X-Git-Url: http://git.chise.org/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=info%2Ftexinfo.info-4;h=8d30a06da7b206ba6ec78c8c8cfa502aa0ab0a82;hb=811555575ffb2579c51fea46c607d531d4d57990;hp=04bcd4c5a43b2c9bfd653fb871cc1e2d2c27908b;hpb=430e0db85cc37821320fe27da9feeacc7961003f;p=chise%2Fxemacs-chise.git- diff --git a/info/texinfo.info-4 b/info/texinfo.info-4 index 04bcd4c..8d30a06 100644 --- a/info/texinfo.info-4 +++ b/info/texinfo.info-4 @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ -This is Info file ../info/texinfo.info, produced by Makeinfo version -1.68 from the input file texinfo.texi. +This is ../info/texinfo.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from +texinfo.texi. INFO-DIR-SECTION Texinfo documentation system START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY @@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ is "Chapter 1", and the name of the `Up' node is "Top". may be at a lower level--a section-level node may follow a chapter-level node, and a subsection-level node may follow a section-level node. `Next' and `Previous' refer to nodes at the - *same* hierarchical level. (The `Top' node contains the exception + _same_ hierarchical level. (The `Top' node contains the exception to this rule. Since the `Top' node is the only node at that level, `Next' refers to the first following node, which is almost always a chapter or chapter-level node.) @@ -316,9 +316,9 @@ The First Node -------------- The first node of a Texinfo file is the "Top" node, except in an -included file (*note Include Files::.). The Top node contains the main +included file (*note Include Files::). The Top node contains the main or master menu for the document, and a short summary of the document -(*note Top Node Summary::.). +(*note Top Node Summary::). The Top node (which must be named `top' or `Top') should have as its `Up' node the name of a node in another file, where there is a menu @@ -433,13 +433,13 @@ Menus ***** "Menus" contain pointers to subordinate nodes.(1) (*note -Menus-Footnotes::) In Info, you use menus to go to such nodes. Menus +Menus-Footnote-1::) In Info, you use menus to go to such nodes. Menus have no effect in printed manuals and do not appear in them. By convention, a menu is put at the end of a node since a reader who uses the menu may not see text that follows it. - A node that has a menu should *not* contain much text. If you have a + A node that has a menu should _not_ contain much text. If you have a lot of text and a menu, move most of the text into a new subnode--all but a few lines. @@ -902,7 +902,7 @@ differently. *Note `@pxref': pxref.) file and in the printed manual. `@xref' must refer to an Info node by name. Use `@node' to define -the node (*note Writing a Node::.). +the node (*note Writing a Node::). `@xref' is followed by several arguments inside braces, separated by commas. Whitespace before and after these commas is ignored. @@ -1215,7 +1215,7 @@ in a printed document, and the following in Info: Sea surges are described in *Note Hurricanes::. - *Caution:* You *must* write a period or comma immediately after an + *Caution:* You _must_ write a period or comma immediately after an `@ref' command with two or more arguments. Otherwise, Info will not find the end of the cross reference entry and its attempt to follow the cross reference will fail. As a general rule, you @@ -1229,7 +1229,7 @@ File: texinfo.info, Node: pxref, Next: inforef, Prev: ref, Up: Cross Referen ======== The parenthetical reference command, `@pxref', is nearly the same as -`@xref', but you use it *only* inside parentheses and you do *not* type +`@xref', but you use it _only_ inside parentheses and you do _not_ type a comma or period after the command's closing brace. The command differs from `@xref' in two ways: @@ -1240,7 +1240,7 @@ differs from `@xref' in two ways: closing colon or period. Because one type of formatting automatically inserts closing -punctuation and the other does not, you should use `@pxref' *only* +punctuation and the other does not, you should use `@pxref' _only_ inside parentheses as part of another sentence. Also, you yourself should not insert punctuation after the reference, as you do with `@xref'.