texinfo (7.1)
This is info-stnd.info, produced by texi2any version 7.1 from
info-stnd.texi.
This manual is for Stand-alone GNU Info (version 7.1, 8 October 2023), a
program for viewing documents in Info format (usually created from
Texinfo source files).
Copyright © 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001-2023 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, no Front-Cover Texts, and
no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the
section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License" in the Texinfo
manual.
This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free
Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document
separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the
license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license.
INFO-DIR-SECTION Texinfo documentation system
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* info stand-alone: (info-stnd). Read Info documents without Emacs.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Top, Next: Stand-alone Info, Up: (dir)
Stand-alone GNU Info
********************
This documentation describes the stand-alone Info reader which you can
use to read Info documentation.
If you are new to the Info reader, then you can get started by typing
‘H’ for a list of basic key bindings. You can read through the rest of
this manual by typing <SPC> and <DEL> (or <Space> and <Backspace>) to
move forwards and backwards in it.
* Menu:
* Stand-alone Info:: What is Info?
* Node Commands:: Commands for selecting a new node.
* More Node Commands:: Further commands for changing the node.
* Cursor Commands:: Commands which move the cursor within a node.
* Scrolling Commands:: Commands for reading the text within a node.
* Searching Commands:: Commands for searching an Info file.
* Index Commands:: Commands for looking up in indices.
* Xref Commands:: Commands for selecting cross-references.
* Window Commands:: Commands which manipulate multiple windows.
* Printing Nodes:: How to print out the contents of a node.
* Miscellaneous Commands:: A few commands that defy categorization.
* Invoking Info:: Options you can pass on the command line.
* Variables:: How to change the default behavior of Info.
* Colors and Styles:: Customize the colors used by Info.
* Custom Key Bindings:: How to define your own key-to-command bindings.
* MS-DOS/Windows keybindings:: Alternate DOS/Windows keybindings.
* Index:: Global index.
-- The Detailed Node Listing --
Selecting Cross-references
* Parts of an Xref:: What a cross-reference is made of.
* Selecting Xrefs:: Commands for selecting menu or note items.
Manipulating Multiple Windows
* The Mode Line:: What appears in the mode line?
* Basic Windows:: Manipulating windows in Info.
* The Echo Area:: Used for displaying errors and reading input.
Customizing Key Bindings and Variables
* infokey format::
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Stand-alone Info, Next: Node Commands, Prev: Top, Up: Top
1 Stand-alone Info
******************
The “Info” program described here is a stand-alone program, part of the
Texinfo distribution, which is used to view Info files on a text
terminal. “Info files” are typically the result of processing Texinfo
files with the program ‘texi2any’ (also in the Texinfo distribution).
Texinfo itself (*note (texinfo)Top::) is a documentation system that
uses a single source file to produce both on-line information and
printed output. You can typeset and print the files that you read in
Info.
GNU Emacs also provides an Info reader (just type ‘M-x info’ in
Emacs). Emacs Info and stand-alone Info have nearly identical user
interfaces, although customization and other details are different (this
manual explains the stand-alone Info reader). The Emacs Info reader
supports the X Window System and other such bitmapped interfaces, not
just plain ASCII, so if you want a prettier display for Info files, you
should try it. You can use Emacs Info without using Emacs for anything
else. (Type ‘C-x C-c’ to exit; this also works in the stand-alone Info
reader.) *Note (info)Top:: for a tutorial and more background
information about the Info system, as well as information about the Info
reader that is part of GNU Emacs,
Please report bugs in this stand-alone Info program to
<bug-texinfo@gnu.org>. Bugs in the Emacs Info reader should be sent to
<bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Node Commands, Next: More Node Commands, Prev: Stand-alone Info, Up: Top
2 Selecting a Node
******************
The most basic node commands are ‘n’, ‘p’, and ‘u’. These move you
around the node structure of the file:
‘n’ (‘next-node’)
Select the 'Next' node.
‘p’ (‘prev-node’)
Select the 'Prev' node.
‘u’ (‘up-node’)
Select the 'Up' node.
The top line of each Info node contains “pointers” which describe
where the next, previous, and up nodes are. The nodes in an Info file
are conventionally arranged in a hierarchical structure; for example,
the 'Next' pointer in a section of a chapter takes you to the next
section in the same chapter, while the 'Up' pointer takes you to the
higher-level node for the chapter as a whole.
You can select a node that you have already viewed by using the ‘l’
command--this stands for "last":
‘l’ (‘history-node’)
Move backwards through the history of visited nodes for this
window. The current node is discarded from the history.
This is useful when you follow a reference to another node to read
about a related issue, and would like then to resume reading at the
same place where you started.
Two additional commands, ‘t’ and ‘d’, select special nodes:
‘t’ (‘top-node’)
Select the node ‘Top’ in the current Info file.
‘d’ (‘dir-node’)
Select the directory node (i.e., the node ‘(dir)’). This contains
a menu referencing all the available Info files that are installed
on your system.
In the command descriptions in this manual, the ‘M-x’ command names
are displayed in parentheses. ‘M-x’ is itself a command
(‘execute-command’) letting you run a command by name. For example, you
could select the next node with ‘M-x next-node’.
‘C-X’ means press the <Ctrl> key and the key X. ‘M-X’ means press
the <Meta> key and the key X. (<Meta> is usually labeled as <Alt>).
<SPC> is the space bar. The other keys are usually called by the names
printed on them. This notation to describe keystrokes is the same as
that used within the Emacs manual (*note (emacs)User Input::).
Many Info commands can take a “numeric argument”; see *note
‘universal-argument’: Miscellaneous Commands. to find out how to supply
one.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: More Node Commands, Next: Cursor Commands, Prev: Node Commands, Up: Top
3 Further Commands for Selecting a Node
***************************************
This chapter describes some other commands which select a different
node.
‘<’ (‘first-node’)
Selects the first node which appears in this file. This node is
most often ‘Top’, but it does not have to be. With a numeric
argument N, select the Nth node (the first node is node 1). An
argument of zero is the same as the argument of 1.
‘>’ (‘last-node’)
Select the last node which appears in this file. With a numeric
argument N, select the Nth node (the first node is node 1). An
argument of zero is the same as no argument, i.e., it selects the
last node.
‘]’ (‘global-next-node’)
Move forward through the node structure. If the node that you are
currently viewing has a menu, select the first menu item.
Otherwise, if this node has a ‘Next’ pointer, follow it. If there
is no menu and no ‘Next’ pointer, then follow ‘Up’ pointers until
there is a ‘Next’ pointer, and then follow it.
‘[’ (‘global-prev-node’)
Move backward through the node structure. If the node that you are
currently viewing has a ‘Prev’ pointer, that node is selected.
Otherwise, if the node has an ‘Up’ pointer, that node is selected,
and if it has a menu, the last item in the menu is selected.
You can get the same behavior as ‘global-next-node’ and
‘global-prev-node’ while simply scrolling through the file with
<SPC> and <DEL> (*note scroll-behavior::).
‘g’ (‘goto-node’)
Read the name of a node and select it. If the desired node resides
in some other file, you must type the node as it appears in that
Info file, and include the name of the other file. For example,
g(emacs)Buffers
finds the node ‘Buffers’ in the Info file ‘emacs’.
While reading the node name, completion (*note completion: The Echo
Area.) is only done for the nodes which reside in one of the Info
files that were loaded in the current Info session.
‘O’ (‘goto-invocation’)
Read the name of a program and look for a node in the current Info
file which describes the invocation and the command-line options
for that program. The default program name is derived from the
name of the current Info file. This command does the same as the
‘--show-options’ command-line option (*note --show-options::), but
it also allows to specify the program name; this is important for
those manuals which describe several programs.
If you need to find the Invocation node of a program that is
documented in another Info file, you need to visit that file before
invoking ‘O’. For example, if you are reading the Emacs manual and
want to see the command-line options of the ‘texi2any’ program,
type ‘g (texinfo) <RET>’ and then ‘O texi2any <RET>’. If you don't
know what Info file documents the command, or if invoking ‘O’
doesn't display the right node, go to the ‘(dir)’ node (using the
‘d’ command) and invoke ‘O’ from there.
‘G’ (‘menu-sequence’)
Read a sequence of menu entries and follow it. Info prompts for a
sequence of menu items separated by commas. (Since commas are not
allowed in a node name, they are a natural choice for a delimiter
in a list of menu items.) Info then looks up the first item in the
menu of the node ‘(dir)’ (if the ‘(dir)’ node cannot be found, Info
uses ‘Top’). If such an entry is found, Info goes to the node it
points to and looks up the second item in the menu of that node,
etc. In other words, you can specify a complete path which
descends through the menu hierarchy of a particular Info file
starting at the ‘(dir)’ node. This has the same effect as if you
typed the menu item sequence on Info's command line, see *note Info
command-line arguments processing: command-line menu items. For
example,
G Texinfo,Overview,Reporting Bugs <RET>
displays the node ‘Reporting Bugs’ in the Texinfo manual. (You
don't actually need to type the menu items in their full length, or
in their exact letter-case. However, if you do type the menu items
exactly, Info will find it faster.)
If any of the menu items you type are not found, Info stops at the
last entry it did find and reports an error.
‘C-x C-f’ (‘view-file’)
Read the name of a file and selects the entire file. The command
C-x C-f FILENAME
is equivalent to typing
g(FILENAME)*
‘C-x C-b’ (‘list-visited-nodes’)
Make a window containing a menu of all of the currently visited
nodes. This window becomes the selected window, and you may use
the standard Info commands within it.
‘C-x b’ (‘select-visited-node’)
Select a node which has been previously visited in a visible
window. This is similar to ‘C-x C-b’ followed by ‘m’, but no
window is created.
‘M-x man’
Read the name of a man page to load and display. This uses the
‘man’ command on your system to retrieve the contents of the
requested man page. See also *note --raw-escapes::.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Cursor Commands, Next: Scrolling Commands, Prev: More Node Commands, Up: Top
4 Moving the Cursor
*******************
GNU Info has several commands which allow you to move the cursor about
the screen.
With a numeric argument, the motion commands are simply executed that
many times; for example, a numeric argument of 4 given to ‘next-line’
causes the cursor to move down 4 lines. With a negative numeric
argument, the motion is reversed; an argument of −4 given to the
‘next-line’ command would cause the cursor to move _up_ 4 lines.
‘C-n’ (‘next-line’)
<DOWN> (an arrow key)
Move the cursor down to the next line.
‘C-p’ (‘prev-line’)
<UP> (an arrow key)
Move the cursor up to the previous line.
‘C-a’ (‘beginning-of-line’)
Move the cursor to the start of the current line.
‘C-e’ (‘end-of-line’)
Move the cursor to the end of the current line.
‘C-f’ (‘forward-char’)
<RIGHT> (an arrow key)
Move the cursor forward a character.
‘C-b’ (‘backward-char’)
<LEFT> (an arrow key)
Move the cursor backward a character.
‘M-f’ (‘forward-word’)
Move the cursor forward a word.
‘M-b’ (‘backward-word’)
Move the cursor backward a word.
‘M-<’ (‘beginning-of-node’)
‘b’
Move the cursor to the start of the current node.
‘M->’ (‘end-of-node’)
‘e’
Move the cursor to the end of the current node.
‘M-r’ (‘move-to-window-line’)
Move the cursor to a specific line of the window. Without a
numeric argument, ‘M-r’ moves the cursor to the start of the line
in the center of the window. With a numeric argument of N, ‘M-r’
moves the cursor to the start of the Nth line in the window.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Scrolling Commands, Next: Searching Commands, Prev: Cursor Commands, Up: Top
5 Moving Text Within a Window
*****************************
Sometimes you are looking at a screenful of text, and only part of the
current paragraph you are reading is visible on the screen. The
commands detailed in this section are used to shift which part of the
current node is visible on the screen.
<SPC> (‘scroll-forward’)
<NEXT>
Shift the text in this window up. That is, show more of the node
which is currently below the bottom of the window. With a numeric
argument, show that many more lines at the bottom of the window; a
numeric argument of 4 would shift all of the text in the window up
4 lines (discarding the top 4 lines), and show you four new lines
at the bottom of the window. Without a numeric argument, <SPC>
takes the bottom two lines of the window and places them at the top
of the window, redisplaying almost a completely new screenful of
lines. If you are at the end of a node, <SPC> takes you to the
"next" node, so that you can read an entire manual from start to
finish by repeating <SPC>.
The <NEXT> key is known as the <PageDown> key on some keyboards.
‘C-v’ (‘scroll-forward-page-only’)
Shift the text in this window up. This is identical to the <SPC>
operation above, except that it never scrolls beyond the end of the
current node.
‘M-x scroll-forward-page-only-set-window’
Scroll forward, like with ‘C-v’, but if a numeric argument is
specified, it becomes the default scroll size for subsequent
‘scroll-forward’ and ‘scroll-backward’ commands and their ilk.
<DEL> (‘scroll-backward’)
<PREVIOUS>
Shift the text in this window down. The inverse of
‘scroll-forward’. If you are at the start of a node, <DEL> takes
you to the "previous" node, so that you can read an entire manual
from finish to start by repeating <DEL>. The default scroll size
can be changed by invoking the
(‘scroll-backward-page-only-set-window’) command with a numeric
argument.
If your keyboard lacks the <DEL> key, look for a key called <BS>,
or ‘Backspace’, sometimes designated with an arrow which points to
the left, which should perform the same function.
The <PREVIOUS> key is the <PageUp> key on many keyboards. Emacs
refers to it by the name <PRIOR>.
‘M-v’ (‘scroll-backward-page-only’)
Shift the text in this window down. The inverse of
‘scroll-forward-page-only’. Does not scroll beyond the start of
the current node. The default scroll size can be changed by
invoking the ‘scroll-backward-page-only-set-window’ command with a
numeric argument.
‘M-x scroll-backward-page-only-set-window’
Scroll backward, like with ‘M-v’, but if a numeric argument is
specified, it becomes the default scroll size for subsequent
‘scroll-forward’ and ‘scroll-backward’ commands.
‘M-x down-line’
Scroll forward by one line. With a numeric argument, scroll
forward that many lines.
‘M-x up-line’
Scroll backward one line. With a numeric argument, scroll backward
that many lines.
‘M-x scroll-half-screen-down’
Scroll forward by half of the screen size. With a numeric
argument, scroll that many lines. If an argument is specified, it
becomes the new default number of lines to scroll for subsequent
‘scroll-half-screen-down’ and ‘scroll-half-screen-up’ commands.
‘M-x scroll-half-screen-up’
Scroll back by half of the screen size. With a numeric argument,
scroll that many lines. If an argument is specified, it becomes
the new default number of lines to scroll for subsequent
‘scroll-half-screen-down’ and ‘scroll-half-screen-up’ commands.
The ‘scroll-forward’ and ‘scroll-backward’ commands can also move
forward and backward through the node structure of the file. If you
press <SPC> while viewing the end of a node, or <DEL> while viewing the
beginning of a node, what happens is controlled by the variable
‘scroll-behavior’ (*note scroll-behavior::).
The ‘scroll-forward-page-only’ and ‘scroll-backward-page-only’
commands never scroll beyond the current node.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Searching Commands, Next: Index Commands, Prev: Scrolling Commands, Up: Top
6 Searching an Info File
************************
GNU Info allows you to search for a sequence of characters throughout an
entire Info file. Here are the commands to do this:
‘s’ (‘search’)
‘/’
Read a string in the echo area and search for it, either as a
regular expression (by default) or a literal string. If the string
includes upper-case characters, the Info file is searched
case-sensitively; otherwise Info ignores the letter case. With a
numeric argument of N, search for Nth occurrence of the string.
Negative arguments search backwards.
‘?’ (‘search-backward’)
Read a string in the echo area and search backward through the Info
file for that string. If the string includes upper-case
characters, the Info file is searched case-sensitively; otherwise
Info ignores the letter case. With a numeric argument of N, search
for Nth occurrence of the string. Negative arguments search
forward.
‘C-x n’ (‘search-next’)
‘}’
Search forwards for the string used for the last search command.
Case sensitivity and use of regular expressions are kept the same.
With a numeric argument of N, search for Nth next occurrence.
By default, the search starts at the position immediately following
the cursor. However, if the variable ‘search-skip-screen’ (*note
‘search-skip-screen’: Variables.) is set, it starts at the
beginning of the next page, thereby skipping all visibly displayed
lines.
‘C-x N’ (‘search-previous’)
‘{’
Just like ‘search-next’, but in reverse. You can use ‘search-next’
and ‘search-previous’ together to move forward and backward through
matches. ‘search-previous’ usually goes to the place in the file
that was displayed before an immediately preceding ‘search-next’,
and vice versa.(1)
‘R’ (‘toggle-regexp’)
Toggle between using regular expressions and literal strings for
searching. Info uses so-called 'extended' regular expression
syntax (*note (grep)Regular Expressions::).
‘S’ (‘search-case-sensitively’)
Read a string in the echo area and search for it case-sensitively,
even if the string includes only lower-case letters. With a
numeric argument of N, search for Nth occurrence of the string.
Negative arguments search backwards.
‘C-s’ (‘isearch-forward’)
Interactively search forward through the Info file for a string as
you type it. If the string includes upper-case characters, the
search is case-sensitive; otherwise Info ignores the letter case.
‘C-r’ (‘isearch-backward’)
Interactively search backward through the Info file for a string as
you type it. If the string includes upper-case characters, the
search is case-sensitive; otherwise Info ignores the letter case.
‘M-/’ (‘tree-search’)
Recursively search this node and any subnodes listed in menus for a
string.
‘M-}’ (‘tree-search-next’)
‘M-{’ (‘tree-search-previous’)
Go forwards and backwards through the matches for an active tree
search.
The most basic searching command is ‘s’ or ‘/’ (‘search’). The ‘s’
command prompts you for a string in the echo area, and then searches the
remainder of the Info file for an occurrence of that string. If the
string is found, the node containing it is selected, and the cursor is
left positioned at the start of the found string. Subsequent ‘s’
commands show you the default search string; pressing <RET> instead of
typing a new string will use the default search string.
“Incremental searching” is similar to basic searching, but the string
is looked up while you are typing it, instead of waiting until the
entire search string has been specified.
The tree search can be used from the ‘dir’ node to search through all
Info files installed on the system. It can also be used to search
through a particular chapter of a manual when you are not interested in
matches in other chapters.
If the ‘highlight-searches’ variable is set, matches from search
commands will be highlighted. *Note ‘highlight-searches’: Variables.
Use the ‘M-x clear-search’ command to clear any search highlights.
Both incremental and non-incremental search by default ignore the
case of letters when comparing the Info file text with the search
string. However, an uppercase letter in the search string makes the
search case-sensitive. You can force a case-sensitive non-incremental
search, even for a string that includes only lower-case letters, by
using the ‘S’ command (‘search-case-sensitively’). The ‘n’ and ‘N’
commands operate case-sensitively if the last search command was ‘S’.
Normally, the search pattern should not be shorter than some
predefined limit. By default, this limit is set to 1 character. *Note
min-search-length:: for more information on this.
---------- Footnotes ----------
(1) This sometimes doesn't happen when ‘search-skip-screen’ is ‘On’,
and the search goes across nodes.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Index Commands, Next: Xref Commands, Prev: Searching Commands, Up: Top
7 Index Commands
****************
GNU Info has commands to search through the indices of an Info file,
which helps you find areas within an Info file which discuss a
particular topic.
‘i’ (‘index-search’)
Look up a string in the indices for this Info file, and select a
node to which the found index entry points.
‘I’ (‘virtual-index’)
Look up a string in the indices for this Info file, and show all
the matches in a new virtual node, synthesized on the fly.
‘,’ (‘next-index-match’)
Move to the node containing the next matching index item from the
last ‘i’ command.
‘M-x index-apropos’
Grovel the indices of all the known Info files on your system for a
string, and build a menu of the possible matches.
The most efficient means of finding something quickly in a manual is
the ‘i’ command (‘index-search’). This command prompts for a string,
and then looks for that string in all the indices of the current Info
manual. If it finds a matching index entry, it displays the node to
which that entry refers and prints the full text of the entry in the
echo area. You can press ‘,’ (‘next-index-match’) to find more matches.
A good Info manual has all of its important concepts indexed, so the ‘i’
command lets you use a manual as a reference.
If you don't know what manual documents something, try the ‘M-x
index-apropos’ command. It prompts for a string and then looks up that
string in all the indices of all the Info documents installed on your
system. It can also be invoked from the command line; see *note
--apropos::.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Xref Commands, Next: Window Commands, Prev: Index Commands, Up: Top
8 Selecting Cross-references
****************************
We have already discussed the ‘Next’, ‘Prev’, and ‘Up’ pointers which
appear at the top of a node, referring you to a different node.
In addition, a node may contain a “menu”, as well as
“cross-references” (“xrefs” for short) interspersed through the text of
the node. Cross-references may possibly refer to a node in another Info
file.
* Menu:
* Parts of an Xref:: What a cross-reference is made of.
* Selecting Xrefs:: Commands for selecting menu or note items.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Parts of an Xref, Next: Selecting Xrefs, Up: Xref Commands
8.1 Parts of an Xref
====================
Here is a sample menu entry showing the parts of a cross-reference:
* Foo Label: Foo Target. More information about Foo.
The reference has two parts: the first part is called the “label”; it is
the name that you can use to refer to the cross-reference, and the
second is the “target”; it is the full name of the node that the
cross-reference points to. The target is separated from the label by a
single colon ‘:’; first the label appears, and then the target.
The ‘.’ ends the name of the target. The ‘.’ is not part of the
target; it serves only to let Info know where the target name ends.
A shorthand way of specifying references allows two adjacent colons
to stand for a target name which is the same as the label name:
* Foo Commands:: Commands pertaining to Foo.
In the above example, the name of the target is the same as the name
of the label, in this case ‘Foo Commands’.
You will normally see two types of cross-reference while viewing
nodes: “menu” references, and “note” references. Menu references appear
within a node's menu; they begin with a ‘*’ at the beginning of a line,
and continue with a label, a target, and a comment which describes what
the contents of the node pointed to contains.
Note references appear within the body of the node text; they begin
with ‘*Note’, and continue with a label and a target.
Like ‘Next’, ‘Prev’, and ‘Up’ pointers, cross-references can point to
any valid node. They are used to refer you to a place where more
detailed information can be found on a particular subject. Here is a
cross-reference which points to a node within the Texinfo documentation:
*Note Cross-refrences: (texinfo)Cross References, for more information
on creating your own Texinfo cross-references.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Selecting Xrefs, Prev: Parts of an Xref, Up: Xref Commands
8.2 Selecting Xrefs
===================
The following table lists the Info commands which operate on menu items.
‘1’ (‘menu-digit’)
‘2’ ... ‘9’
‘M-1’, vi-like operation
‘M-2’ ... ‘M-9’, vi-like operation
Within an Info window, pressing a single digit, (such as ‘1’),
selects that menu item, and places its node in the current window.
For convenience, there is one exception; pressing ‘0’ selects the
_last_ item in the node's menu. When ‘--vi-keys’ is in effect,
digits set the numeric argument, so these commands are remapped to
their ‘M-’ varieties. For example, to select the last menu item,
press ‘M-0’.
‘0’ (‘last-menu-item’)
‘M-0’, vi-like operation
Select the last item in the current node's menu.
‘m’ (‘menu-item’)
Reads the name of a menu item in the echo area and selects its
node. Completion is available while reading the menu label. *Note
completion: The Echo Area.
‘M-x find-menu’
Move the cursor to the start of this node's menu.
This table lists the Info commands which operate on cross-references.
‘f’ (‘xref-item’)
‘r’
Reads the name of a note cross-reference in the echo area and
selects its node. Completion is available while reading the
cross-reference label. *Note completion: The Echo Area.
Finally, the next few commands operate on menu or note references
alike:
<TAB> (‘move-to-next-xref’)
Move the cursor to the start of the next nearest menu item or note
reference in this node. You can then use <RET>
(‘select-reference-this-line’) to select the menu or note
reference.
‘M-<TAB>’ (‘move-to-prev-xref’)
‘BackTab’
Move the cursor the start of the nearest previous menu item or note
reference in this node.
The ‘BackTab’ key can be produced on some terminals with
‘Shift-<TAB>’.
<RET> (‘select-reference-this-line’)
Select the menu item or note reference appearing on this line.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Window Commands, Next: Printing Nodes, Prev: Xref Commands, Up: Top
9 Manipulating Multiple Windows
*******************************
A “window” is a place to show the text of a node. Windows have a view
area where the text of the node is displayed, and an associated “mode
line”, which briefly describes the node being viewed.
GNU Info supports multiple windows appearing in a single screen; each
window is separated from the next by its mode line. At any time, there
is only one “active” window, that is, the window in which the cursor
appears. There are commands available for creating windows, changing
the size of windows, selecting which window is active, and for deleting
windows.
* Menu:
* The Mode Line:: What appears in the mode line?
* Basic Windows:: Manipulating windows in Info.
* The Echo Area:: Used for displaying errors and reading input.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: The Mode Line, Next: Basic Windows, Up: Window Commands
9.1 The Mode Line
=================
A “mode line” is a line of inverse video which appears at the bottom of
an Info window. It describes the contents of the window just above it;
this information includes the name of the file and node appearing in
that window, the number of screen lines it takes to display the node,
and the percentage of text that is above the top of the window.
Here is a sample mode line for a window containing a file named
‘dir’, showing the node ‘Top’.
-----Info: (dir)Top, 40 lines --Top-------------------------------------
^^ ^ ^^^ ^^
(file)Node #lines where
Truncation of long lines (as opposed to wrapping them to the next
display line, *note toggle-wrap: Scrolling Commands.) is indicated by a
‘$’ at the left edge of the mode line:
--$--Info: (texinfo)Top, 480 lines --Top--------------------------------
When Info makes a node internally, such that there is no
corresponding info file on disk, the name of the node is surrounded by
asterisks (‘*’). The name itself tells you what the contents of the
window are; the sample mode line below shows an internally constructed
node showing possible completions:
-----Info: *Completions*, 7 lines --All---------------------------------
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Basic Windows, Next: The Echo Area, Prev: The Mode Line, Up: Window Commands
9.2 Window Commands
===================
It can be convenient to view more than one node at a time. To allow
this, Info can display more than one “window”. Each window has its own
mode line (*note The Mode Line::) and history of nodes viewed in that
window (*note ‘history-node’: Node Commands.).
‘C-x o’ (‘next-window’)
Select the next window on the screen. Note that the echo area can
only be selected if it is already in use, and you have left it
temporarily. Normally, ‘C-x o’ simply moves the cursor into the
next window on the screen, or if you are already within the last
window, into the first window on the screen. Given a numeric
argument, ‘C-x o’ moves over that many windows. A negative
argument causes ‘C-x o’ to select the previous window on the
screen.
‘M-x prev-window’
Select the previous window on the screen. This is identical to
‘C-x o’ with a negative argument.
‘C-x 2’ (‘split-window’)
Split the current window into two windows, both showing the same
node. Each window is one half the size of the original window, and
the cursor remains in the original window. The variable
‘automatic-tiling’ can cause all of the windows on the screen to be
resized for you automatically (*note ‘automatic-tiling’:
Variables.).
‘C-x 0’ (‘delete-window’)
Delete the current window from the screen. If you have made too
many windows and your screen appears cluttered, this is the way to
get rid of some of them.
‘C-x 1’ (‘keep-one-window’)
Delete all of the windows excepting the current one.
‘<ESC> C-v’ (‘scroll-other-window’)
Scroll the other window, in the same fashion that ‘C-v’ might
scroll the current window. Given a negative argument, scroll the
"other" window backward.
‘C-x ^’ (‘grow-window’)
Grow (or shrink) the current window. Given a numeric argument,
grow the current window that many lines; with a negative numeric
argument, shrink the window instead.
‘C-x t’ (‘tile-windows’)
Divide the available screen space among all of the visible windows.
Each window is given an equal portion of the screen in which to
display its contents. The variable ‘automatic-tiling’ can cause
‘tile-windows’ to be called when a window is created or deleted.
*Note ‘automatic-tiling’: Variables.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: The Echo Area, Prev: Basic Windows, Up: Window Commands
9.3 The Echo Area
=================
The “echo area” is a one line window which appears at the bottom of the
screen. It is used to display informative or error messages, and to
read lines of input from you when that is necessary. Almost all of the
commands available in the echo area are identical to their Emacs
counterparts, so please refer to that documentation for greater depth of
discussion on the concepts of editing a line of text. The following
table briefly lists the commands that are available while input is being
read in the echo area:
‘C-f’ (‘echo-area-forward’)
<RIGHT> (an arrow key)
Move forward a character.
‘C-b’ (‘echo-area-backward’)
<LEFT> (an arrow key)
Move backward a character.
‘C-a’ (‘echo-area-beg-of-line’)
Move to the start of the input line.
‘C-e’ (‘echo-area-end-of-line’)
Move to the end of the input line.
‘M-f’ (‘echo-area-forward-word’)
Move forward a word.
‘M-b’ (‘echo-area-backward-word’)
Move backward a word.
‘C-d’ (‘echo-area-delete’)
Delete the character under the cursor.
<DEL> (‘echo-area-rubout’)
Delete the character behind the cursor.
On some keyboards, this key is designated <BS>, for ‘Backspace’.
Those keyboards will usually bind <DEL> in the echo area to
‘echo-area-delete’.
‘C-g’ (‘echo-area-abort’)
Cancel or quit the current operation. If completion is being read,
this command discards the text of the input line which does not
match any completion. If the input line is empty, it aborts the
calling function.
<RET> (‘echo-area-newline’)
Accept (or forces completion of) the current input line.
‘C-q’ (‘echo-area-quoted-insert’)
Insert the next character verbatim. This is how you can insert
control characters into a search string.
‘M-<TAB>’ (‘echo-area-tab-insert’)
Insert a <TAB> character.
‘C-t’ (‘echo-area-transpose-chars’)
Transpose the characters at the cursor.
PRINTING CHARACTER
Insert the character.
The next group of commands deal with “killing”, and “yanking” text.
(Sometimes these operations are called “cut” and “paste”, respectively.)
For an in-depth discussion, see *note Killing and Deleting:
(emacs)Killing.
‘M-d’ (‘echo-area-kill-word’)
Kill the word following the cursor.
‘M-<DEL>’ (‘echo-area-backward-kill-word’)
‘M-<BS>’
Kill the word preceding the cursor.
On some keyboards, the ‘Backspace’ key is used instead of ‘DEL’, so
‘M-<Backspace>’ has the same effect as ‘M-<DEL>’.
‘C-k’ (‘echo-area-kill-line’)
Kill the text from the cursor to the end of the line.
‘C-x <DEL>’ (‘echo-area-backward-kill-line’)
Kill the text from the cursor to the beginning of the line.
‘C-y’ (‘echo-area-yank’)
Yank back the contents of the last kill.
‘M-y’ (‘echo-area-yank-pop’)
Yank back a previous kill, removing the last yanked text first.
Sometimes when reading input in the echo area, the command that
needed input will only accept one of a list of several choices. The
choices represent the “possible completions”, and you must respond with
one of them. Since there are a limited number of responses you can
make, Info allows you to abbreviate what you type, only typing as much
of the response as is necessary to uniquely identify it. In addition,
you can request Info to fill in as much of the response as is possible;
this is called “completion”.
The following commands are available when completing in the echo
area:
<TAB> (‘echo-area-complete’)
Insert as much of a completion as is possible. Otherwise, display
a window containing a list of the possible completions of what you
have typed so far. For example, if the available choices are:
bar
foliate
food
forget
and you have typed an ‘f’, followed by <TAB>, this would result in
‘fo’ appearing in the echo area, since all of the choices which
begin with ‘f’ continue with ‘o’.
Now if you type <TAB> again, Info will pop up a window showing a
node called ‘*Completions*’ which lists the possible completions
like this:
3 completions:
foliate food
forget
i.e., all of the choices which begin with ‘fo’.
Now, typing ‘l’ followed by ‘TAB’ results in ‘foliate’ appearing in
the echo area, since that is the only choice which begins with
‘fol’.
‘<ESC> C-v’ (‘echo-area-scroll-completions-window’)
Scroll the completions window, if that is visible, or the "other"
window if not.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Printing Nodes, Next: Miscellaneous Commands, Prev: Window Commands, Up: Top
10 Printing Nodes
*****************
In general, we recommend that you use TeX to format the document and
print sections of it, by running ‘tex’ on the Texinfo source file.
However, you may wish to print out the contents of a node as a quick
reference document for later use, or if you don't have TeX installed.
Info provides you with a command for doing this.
‘M-x print-node’
Pipe the contents of the current node through the command in the
environment variable ‘INFO_PRINT_COMMAND’. If the variable does
not exist, the node is simply piped to ‘lpr’ (on DOS/Windows, the
default is to print the node to the local printer device, ‘PRN’).
The value of ‘INFO_PRINT_COMMAND’ may begin with the ‘>’ character,
as in ‘>/dev/printer’, in which case Info treats the rest as the
name of a file or a device. Instead of piping to a command, Info
opens the file, writes the node contents, and closes the file,
under the assumption that text written to that file will be printed
by the underlying OS.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Miscellaneous Commands, Next: Invoking Info, Prev: Printing Nodes, Up: Top
11 Miscellaneous Commands
*************************
GNU Info contains several commands which self-document GNU Info:
‘M-x describe-command’
Read the name of an Info command in the echo area and then display
a brief description of what that command does.
‘M-x describe-key’
Read a key sequence in the echo area, and then display the name and
documentation of the Info command that the key sequence invokes.
‘M-x describe-variable’
Read the name of a variable in the echo area and then display a
brief description of what the variable affects.
‘M-x where-is’
Read the name of an Info command in the echo area, and then display
a key sequence which can be typed in order to invoke that command.
‘H’ (‘get-help-window’)
Create (or Move into) the window displaying ‘*Help*’, and place a
node containing a quick reference card into it. This window
displays the most concise information about GNU Info available.
‘h’ (‘get-info-help-node’)
Try hard to visit the node ‘(info)Help’. The Info file ‘info.texi’
distributed with GNU Emacs contains this node. Of course, the file
must first be processed with ‘texi2any’, and then placed into the
location of your Info directory.
‘=’ (‘display-file-info’)
Show information about what's currently being viewed in the echo
area: the Info file name, and current line number and percentage
within the current node.
‘M-x info-version’
Display the name and version of the currently running Info program.
Here are the commands for creating a numeric argument:
‘C-u’ (‘universal-argument’)
Start (or multiply by 4) the current numeric argument. ‘C-u’ is a
good way to give a small numeric argument to cursor movement or
scrolling commands; ‘C-u C-v’ scrolls the screen 4 lines, while
‘C-u C-u C-n’ moves the cursor down 16 lines. ‘C-u’ followed by
digit keys sets the numeric argument to the number thus typed: ‘C-u
1 2 0’ sets the argument to 120.
‘M-1’ (‘add-digit-to-numeric-arg’)
‘1’, vi-like operation
‘M-2’ ... ‘M-9’
‘2’ ... ‘9’, vi-like operation
‘M-0’
‘0’, vi-like operation
Add the digit value of the invoking key to the current numeric
argument. Once Info is reading a numeric argument, you may just
type the digits of the argument, without the Meta prefix. For
example, you might give ‘C-l’ a numeric argument of 32 by typing:
C-u 3 2 C-l
or
M-3 2 C-l
‘M--’ (‘add-digit-to-numeric-arg’)
‘-’
To make a negative argument, type ‘-’. Typing ‘-’ alone makes a
negative argument with a value of −1. If you continue to type
digit or Meta-digit keys after ‘-’, the result is a negative number
produced by those digits.
‘-’ doesn't work when you type in the echo area, because you need
to be able to insert the ‘-’ character itself; use ‘M--’ instead,
if you need to specify negative arguments in the echo area.
<C-g> is used to abort the reading of a multi-character key sequence,
to cancel lengthy operations (such as multi-file searches) and to cancel
reading input in the echo area.
‘C-g’ (‘abort-key’)
Cancel current operation.
The ‘q’ command of Info simply quits running Info.
‘q’ (‘quit’)
‘C-x C-c’
Exit GNU Info.
Here are commands affecting the display of nodes:
‘C-l’ (‘redraw-display’)
Redraw the display from scratch, or shift the line containing the
cursor to a specified location. With no numeric argument, ‘C-l’
clears the screen, and then redraws its entire contents. Given a
numeric argument of N, the line containing the cursor is shifted so
that it is on the Nth line of the window.
‘M-x set-screen-height’
Read a height value in the echo area and set the height of the
displayed screen to that value. For example, if the operating
system tells GNU Info that the screen is 60 lines tall, and it is
actually only 40 lines tall, you could use this command to tell
Info that the operating system is incorrect.
‘C-x w’ (‘toggle-wrap’)
Toggles the state of line wrapping in the current window.
Normally, lines which are longer than the screen width “wrap”,
i.e., they are continued on the next line. Lines which wrap have a
‘\’ appearing in the rightmost column of the screen. You can cause
such lines to be terminated at the rightmost column by changing the
state of line wrapping in the window with ‘C-x w’. When a line
which needs more space than one screen width to display is
displayed, a ‘$’ appears in the rightmost column of the screen, and
the remainder of the line is invisible. When long lines are
truncated, the mode line displays the ‘$’ character near its left
edge.
On MS-DOS/MS-Windows, this command actually tries to change the
dimensions of the visible screen to the value you type in the echo area.
Finally, Info provides a way to display footnotes which might be
associated with the current node that you are viewing:
‘<ESC> C-f’ (‘show-footnotes’)
Show the footnotes (if any) associated with the current node in
another window. You can have Info automatically display the
footnotes associated with a node when the node is selected by
setting the variable ‘automatic-footnotes’. *Note
‘automatic-footnotes’: Variables.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Invoking Info, Next: Variables, Prev: Miscellaneous Commands, Up: Top
12 Invoking Info
****************
GNU Info accepts several options to control the initial node or nodes
being viewed, and to specify which directories to search for Info files.
Here is a template showing an invocation of GNU Info from the shell:
info [OPTION...] [MANUAL] [MENU-OR-INDEX-ITEM...]
Info will look for an entry called MANUAL in the directory files,
which are named ‘dir’, that it finds in its search path. The search is
case-insensitive and considers substrings. (If MANUAL is not given, by
default Info displays a composite directory listing, constructed by
combining the ‘dir’ files.) A basic example:
info coreutils
This looks for an entry labelled ‘coreutils’, or ‘Coreutils’, etc.,
and if found, displays the referenced file (e.g., ‘coreutils.info’) at
the location given. ‘info coreu’ will find it too, if there is no
better match.
Another example:
info ls
Assuming the normal ‘dir’ entry for ‘ls’, this will show the ‘ls’
documentation, which happens to be within the ‘coreutils’ manual rather
than a separate manual. The ‘dir’ entries can point to any node within
a manual, so that users don't have to be concerned with the exact
structure used by different authors.
If no entry is found in the directories, Info looks for a file called
MANUAL in its search path. If not found, Info looks for it with the
file extensions ‘.info’, ‘-info’, and ‘.inf’. For each of these known
extensions, if a regular file is not found, Info looks for a compressed
file.(1)
You can specify the name of a node to visit with the ‘--node’ or ‘-n’
option. Alternatively, you can specify the file and node together using
the same format that occurs in Info cross-references. These two
examples both load the ‘Files’ node within the ‘emacs’ manual:
info emacs -n Files
info '(emacs)Files'
If you want to load a file without looking in the search path,
specify MANUAL either as an absolute path, or as a path relative to the
current directory which contains at least one slash character. (You can
also use the ‘--file’ option for similar behavior, described below.)
Examples:
info /usr/local/share/info/bash.info
info ./document.info
Info looks for MANUAL only in the explicitly specified directory, and
adds that directory to its search path.
Info treats any remaining arguments as the names of menu items, or
(see below) index entries. The first argument is a menu item in the
‘Top’ node of the file loaded, the second argument is a menu item in the
first argument's node, etc. You can move to the node of your choice by
specifying the menu names which describe the path to that node. For
example,
info emacs buffers
info texinfo Overview 'Using Texinfo'
The first example selects the menu item ‘Buffers’ in the node
‘(emacs)Top’. The second example loads the ‘texinfo’ file and looks in
its top-level menu for a ‘Overview’ item, looks in the menu of the node
referenced, and finally displays the node referenced by the ‘Using
Texinfo’ item.
If there was only one MENU-OR-INDEX-ITEM argument and it wasn't found
as a menu item, Info looks for it as an index entry. For example:
info libc printf
This loads the libc Info manual and first looks for ‘printf’ in the
top-level menu as usual; since it isn't there (at this writing), it then
looks in the indices. If it's found there (which it is), the relevant
node at the given location is displayed.
If Info is invoked when its standard output is not a terminal, it
does not attempt to start an interactive session; rather, it writes the
contents of the loaded nodes and subnodes to standard output, as if the
‘--output=-’ and ‘--subnodes’ options were given. This can be used to
pipe the contents of Info nodes to another program, such as a pager.
A complete list of options follows.
‘--all’
‘-a’
Find all files matching MANUAL. Three usage patterns are
supported, as follows.
First, if ‘--all’ is used together with ‘--where’, ‘info’ prints
the names of all matching files found on standard output (including
‘*manpages*’ if relevant) and exits.
Second, if ‘--all’ is used together with ‘--output’, the contents
of all matched files are dumped to the specified output file.
Otherwise, an interactive session is initiated. If more than one
file matches, a menu node is displayed listing the matches and
allowing you to select one. This menu node can be brought back at
any time by pressing ‘C-x f’. If there is only one match, ‘info’
starts as usual.
When used with the ‘--index-search’ option, ‘info’ displays a menu
of matching index entries (just as the ‘virtual-index’ command
does; see *note Index Commands::).
The ‘--node’ option cannot be used together with this option.
‘--apropos=STRING’
‘-k STRING’
Specify a string to search in every index of every Info file
installed on your system. Info looks up the named STRING in all
the indices it can find, prints the results to standard output, and
then exits. If you are not sure which Info file explains certain
issues, this option is your friend. (If your system has a lot of
Info files installed, searching all of them might take some time!)
You can invoke the apropos command from inside Info; see *note
Searching Commands::.
‘--debug=NUMBER’
‘-x NUMBER’
Print additional debugging information. The argument specifies the
verbosity level, so a higher level includes all the information
from lower levels. For all available debugging output, use
‘-x -1’. Info version 7.1 has these levels:
‘1’
Print information about file handling, such as looking for
‘dir’ files and nodes written with ‘--output’.
‘2’
Print operations relating to ‘INFOPATH’.
‘3’
Print information about node searching.
Debugging output goes to standard error.
‘--directory DIRECTORY-PATH’
‘-d DIRECTORY-PATH’
Add DIRECTORY-PATH to the list of directory paths searched when
Info needs to find a file. You may issue ‘--directory’ multiple
times; once for each directory which contains Info files, or with a
list of such directories separated by a colon (or semicolon on
MS-DOS/MS-Windows).
Directories specified in the environment variable ‘INFOPATH’ are
added to the directories specified with ‘--directory’, if any. The
value of ‘INFOPATH’ is a list of directories usually separated by a
colon; on MS-DOS/MS-Windows systems, the semicolon is used. If the
value of ‘INFOPATH’ ends with a colon (or semicolon on
MS-DOS/MS-Windows), the initial list of directories is constructed
by appending the build-time default to the value of ‘INFOPATH’.
If you do not define ‘INFOPATH’, Info uses a default path defined
when Info was built as the initial list of directories.
Regardless of whether ‘INFOPATH’ is defined, the default
documentation directory defined when Info was built is added to the
search path. If you do not want this directory to be included, set
the ‘infopath-no-defaults’ variable to ‘On’ (*note
infopath-no-defaults::).
If the list of directories contains the element ‘PATH’, that
element is replaced by a list of directories derived from the value
of the environment variable ‘PATH’. Each path element of the form
DIR/BASE is replaced by DIR‘/share/info’ or DIR‘/info’, provided
that directory exists.
‘--dribble=FILE’
Specify a file where all user keystrokes will be recorded. This
file can be used later to replay the same sequence of commands, see
the ‘--restore’ option below.
‘--file MANUAL’
‘-f MANUAL’
Specify a particular manual to visit without looking its name up in
any ‘dir’ files.
With this option, it starts by trying to visit ‘(MANUAL)Top’, i.e.,
the ‘Top’ node in (typically) ‘MANUAL.info’. As above, it tries
various file extensions to find the file. If no such file (or
node) can be found, Info exits without doing anything. As with the
‘dir’ lookup described above, any extra MENU-OR-INDEX-ITEM
arguments are used to locate a node within the loaded file.
If MANUAL is an absolute file name, or begins with ‘./’ or ‘../’,
or contains an intermediate directory, Info will only look for the
file in the directory specified, and add this directory to
‘INFOPATH’. (This is the same as what happens when ‘--file’ is not
given.)
‘--help’
‘-h’
Output a brief description of the available Info command-line
options.
‘--index-search STRING’
After processing all command-line arguments, go to the index in the
selected Info file and search for index entries which match STRING.
If such an entry is found, the Info session begins with displaying
the node pointed to by the first matching index entry; press ‘,’ to
step through the rest of the matching entries. If no such entry
exists, print ‘no entries found’ and exit with nonzero status.
This can be used from another program as a way to provide online
help, or as a quick way of starting to read an Info file at a
certain node when you don't know the exact name of that node.
When used with the ‘--all’ option, ‘info’ displays a menu of
matching index entries (just as the ‘virtual-index’ command does;
see *note Index Commands::).
This command can also be invoked from inside Info; *note Searching
Commands::.
‘--init-file INIT-FILE’
Read key bindings and variable settings from INIT-FILE instead of
the ‘.infokey’ file in your home directory. *Note Custom Key
Bindings::.
‘--node NODENAME’
‘-n NODENAME’
Specify a particular node to visit in the initial file that Info
loads. You may specify ‘--node’ multiple times: for an interactive
Info, each NODENAME is visited in its own window; for a
non-interactive Info (such as when ‘--output’ is given) each
NODENAME is processed sequentially.
You can specify both the file and node to the ‘--node’ option using
the usual Info syntax, but don't forget to escape the open and
close parentheses and whitespace from the shell; for example:
info --node "(emacs)Buffers"
‘--output FILE’
‘-o FILE’
Direct output to FILE. Each node that Info visits will be output
to FILE instead of interactively viewed. A value of ‘-’ for FILE
means standard output.
‘--no-raw-escapes’
‘--raw-escapes, -R’
By default, Info passes SGR terminal control sequences (also known
as ANSI escape sequences) found in documents directly through to
the terminal. If you use the ‘--no-raw-escapes’ options, these
sequences are displayed as other control characters are; for
example, an <ESC> byte is displayed as ‘^[’. The ‘--raw-escapes’
and ‘-R’ options do not do anything, but are included for
completeness.
‘--restore=DRIBBLE-FILE’
Read keystrokes from DRIBBLE-FILE, presumably recorded during
previous Info session (see the description of the ‘--dribble’
option above). When the keystrokes in the files are all read, Info
reverts its input to the usual interactive operation.
‘--show-malformed-multibytes’
‘--no-show-malformed-multibytes’
Show malformed multibyte sequences in the output. By default, such
sequences are dropped.
‘--show-options’
‘--usage’
‘-O’
Look for the node that describes how to invoke the program. The
name of the program is taken from the other non-option arguments on
the command line. For example, ‘info emacs -O’ loads the ‘Emacs
Invocation’ node of the ‘emacs’ manual.
This option is provided to make it easier to find the most
important usage information in a manual without navigating through
menu hierarchies. The effect is similar to the ‘M-x
goto-invocation’ command (*note goto-invocation::) from inside
Info.
‘--speech-friendly’
‘-b’
On MS-DOS/MS-Windows only, this option causes Info to use standard
file I/O functions for screen writes. (By default, Info uses
direct writes to the video memory on these systems, for faster
operation and colored display support.) This allows the speech
synthesizers used by blind persons to catch the output and convert
it to audible speech.
‘--strict-node-location’
This option causes Info not to search "nearby" to locate nodes, and
instead strictly use the information provided in the Info file.
The practical use for this option is for debugging programs that
write Info files, to check that they are outputting the correct
locations. Due to bugs and malfeasances in the various Info
writing programs over the years and versions, it is not advisable
to ever use this option when just trying to read documentation.
‘--subnodes’
This option only has meaning when given in conjunction with
‘--output’. It means to recursively output the nodes appearing in
the menus of each node being output. Menu items which resolve to
external Info files are not output, and neither are menu items
which are members of an index. Each node is only output once.
‘-v NAME=VALUE’
‘--variable=NAME=VALUE’
Set the ‘info’ variable NAME to VALUE. *Note Variables::.
‘--version’
Prints the version information of Info and exits.
‘--vi-keys’
This option binds functions to keys differently, to emulate the key
bindings of ‘vi’ and Less. The bindings activated by this option
are documented in *note infokey format::. (*Note Custom Key
Bindings:: for a more general way of altering GNU Info's key
bindings.)
‘--where’
‘--location’
‘-w’
Show the filename that would be read and exit, instead of actually
reading it and starting Info.
Finally, Info defines many default key bindings and variables. *Note
Custom Key Bindings:: for information on how to customize these
settings.
---------- Footnotes ----------
(1) Info supports files compressed with ‘gzip’, ‘xz’, ‘bzip2’,
‘lzip’, ‘lzma’, ‘compress’ and ‘yabba’ programs, assumed to have
extensions ‘.z’, ‘.gz’, ‘.xz’, ‘.bz2’, ‘.lz’, ‘.lzma’, ‘.Z’, and ‘.Y’
respectively.
On MS-DOS, Info allows for the Info extension, such as ‘.inf’, and
the short compressed file extensions, such as ‘.z’ and ‘.gz’, to be
merged into a single extension, since DOS doesn't allow more than a
single dot in the basename of a file. Thus, on MS-DOS, if Info looks
for ‘bison’, file names like ‘bison.igz’ and ‘bison.inz’ will be found
and decompressed by ‘gunzip’.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Variables, Next: Colors and Styles, Prev: Invoking Info, Up: Top
13 Manipulating Variables
*************************
GNU Info uses several internal “variables” whose values are looked at by
various Info commands. You can change the values of these variables,
and thus change the behavior of Info, if desired.
There are three ways to set the value of a variable, listed here in
order of precedence:
1. interactively, using the ‘set-variable’ command described below;
2. on the command line, using the ‘-v’ (‘--variable’) command line
option (*note variable-assignment::);
3. in the ‘#var’ section of the ‘.infokey’ file (*note Custom Key
Bindings::).
‘M-x set-variable’
Read the name of a variable, and the value for it, in the echo area
and then set the variable to that value. Completion is available
when reading the variable name (*note The Echo Area::); completion
is also available when reading the value when that makes sense.
‘M-x describe-variable’
Read the name of a variable in the echo area and display its value
and a brief description.
Here is a list of the variables that you can set in Info.
‘automatic-footnotes’
When set to ‘On’, footnotes appear and disappear automatically;
else, they appear at the bottom of the node text. This variable is
‘Off’ by default. When a node is selected, a window containing the
footnotes which appear in that node is created, and the footnotes
are displayed within the new window. The window that Info creates
to contain the footnotes is called ‘*Footnotes*’. If a node is
selected which contains no footnotes, and a ‘*Footnotes*’ window is
on the screen, the ‘*Footnotes*’ window is deleted. Footnote
windows created in this fashion are not automatically tiled so that
they can use as little of the display as is possible.
‘automatic-tiling’
When set to ‘On’, creating or deleting a window resizes other
windows. This variable is ‘Off’ by default. Normally, typing ‘C-x
2’ divides the current window into two equal parts. When
‘automatic-tiling’ is set to ‘On’, all of the windows are resized
automatically, keeping an equal number of lines visible in each
window. Any ‘*Completions*’ and ‘*Footnotes*’ windows are
exceptions to the automatic tiling; they retain their original
size.
‘cursor-movement-scrolls’
When set to ‘On’, when cursor movement commands reach the top or
bottom of a node, another node is loaded depending on the value of
‘scroll-behavior’ (see below). This is the default. When this
variable is set to ‘Off’, cursor movements stop at the top or
bottom of a node.
‘errors-ring-bell’
When set to ‘On’ (the default), errors cause the bell to ring.
‘follow-strategy’
When set to ‘remain’ (the default), Info tries to remain within the
directory containing the currently displayed Info file when
following a cross-reference to an external manual, before looking
for the referenced manual in the search path. The alternative
value is ‘path’, which means to look through the search path right
away.
‘remain’ is intended to be useful for several Texinfo manuals that
all reference each other and whose versions should match each
other. (For example, various manuals relating to a particular
version of Emacs.)
The alternative behavior, with ‘path’, may be useful when your Info
file search path parallels your command shell's search path, and
you always want to find documentation of the version of the program
that the shell would execute.
‘gc-compressed-files’
When set to ‘On’, Info garbage collects files which had to be
uncompressed. The default value of this variable is ‘Off’.
Whenever a node is visited in Info, the Info file containing that
node is read into memory, and Info reads information about the tags
and nodes contained in that file. Once the tags information is
read by Info, it is never forgotten. However, the actual text of
the nodes does not need to be retained unless a particular Info
window needs it. For non-compressed files, node text is not
remembered when it is no longer in use. But de-compressing a file
can be a time-consuming operation, and so Info tries hard not to do
it twice. This variable tells Info it is okay to garbage collect
the text of the nodes of a file which was compressed on disk.
‘hide-note-references’
By default, Info displays the contents of Info files mostly
verbatim, including text that is used by Info readers for
navigation (for example, marking the location of menus or
cross-references). If you set this variable to ‘On’, some of this
text is hidden, in a similar way to the ‘Info-hide-note-references’
variable in Emacs (*note (info)Emacs Info Variables::).
‘highlight-searches’
When set to ‘On’, highlight matches from searching commands (*note
Searching Commands::).
‘infopath-no-defaults’
Used in conjunction with the ‘INFOPATH’ environment variable (*note
INFOPATH::). When set to ‘On’, the default documentation directory
defined when Info was built (e.g., ‘/usr/share/info’) is not added
to the search path for Info files.
‘ISO-Latin’
The default is ‘On’, which means that Info accepts and displays
characters represented by bytes with values 128 and above, such as
characters in the UTF-8 encoding or in various 8-bit ISO Latin
characters, as well as allowing you to input such characters.
The only reason to set this variable to ‘Off’ would be if your
terminal set the eighth bit of a byte to represent the Meta key
being pressed.
‘key-time’
Length of time in milliseconds to wait for the next byte of a byte
sequence generated by a key (or key chord) on the keyboard. For
example, if the ‘down’ key generates the byte sequence ‘<ESC> O B’,
and the two bytes ‘<ESC> O’ have been received, then a ‘B’ byte
would have to be received within this length of time for a key
press of ‘down’ to be registered. You may wish to set this
variable to a larger value for slow terminals or network
connections.
If you set this variable to 0, it's unspecified whether a
recognized byte sequence representing a key takes precedence over
another recognized sequence representing a key that is an initial
subsequence of the first sequence. In some cases, you may be able
to make pressing a special key on the keyboard that Info doesn't
know about (for example, a function key) cause a command to be
executed by setting this variable to 0, and giving the byte
sequence the key sends in ‘.infokey’. (*Note Custom Key
Bindings::.)
‘min-search-length’
Minimum length of a search string (default 1). Attempts to
initiate a search for a string (or regular expression) shorter than
this value, result in an error.
‘mouse’
What method to use to get input from a mouse device. The default
value is ‘Off’. Set this variable to ‘normal-tracking’ to make
Info use "normal tracking mode" if it detects that the terminal
supports it. This enables you to scroll the contents of the active
window with a mouse scrollwheel.
On terminal emulators running under the X Window System, such as
‘xterm’, you can usually select text with the mouse. However,
mouse tracking mode may interfere with this. When this happens,
you may be able to select text by holding down the ‘Shift’ key
while clicking and dragging.
‘nodeline’
How to print the node header line that appears at the top of each
node. By default only the pointers to neighbouring nodes are
displayed (the "Next", "Prev", and "Up" pointers): this corresponds
to the ‘pointers’ value for this variable. To print the entire
line, set ‘nodeline’ to the value ‘print’, which will include the
filename and name of the node. To not display the header line at
all, use the value ‘no’.
‘scroll-behavior’
‘scroll-behaviour’
The two variable names are synonymous. Control what happens when
scrolling commands are used at the end or beginning of a node
(*note Scrolling Commands::). The default value for this variable
is ‘Continuous’. Possible values:
‘Continuous’
Try to get the first item in this node's menu, or failing
that, the ‘Next’ node, or failing that, the ‘Next’ of the ‘Up’
node. This behavior is identical to using the ‘]’
(‘global-next-node’) and ‘[’ (‘global-prev-node’) commands.
‘Next Only’
Only try to get the ‘Next’ node.
‘Page Only’
Just stop, changing nothing. With this value, no scrolling
command can change the node that is being viewed.
This variable also affects cursor movement commands (*note Cursor
Commands::) unless the ‘cursor-movement-scrolls’ variable is set to
‘Off’. *Note cursor-movement-scrolls::.
‘scroll-last-node’
Control what happens when a scrolling command is issued at the end
of the last node. Possible values are:
‘Stop’
Do not scroll. Display the ‘No more nodes within this
document’ message. This is the default.
‘Top’
Go to the top node of the document.
This variable is in effect only if ‘scroll-behavior’ is set to
‘Continuous’.
‘scroll-step’
The number of lines to scroll to bring the cursor back into the
window. The default value of this variable is 1, which causes a
kind of "smooth scrolling" which some people prefer. Scrolling
happens automatically if the cursor has moved out of the visible
portion of the node text.
If the variable ‘scroll-step’ is 0, the cursor (and the text it is
attached to) is placed in the centre of the window.
‘search-skip-screen’
Set the starting point of repeated searches (*note
repeated-search::). When set to ‘Off’ (the default), repeated
searches start at the position immediately following (when
searching in forward direction), or immediately preceding (when
searching backwards) the cursor. When set to ‘On’, repeated
searches omit lines visibly displayed on the screen. In other
words, forward searches (‘}’) start at the beginning of the next
page, and backward searches (‘{’) start at the end of the previous
page.
‘show-index-match’
When set to ‘On’ (the default), the portion of the matched search
string that you typed is indicated (by displaying it in the
"opposite" case) in the result message (*note ‘next-index-match’:
Searching Commands.).
‘visible-bell’
When set to ‘On’, Info attempts to flash the screen instead of
ringing the bell. This variable is ‘Off’ by default. If the
terminal does not allow flashing, this variable has no effect.
(But you can still make Info perform quietly by setting the
‘errors-ring-bell’ variable to ‘Off’; or using an external command
to mute the bell, e.g., ‘xset b 0 0 0’.)
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Colors and Styles, Next: Custom Key Bindings, Prev: Variables, Up: Top
14 Colors and Styles
********************
You can choose to highlight parts of Info's display, such as
cross-references and search matches, using a variety of styles,
including colors, boldface and underline. Here are the variables that
are available to do this:
‘link-style’
Used for cross-references and menu entries.
‘active-link-style’
Used for a cross-reference or menu entry when typing <RET> would
have the effect of following said cross-reference or menu entry.
‘match-style’
Used for matches from a search command. (*Note Searching
Commands::.)
Each of these is given in the ‘.infokey’ file just as the variables
in the previous chapter. Their values are a comma-separated list of
values in the following table:
‘black’
‘red’
‘green’
‘yellow’
‘blue’
‘magenta’
‘cyan’
‘white’
Use the color specified for text.
‘nocolor’
‘nocolour’
Turn off any color that was in effect, using the terminal's default
color.
‘bgblack’
‘bgred’
‘bggreen’
‘bgyellow’
‘bgblue’
‘bgmagenta’
‘bgcyan’
‘bgwhite’
Use the color specified for the background.
‘bgnocolor’
‘bgnocolour’
Use the terminal's default background color.
‘underline’
‘nounderline’
Turn text underline on or off.
‘standout’
‘nostandout’
Turn 'standout mode' on or off. Standout mode entails the use of
appearance modes that make text stand out, and varies between
terminals.
‘bold’
‘regular’
‘nobold’
Turn boldface on or off.
‘blink’
‘noblink’
Make the text blink, or not.
Here is an sample excerpt from an ‘.infokey’ file:
#var
link-style=yellow
active-link-style=yellow,bold
match-style=underline,bold,nocolor
With this, cross-references are all yellow, and active cross-references
are additionally displayed in bold. Any search matches will be shown in
bold, and underlined. Moreover, if there is a search match inside a
cross-reference, the ‘nocolor’ rendition style will cancel the yellow
color, leaving the text in the match the terminal's default color.
(Note, however, that the rendition styles for active cross-references
take priority over those for search matches, so search matches there
will still be displayed in yellow.)
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Custom Key Bindings, Next: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings, Prev: Colors and Styles, Up: Top
15 Customizing Key Bindings and Variables
*****************************************
Info allows you to override the default key-to-command bindings and
variable settings described in this document. (The ‘--vi-keys’ option
rebinds many keys at once; *note --vi-keys::.)
On startup, GNU Info looks for a configuration file in the invoker's
‘HOME’ directory called ‘.infokey’, i.e., ‘~/.infokey’.(1) If it is
present, then Info adopts the key bindings and variable settings
contained therein. To use an alternative configuration file, use the
‘--init-file’ option (*note --init-file::).
Variables may also be set on the command line with the ‘--variable’
option (*note variable-assignment::). Variable settings on the command
line override settings from the ‘.infokey’ file.
* Menu:
* infokey format::
---------- Footnotes ----------
(1) Due to the limitations of DOS filesystems, the MS-DOS version of
Info looks for a file ‘_infokey’ instead. If the ‘HOME’ variable is not
defined, Info additionally looks in the current directory.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: infokey format, Up: Custom Key Bindings
15.1 ‘infokey’ format
=====================
Here is an example ‘.infokey’ file which specifies the key bindings that
are activated by the ‘--vi-keys’ option to Info (*note --vi-keys::).
#info
g first-node
G last-node
\mb beginning-of-node
\me end-of-node
j next-line
k prev-line
f scroll-forward-page-only
^f scroll-forward-page-only
\m\ scroll-forward-page-only
z scroll-forward-page-only-set-window
b scroll-backward-page-only
^b scroll-backward-page-only
w scroll-backward-page-only-set-window
\kd down-line
^e down-line
^j down-line
^m down-line
\ku up-line
^y up-line
^k up-line
d scroll-half-screen-down
^d scroll-half-screen-down
u scroll-half-screen-up
^u scroll-half-screen-up
^xn next-node
^xp prev-node
^xu up-node
' last-node
\mt top-node
\md dir-node
^xg goto-node
I goto-invocation-node
n search-next
N search-previous
\mf xref-item
^xr xref-item
\mg select-reference-this-line
^x^j select-reference-this-line
^x^m select-reference-this-line
^c abort-key
\mh get-info-help-node
:q quit
ZZ quit
#echo-area
\mh echo-area-backward
\ml echo-area-forward
\m0 echo-area-beg-of-line
\m$ echo-area-end-of-line
\mw echo-area-forward-word
\mx echo-area-delete
\mu echo-area-abort
^v echo-area-quoted-insert
\mX echo-area-kill-word
The file consists of one or more “sections”. Each section starts
with a line that identifies the type of section. The possible sections
are:
‘#info’
Key bindings for Info windows. The start of this section is
indicated by a line containing just ‘#info’ by itself. If this is
the first section in the source file, the ‘#info’ line can be
omitted. The rest of this section consists of lines of the form:
STRING whitespace ACTION [ whitespace [ # comment ] ] newline
Whitespace is any sequence of one or more spaces and/or tabs.
Comment is any sequence of any characters, excluding newline.
STRING is the key sequence which invokes the action. ACTION is the
name of an Info command. The characters in STRING are interpreted
literally or prefixed by a caret (‘^’) to indicate a control
character. A backslash followed by certain characters specifies
input keystrokes as follows:
‘\b’
Backspace
‘\e’
Escape (ESC)
‘\n’
Newline
‘\r’
Return
‘\t’
Tab
‘\ku’
Up arrow
‘\kd’
Down arrow
‘\kl’
Left arrow
‘\kr’
Right arrow
‘\kU’
Page Up
‘\kD’
Page Down
‘\kh’
HOME
‘\ke’
END
‘\kx’
Delete (DEL)
‘\mX’
Meta-X where X is any character as described above.
Backslash followed by any other character indicates that character
is to be taken literally. Characters which must be preceded by a
backslash include caret, space, tab, and backslash itself.
‘#echo-area’
Key bindings for the echo area. The start of this section is
indicated by a line containing just ‘#echo-area’ by itself. The
rest of this section has a syntax identical to that for the key
definitions for the Info area, described above.
‘#var’
Variable initializations. The start of this section is indicated
by a line containing just ‘#var’ by itself. Following this line is
a list of variable assignments, one per line. Each line consists
of a variable name (*note Variables::) followed by ‘=’ followed by
a value. There may be no white space between the variable name and
the ‘=’, and all characters following the ‘=’, including white
space, are included in the value.
Blank lines and lines starting with ‘#’ are ignored, except for the
special section header lines.
Key bindings defined in the ‘.infokey’ file take precedence over GNU
Info's default key bindings, whether or not ‘--vi-keys’ is used. A
default key binding may be disabled by overriding it in the ‘.infokey’
file with the action ‘invalid’. In addition, _all_ default key bindings
can be disabled by adding this line _anywhere_ in the relevant section:
#stop
This will cause GNU Info to ignore all the default key commands for
that section.
Beware: ‘#stop’ can be dangerous. Since it disables all default key
bindings, you must supply enough new key bindings to enable all
necessary actions. Failure to bind any key to the ‘quit’ command, for
example, can lead to frustration.
Note that some keys (such as <C-c>) have special meanings to
terminals, and any bindings for these would not be effective. *Note
(coreutils)Special Characters::.
The order in which key bindings are defined in the ‘.infokey’ file is
not important, except that the command summary produced by the
‘get-help-window’ command only displays the _first_ key that is bound to
each command.
File: info-stnd.info, Node: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings, Next: Index, Prev: Custom Key Bindings, Up: Top
16 Alternate MS-DOS/Windows keybindings
***************************************
Here are some keybindings that are only used in Info on MS-DOS/Windows.
Cursor commands
===============
‘<Home>’
‘beginning-of-line’
‘<End>’
‘end-of-line’
‘C-<RIGHT>’
‘forward-word’
‘C-<LEFT>’
‘backward-word’
‘C-<Home>’
‘beginning-of-node’
‘C-<End>’
‘end-of-node’
Node commands
=============
‘C-<NEXT>’
‘next-node’
‘C-<PREVIOUS>’
‘prev-node’
‘C-<UP> (an arrow key)’
‘up-node’
‘C-<CENTER>’
‘history-node’
The <NEXT> key is known as the <PgDn> key on some keyboards. The
<PREVIOUS> key is known as the <PgUp> key on some keyboards.
Echo area commands
==================
‘C-<RIGHT>’
‘echo-area-forward-word’
‘C-<LEFT>’
‘echo-area-backward-word’
‘Shift-<TAB>’
‘echo-area-tab-insert’
On DOS/Windows only, the ‘Shift-<TAB>’ key is an alias for ‘M-<TAB>’.
This key is sometimes called ‘BackTab’.
Miscellaneous commands
======================
‘<F1>’
‘get-help-window’
File: info-stnd.info, Node: Index, Prev: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings, Up: Top
Appendix A Index
****************
[index ]
* Menu:
* _info file (MS-DOS): Custom Key Bindings. (line 6)
* -: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 72)
* --all (-a) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 97)
* --apropos (-k) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 121)
* --debug (-x) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 133)
* --directory (-d) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 152)
* --dribble command line option: Invoking Info. (line 182)
* --file (-f) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 188)
* --help (-h) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 206)
* --index-search command line option: Invoking Info. (line 210)
* --init-file command line option: Invoking Info. (line 228)
* --node (-n) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 234)
* --output (-o) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 247)
* --raw-escapes (-R) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 253)
* --restore command line option: Invoking Info. (line 262)
* --show-malformed-multibytes command line option: Invoking Info.
(line 269)
* --show-options (--usage, -O) command line option: Invoking Info.
(line 275)
* --speech-friendly (-b) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 288)
* --strict-node-location command line option: Invoking Info. (line 296)
* --subnodes, command line option: Invoking Info. (line 305)
* --variable (-v) command line option: Invoking Info. (line 313)
* --version command line option: Invoking Info. (line 316)
* --vi-keys command line option: Invoking Info. (line 319)
* --where (--location, -w) command line option: Invoking Info.
(line 328)
* ,: Index Commands. (line 19)
* ?: Searching Commands. (line 19)
* ?, in Info windows: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 25)
* .infokey format: infokey format. (line 6)
* [: More Node Commands. (line 29)
* ]: More Node Commands. (line 22)
* {: Searching Commands. (line 40)
* }: Searching Commands. (line 28)
* *Footnotes* window: Variables. (line 32)
* /: Searching Commands. (line 11)
* <: More Node Commands. (line 10)
* =, in Info windows: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 36)
* >: More Node Commands. (line 16)
* 0 ... 9, vi-like operation: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 59)
* 0, in Info windows: Selecting Xrefs. (line 22)
* 1 ... 9, in Info windows: Selecting Xrefs. (line 12)
* 1 ... 9, in Info windows <1>: Selecting Xrefs. (line 12)
* abort-key: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 86)
* absolute Info file names: Invoking Info. (line 49)
* active-link-style: Colors and Styles. (line 14)
* add-digit-to-numeric-arg: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 59)
* ANSI escape sequences in documents: Invoking Info. (line 253)
* Apropos, in Info files: Invoking Info. (line 121)
* arguments, command line: Invoking Info. (line 6)
* arguments, negative: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 72)
* automatic-footnotes: Variables. (line 31)
* automatic-tiling: Variables. (line 43)
* b, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 45)
* BackTab, in Info windows: Selecting Xrefs. (line 54)
* BackTab, in the echo area: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 42)
* backward-char: Cursor Commands. (line 35)
* backward-word: Cursor Commands. (line 41)
* beginning-of-line: Cursor Commands. (line 24)
* beginning-of-node: Cursor Commands. (line 45)
* Blinking text: Colors and Styles. (line 72)
* Bold text: Colors and Styles. (line 68)
* BS (backspace): Scrolling Commands. (line 47)
* bugs, reporting: Stand-alone Info. (line 28)
* C-a, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 24)
* C-a, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 24)
* C-b, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 35)
* C-b, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 21)
* C-CENTER: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 27)
* C-d, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 36)
* C-e, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 27)
* C-e, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 27)
* C-End: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 11)
* C-f, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 31)
* C-f, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 17)
* C-g, in Info windows: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 86)
* C-g, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 46)
* C-h: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 25)
* C-Home: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 11)
* C-k, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 83)
* C-l: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 97)
* C-LEFT: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 11)
* C-LEFT, in the echo area: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 42)
* C-n: Cursor Commands. (line 17)
* C-NEXT: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 27)
* C-p: Cursor Commands. (line 21)
* C-PgDn: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 27)
* C-PgUp: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 27)
* C-PREVIOUS: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 27)
* C-q, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 55)
* C-r: Searching Commands. (line 63)
* C-RIGHT: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 11)
* C-RIGHT, in the echo area: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 42)
* C-s: Searching Commands. (line 58)
* C-t, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 62)
* C-u: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 46)
* C-UP: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 27)
* C-v: Scrolling Commands. (line 28)
* C-w: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 111)
* C-x ^: Basic Windows. (line 47)
* C-x 0: Basic Windows. (line 34)
* C-x 1: Basic Windows. (line 39)
* C-x 2: Basic Windows. (line 26)
* C-x b: More Node Commands. (line 106)
* C-x C-b: More Node Commands. (line 101)
* C-x C-c: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 92)
* C-x C-f: More Node Commands. (line 95)
* C-x DEL, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 86)
* C-x n: Searching Commands. (line 28)
* C-x N: Searching Commands. (line 40)
* C-x o: Basic Windows. (line 12)
* C-x t: Basic Windows. (line 52)
* C-y, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 89)
* cancelling the current operation: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 86)
* cancelling typeahead: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 86)
* case-sensitive search: Searching Commands. (line 52)
* case-sensitivity, and search: Searching Commands. (line 97)
* clear-search: Searching Commands. (line 93)
* Colored background: Colors and Styles. (line 49)
* Colored foreground: Colors and Styles. (line 34)
* colors in documents: Invoking Info. (line 253)
* command line options: Invoking Info. (line 6)
* command-line options, how to find: Invoking Info. (line 275)
* commands, describing: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 9)
* completion: The Echo Area. (line 94)
* compressed Info files: Invoking Info. (line 35)
* current file, information about: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 36)
* cursor-movement-scrolls: Variables. (line 53)
* cursor, moving: Cursor Commands. (line 6)
* customizing key bindings: Custom Key Bindings. (line 6)
* d: Node Commands. (line 42)
* debugging: Invoking Info. (line 133)
* default key bindings, overriding: Custom Key Bindings. (line 6)
* DEL, in Info windows: Scrolling Commands. (line 38)
* DEL, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 39)
* delete-window: Basic Windows. (line 34)
* describe-command: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 9)
* describe-key: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 13)
* describe-variable: Variables. (line 26)
* dir-node: Node Commands. (line 42)
* directory path: Invoking Info. (line 152)
* display-file-info: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 36)
* DOWN (an arrow key): Cursor Commands. (line 17)
* down-line: Scrolling Commands. (line 67)
* e, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 49)
* echo area: The Echo Area. (line 6)
* echo-area-abort: The Echo Area. (line 46)
* echo-area-backward: The Echo Area. (line 21)
* echo-area-backward-kill-line: The Echo Area. (line 86)
* echo-area-backward-kill-word: The Echo Area. (line 77)
* echo-area-backward-word: The Echo Area. (line 33)
* echo-area-beg-of-line: The Echo Area. (line 24)
* echo-area-complete: The Echo Area. (line 107)
* echo-area-delete: The Echo Area. (line 36)
* echo-area-end-of-line: The Echo Area. (line 27)
* echo-area-forward: The Echo Area. (line 17)
* echo-area-forward-word: The Echo Area. (line 30)
* echo-area-kill-line: The Echo Area. (line 83)
* echo-area-kill-word: The Echo Area. (line 73)
* echo-area-newline: The Echo Area. (line 52)
* echo-area-quoted-insert: The Echo Area. (line 55)
* echo-area-rubout: The Echo Area. (line 39)
* echo-area-scroll-completions-window: The Echo Area. (line 135)
* echo-area-tab-insert: The Echo Area. (line 59)
* echo-area-transpose-chars: The Echo Area. (line 62)
* echo-area-yank: The Echo Area. (line 89)
* echo-area-yank-pop: The Echo Area. (line 92)
* Emacs Info reader: Stand-alone Info. (line 16)
* End: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 11)
* end-of-line: Cursor Commands. (line 27)
* end-of-node: Cursor Commands. (line 49)
* errors-ring-bell: Variables. (line 60)
* ESC C-f: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 130)
* ESC C-v, in Info windows: Basic Windows. (line 42)
* ESC C-v, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 135)
* execute-command: Node Commands. (line 46)
* f: Selecting Xrefs. (line 36)
* F1: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 25)
* file names, relative: Invoking Info. (line 49)
* file, outputting to: Invoking Info. (line 247)
* files, compressed: Invoking Info. (line 35)
* find-menu: Selecting Xrefs. (line 30)
* finding the Invocation node: More Node Commands. (line 52)
* first-node: More Node Commands. (line 10)
* follow-strategy: Variables. (line 63)
* footnotes window: Variables. (line 32)
* footnotes, displaying: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 130)
* format of .infokey: infokey format. (line 6)
* forward-char: Cursor Commands. (line 31)
* forward-word: Cursor Commands. (line 38)
* functions, describing: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 9)
* g: More Node Commands. (line 39)
* G: More Node Commands. (line 70)
* gc-compressed-files: Variables. (line 81)
* get-help-window: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 25)
* get-info-help-node: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 30)
* global-next-node: More Node Commands. (line 22)
* global-prev-node: More Node Commands. (line 29)
* goto-invocation: More Node Commands. (line 52)
* goto-node: More Node Commands. (line 39)
* grow-window: Basic Windows. (line 47)
* h: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 30)
* hide-note-references: Variables. (line 95)
* highlight-searches: Searching Commands. (line 93)
* highlight-searches <1>: Variables. (line 103)
* history-node: Node Commands. (line 29)
* Home: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 11)
* i: Index Commands. (line 11)
* I: Index Commands. (line 15)
* incremental search: Searching Commands. (line 58)
* index: Index Commands. (line 6)
* index search, selecting from the command line: Invoking Info.
(line 210)
* index-apropos: Index Commands. (line 23)
* index-search: Index Commands. (line 11)
* index, searching: Index Commands. (line 11)
* index, virtual: Index Commands. (line 15)
* indexes: Index Commands. (line 6)
* indices: Index Commands. (line 6)
* Info files, compressed: Invoking Info. (line 35)
* Info files, reading in Emacs: Stand-alone Info. (line 16)
* Info files, relative: Invoking Info. (line 49)
* Info files, searching all indices: Invoking Info. (line 121)
* Info manual location: Invoking Info. (line 328)
* Info manual, specifying initial: Invoking Info. (line 188)
* INFO_PRINT_COMMAND, environment variable: Printing Nodes. (line 13)
* info-version: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 41)
* Info, invoking: Invoking Info. (line 6)
* infokey format: infokey format. (line 6)
* infokey, program for customizing key bindings: Custom Key Bindings.
(line 6)
* INFOPATH: Invoking Info. (line 152)
* infopath-no-defaults: Variables. (line 107)
* initial node, specifying: Invoking Info. (line 188)
* invocation description, how to find: Invoking Info. (line 275)
* invoking Info: Invoking Info. (line 6)
* isearch-backward: Searching Commands. (line 63)
* isearch-forward: Searching Commands. (line 58)
* ISO Latin characters: Variables. (line 114)
* ISO-Latin: Variables. (line 113)
* keep-one-window: Basic Windows. (line 39)
* key bindings, customizing: Custom Key Bindings. (line 6)
* key-time: Variables. (line 123)
* keys, describing: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 13)
* keystrokes, recording: Invoking Info. (line 182)
* l: Node Commands. (line 29)
* last-menu-item: Selecting Xrefs. (line 22)
* last-node: More Node Commands. (line 16)
* LEFT (an arrow key): Cursor Commands. (line 35)
* LEFT, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 21)
* Less-like key bindings: Invoking Info. (line 319)
* link-style: Colors and Styles. (line 11)
* list-visited-nodes: More Node Commands. (line 101)
* local printer device: Printing Nodes. (line 18)
* m: Selecting Xrefs. (line 25)
* M--: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 72)
* M-<: Cursor Commands. (line 45)
* M->: Cursor Commands. (line 49)
* M-0 ... M-9: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 59)
* M-0, vi-like operation: Selecting Xrefs. (line 22)
* M-1 ... M-9, vi-like operation: Selecting Xrefs. (line 12)
* M-1 ... M-9, vi-like operation <1>: Selecting Xrefs. (line 12)
* M-b, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 41)
* M-b, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 33)
* M-BS, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 79)
* M-d, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 73)
* M-DEL, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 77)
* M-f, in Info windows: Cursor Commands. (line 38)
* M-f, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 30)
* M-r: Cursor Commands. (line 52)
* M-TAB, in Info windows: Selecting Xrefs. (line 51)
* M-TAB, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 59)
* M-v: Scrolling Commands. (line 55)
* M-y, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 92)
* malformed multibyte sequences, showing: Invoking Info. (line 269)
* man: More Node Commands. (line 111)
* man pages, displaying: More Node Commands. (line 111)
* match-style: Colors and Styles. (line 18)
* menu-digit: Selecting Xrefs. (line 12)
* menu-item: Selecting Xrefs. (line 25)
* menu-sequence: More Node Commands. (line 70)
* menu, following: Invoking Info. (line 61)
* menu, following, from inside Info: More Node Commands. (line 70)
* Meta key sets eighth bit: Variables. (line 114)
* min-search-length: Variables. (line 143)
* mouse: Variables. (line 148)
* move-to-next-xref: Selecting Xrefs. (line 44)
* move-to-prev-xref: Selecting Xrefs. (line 51)
* move-to-window-line: Cursor Commands. (line 52)
* moving the cursor: Cursor Commands. (line 6)
* n: Node Commands. (line 10)
* negative arguments: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 72)
* NEXT: Scrolling Commands. (line 13)
* next-index-match: Index Commands. (line 19)
* next-line: Cursor Commands. (line 17)
* next-node: Node Commands. (line 10)
* next-window: Basic Windows. (line 12)
* node header line: Variables. (line 162)
* node, selecting from the command line: Invoking Info. (line 234)
* nodeline: Variables. (line 161)
* nodes, selection of: Node Commands. (line 6)
* Non-interactive usage: Invoking Info. (line 87)
* numeric arguments: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 46)
* numeric arguments, negative: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 72)
* O: More Node Commands. (line 52)
* online help, using Info as: Invoking Info. (line 210)
* options, command line: Invoking Info. (line 6)
* outputting to a file: Invoking Info. (line 247)
* overriding default key bindings: Custom Key Bindings. (line 6)
* p: Node Commands. (line 13)
* PageDown: Scrolling Commands. (line 25)
* PageUp: Scrolling Commands. (line 51)
* prev-line: Cursor Commands. (line 21)
* prev-node: Node Commands. (line 13)
* prev-window: Basic Windows. (line 22)
* PREVIOUS: Scrolling Commands. (line 39)
* print-node: Printing Nodes. (line 13)
* printing: Printing Nodes. (line 6)
* printing characters, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 65)
* printing nodes to the local printer: Printing Nodes. (line 18)
* q: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 92)
* quit: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 92)
* quitting: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 92)
* R: Searching Commands. (line 47)
* r: Selecting Xrefs. (line 36)
* redraw-display: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 97)
* regular expression search: Searching Commands. (line 11)
* relative Info file names: Invoking Info. (line 49)
* remembering user keystrokes: Invoking Info. (line 182)
* repeated search: Searching Commands. (line 28)
* replaying recorded keystrokes: Invoking Info. (line 262)
* RET, in Info windows: Selecting Xrefs. (line 58)
* RET, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 52)
* RIGHT (an arrow key): Cursor Commands. (line 31)
* RIGHT, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 17)
* s: Searching Commands. (line 11)
* S: Searching Commands. (line 52)
* screen, changing the height of: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 104)
* scroll-backward: Scrolling Commands. (line 39)
* scroll-backward-page-only: Scrolling Commands. (line 55)
* scroll-backward-page-only-set-window: Scrolling Commands. (line 62)
* scroll-behavior: Variables. (line 170)
* scroll-behaviour: Variables. (line 171)
* scroll-forward: Scrolling Commands. (line 13)
* scroll-forward-page-only: Scrolling Commands. (line 28)
* scroll-forward-page-only-set-window: Scrolling Commands. (line 33)
* scroll-half-screen-down: Scrolling Commands. (line 75)
* scroll-half-screen-up: Scrolling Commands. (line 81)
* scroll-last-node: Variables. (line 194)
* scroll-other-window: Basic Windows. (line 42)
* scroll-step: Variables. (line 208)
* scrolling: Scrolling Commands. (line 6)
* scrolling through node structure: Scrolling Commands. (line 86)
* search: Searching Commands. (line 11)
* search-backward: Searching Commands. (line 19)
* search-case-sensitively: Searching Commands. (line 52)
* search-next: Searching Commands. (line 28)
* search-previous: Searching Commands. (line 40)
* search-skip-screen: Variables. (line 218)
* search, and case-sensitivity: Searching Commands. (line 97)
* search, case-sensitive: Searching Commands. (line 52)
* searching: Searching Commands. (line 6)
* Searching all indices: Invoking Info. (line 121)
* searching, in the indices: Index Commands. (line 11)
* select-reference-this-line: Selecting Xrefs. (line 58)
* select-visited-node: More Node Commands. (line 106)
* Selecting text with the mouse: Variables. (line 155)
* set-screen-height: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 104)
* set-variable: Variables. (line 20)
* Shift-TAB, in Info windows: Selecting Xrefs. (line 54)
* Shift-TAB, in the echo area: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings.
(line 42)
* show-footnotes: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 130)
* show-index-match: Variables. (line 229)
* slow network connections: Variables. (line 124)
* SPC, in Info windows: Scrolling Commands. (line 12)
* speech synthesizers: Invoking Info. (line 288)
* split-window: Basic Windows. (line 26)
* Standard output not a terminal: Invoking Info. (line 87)
* startup node, specifying: Invoking Info. (line 188)
* t: Node Commands. (line 39)
* TAB, in Info windows: Selecting Xrefs. (line 44)
* TAB, in the echo area: The Echo Area. (line 107)
* tile-windows: Basic Windows. (line 52)
* tiling: Basic Windows. (line 52)
* toggle-regexp: Searching Commands. (line 47)
* toggle-wrap: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 111)
* top-node: Node Commands. (line 39)
* tree-search: Searching Commands. (line 68)
* tree-search-next: Searching Commands. (line 73)
* tree-search-previous: Searching Commands. (line 73)
* u: Node Commands. (line 16)
* Underlined text: Colors and Styles. (line 57)
* universal-argument: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 46)
* UP (an arrow key): Cursor Commands. (line 21)
* up-line: Scrolling Commands. (line 71)
* up-node: Node Commands. (line 16)
* variable assignment: Invoking Info. (line 313)
* variables, describing: Variables. (line 26)
* variables, setting: Variables. (line 20)
* version information: Invoking Info. (line 316)
* vi-like key bindings: Invoking Info. (line 319)
* view-file: More Node Commands. (line 95)
* virtual-index: Index Commands. (line 15)
* visible-bell: Variables. (line 235)
* Where is an Info manual?: Invoking Info. (line 328)
* where-is: Miscellaneous Commands.
(line 21)
* windows, creating: Basic Windows. (line 26)
* windows, deleting: Basic Windows. (line 34)
* windows, manipulating: Window Commands. (line 6)
* windows, selecting: Basic Windows. (line 12)
* xref-item: Selecting Xrefs. (line 36)
* xterm mouse selections: Variables. (line 155)
Tag Table:
Node: Top1202
Node: Stand-alone Info3347
Node: Node Commands4883
Node: More Node Commands7275
Ref: goto-node8973
Ref: goto-invocation9507
Node: Cursor Commands12761
Node: Scrolling Commands14561
Node: Searching Commands18954
Ref: repeated-search20052
Ref: Searching Commands-Footnote-124129
Node: Index Commands24244
Node: Xref Commands25990
Node: Parts of an Xref26669
Node: Selecting Xrefs28648
Node: Window Commands30808
Node: The Mode Line31760
Node: Basic Windows33161
Node: The Echo Area35755
Node: Printing Nodes40647
Node: Miscellaneous Commands41836
Node: Invoking Info47589
Ref: command-line menu items50091
Ref: --all51659
Ref: --apropos52699
Ref: INFOPATH53942
Ref: --init-file57689
Ref: --raw-escapes58712
Ref: --show-options59632
Ref: variable-assignment61517
Ref: --vi-keys61706
Ref: Invoking Info-Footnote-162351
Node: Variables63033
Ref: cursor-movement-scrolls65552
Ref: infopath-no-defaults68334
Ref: min-search-length70162
Ref: scroll-behavior71506
Node: Colors and Styles74725
Node: Custom Key Bindings77187
Ref: Custom Key Bindings-Footnote-178189
Node: infokey format78402
Node: MS-DOS/Windows keybindings83988
Node: Index85252
End Tag Table
Local Variables:
coding: utf-8
End: