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@settitle
: Set the document titleIn order to be made into a printed manual, a Texinfo file must contain
a line that looks like this:
@settitle title
Write the @settitle
command at the beginning of a line and
follow it on the same line by the title. This tells TeX the title to
use in a header or footer. Do not write anything else on the line;
anything on the line after the command is considered part of the title,
including what would otherwise be a comment.
The @settitle
command should precede everything that generates
actual output in TeX.
In the HTML file produced by makeinfo
, title also serves
as the document <title>
and the default document description in
the <head>
part; see documentdescription, for how to change
that.
The title in the @settitle
command does not affect the title as
it appears on the title page. Thus, the two do not need not match
exactly. A practice we recommend is to include the version or edition
number of the manual in the @settitle
title; on the title page,
the version number generally appears as a @subtitle
so it would
be omitted from the @title
. (See titlepage.)
Conventionally, when TeX formats a Texinfo file for double-sided
output, the title is printed in the left-hand (even-numbered) page
headings and the current chapter title is printed in the right-hand
(odd-numbered) page headings. (TeX learns the title of each chapter
from each @chapter
command.) By default, no page footer is
printed.
Even if you are printing in a single-sided style, TeX looks for an
@settitle
command line, in case you include the manual title
in the heading.
TeX prints page headings only for that text that comes after the
@end titlepage
command in the Texinfo file, or that comes
after an @headings
command that turns on headings.
(See The @headings
Command, for more
information.)
You may, if you wish, create your own, customized headings and footings. See Headings, for a detailed discussion of this.