Variables. (line 39) * Info-fontify-visited-nodes: Emacs Info Variables. (line 42) * Info-goto-node: Go to node. (line 6) * Info-hide-note-references: Emacs Info Variables. (line 51) * Info-history: Help-Int. (line 45) * Info-history-back: Help-Int. (line 26) * Info-history-forward: Help-Int. (line 41) * Info-index: Search Index. (line 6) * Info-isearch-search: Emacs Info Variables. (line 69) * Info-menu: Help-M. (line 85) * Info-mode-hook: Emacs Info Variables. (line 29) * Info-mouse-follow-nearest-node: Help-M. (line 170) * Info-nth-menu-item: Choose menu subtopic. (line 6) * Info-scroll-down: Help-^L. (line 15) * Info-scroll-prefer-subnodes: Emacs Info Variables. (line 59) * Info-scroll-up: Help-^L. (line 15) * Info-search: Search Text. (line 16) * Info-summary: Help-^L. (line 74) * Info-top-node: Help-Int. (line 59) * Info-up: Help-FOO. (line 13) * Info-use-header-line: Emacs Info Variables. (line 46) * Info-virtual-index: Search Index. (line 37) * invisible text in Emacs: Help-Inv. (line 10) * isearch: Search Text. (line 28) * l (Info mode): Help-Int. (line 26) * L (Info mode): Help-Int. (line 45) * m (Info mode): Help-M. (line 62) * M-n (Info mode): Create Info buffer. (line 6) * menus in an Info document: Help-M. (line 6) * mouse support in Info mode: Help-M. (line 154) * Mouse-2 (Info mode): Help-M. (line 154) * multiple Info buffers: Create Info buffer. (line 6) * n (Info mode): Help. (line 27) * node, in Info documents: Help. (line 11) * p (Info mode): Help-P. (line 6) * PAGEDOWN (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 52) * PAGEUP (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 52) * q (Info mode): Help-Q. (line 6) * quitting Info mode: Help-Q. (line 6) * r (Info mode): Help-Int. (line 41) * reading Info documents top to bottom: Help-^L. (line 37) * s (Info mode): Search Text. (line 16) * searching Info documents: Search Text. (line 6) * searching Info indices: Search Index. (line 6) * select N’th menu item: Choose menu subtopic. (line 6) * small screen, moving around: Help-Small-Screen. (line 6) * SPC (Info mode): Help-^L. (line 15) * t (Info mode): Help-Int. (line 59) * Texinfo: Further Reading. (line 6) * u (Info mode): Help-FOO. (line 13) * visible-mode: Help-Inv. (line 17)  Tag Table: Node: Top957 Node: Getting Started2975 Node: Help-Small-Screen3819 Node: Help5975 Node: Help-P7703 Node: Help-^L8987 Ref: Help-^L-Footnote-113513 Node: Help-Inv13907 Node: Help-]15635 Node: Help-M17271 Node: Help-FOO26092 Node: Help-Xref27127 Node: Help-Cross30897 Node: Help-Int31593 Node: Help-Q34740 Node: Advanced35919 Node: Search Text37142 Node: Search Index38972 Node: Go to node41489 Node: Choose menu subtopic42608 Node: Create Info buffer43857 Node: Emacs Info Variables45261 Node: Further Reading49248 Node: GNU Free Documentation License50012 Node: Index75363  End Tag Table  Local Variables: coding: utf-8 End: