Mercurial > emacs
diff man/info.texi @ 83042:968e8c7ff1f4
Merged in changes from CVS HEAD
Patches applied:
* miles@gnu.org--gnu-2004/emacs--cvs-trunk--0--patch-103
Update from CVS
git-archimport-id: lorentey@elte.hu--2004/emacs--multi-tty--0--patch-82
author | Karoly Lorentey <lorentey@elte.hu> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 19 Feb 2004 13:25:32 +0000 |
parents | f0eb34e60705 c92801a25b2f |
children | 1281a5c8fb39 |
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--- a/man/info.texi Thu Feb 19 02:27:31 2004 +0000 +++ b/man/info.texi Thu Feb 19 13:25:32 2004 +0000 @@ -6,13 +6,12 @@ @syncodeindex vr cp @syncodeindex ky cp @comment %**end of header -@comment $Id: info.texi,v 1.37 2003/10/27 00:01:25 karl Exp $ @copying This file describes how to use Info, the on-line, menu-driven GNU documentation system. -Copyright (C) 1989, 1992, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 +Copyright (C) 1989, 1992, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @quotation @@ -829,12 +828,16 @@ The introductory course is almost over; please continue a little longer to learn some intermediate-level commands. - Most Info files have an index, which is actually a large node that -contains nothing but a menu. The menu has one menu item for each -topic listed in the index. You can find the index node from the main -menu of the file, with the @kbd{m} command; then you can use the -@kbd{m} command again in the index node to go to the node that -describes the topic. + Most Info files have an index, which is actually a large node +containing little but a menu. The menu has one menu item for each +topic listed in the index. (As a special feature, menus for indices +may also include the line number within the node of the index entry. +This allows Info readers to go to the exact line of an entry, not just +the start of the containing node.) + + You can get to the index from the main menu of the file with the +@kbd{m} command; then you can use the @kbd{m} command again in the +index node to go to the node that describes the topic you want. There is also a short-cut Info command, @kbd{i}, which does all of that for you. It searches the index for a given topic (a string) and @@ -1046,7 +1049,7 @@ looking for a description of a command, an option, or a key, just type their names when @kbd{i} prompts you for a topic. For example, if you want to read the description of what the @kbd{C-f} key does, type -@kbd{iC-f@key{RET}}. Here @kbd{C-f} are 3 literal characters +@kbd{i C - f @key{RET}}. Here @kbd{C-f} are 3 literal characters @samp{C}, @samp{-}, and @samp{f}, not the ``Control-f'' command key you type inside Emacs to run the command bound to @kbd{C-f}.