Certain pieces of information must be provided at the beginning of a Texinfo file, such as the name of the file and the title of the document.
Generally, the beginning of a Texinfo file has four parts:
@ifinfo
and
@end ifinfo
commands so that the formatters place it only
in the Info file.
@titlepage
and
@end titlepage
commands. The title and copyright page appear
only in the printed manual.
Also, optionally, you may include the copying conditions for a program and a warranty disclaimer. The copying section will be followed by an introduction or else by the first chapter of the manual.
Since the copyright notice and copying permissions for the Texinfo document (in contrast to the copying permissions for a program) are in parts that appear only in the Info file or only in the printed manual, this information must be given twice.
The following sample shows what is needed.
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename name-of-info-file @settitle name-of-manual @setchapternewpage odd @c %**end of header @ifinfo This file documents ... Copyright year copyright-owner Permission is granted to ... @end ifinfo @c This title page illustrates only one of the @c two methods of forming a title page. @titlepage @title name-of-manual-when-printed @subtitle subtitle-if-any @subtitle second-subtitle @author author @c The following two commands @c start the copyright page. @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll Copyright @copyright{} year copyright-owner Published by ... Permission is granted to ... @end titlepage @node Top, Overview, (dir), (dir) @ifinfo This document describes ... This document applies to version ... of the program named ... @end ifinfo @menu * Copying:: Your rights and freedoms. * First Chapter:: Getting started ... * Second Chapter:: ... ... ... @end menu @node First Chapter, Second Chapter, top, top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @chapter First Chapter @cindex Index entry for First Chapter
Texinfo files start with at least three lines that provide Info and
TeX with necessary information. These are the \input
texinfo
line, the @settitle
line, and the
@setfilename
line. If you want to run TeX on just a part
of the Texinfo File, you must write the @settitle
and @setfilename
lines between start-of-header and end-of-header
lines.
Thus, the beginning of a Texinfo file looks like this:
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- @setfilename sample.info @settitle Sample Document
or else like this:
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename sample.info @settitle Sample Document @c %**end of header
Every Texinfo file that is to be the top-level input to TeX must begin with a line that looks like this:
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
This line serves two functions:
\input texinfo
command
tells TeX to load the macros needed for processing a Texinfo file.
These are in a file called `texinfo.tex', which is usually located
in the `/usr/lib/tex/macros' directory. TeX uses the backslash,
`\', to mark the beginning of a command, just as Texinfo uses
@
. The `texinfo.tex' file causes the switch from `\'
to `@'; before the switch occurs, TeX requires `\', which
is why it appears at the beginning of the file.
Write a start-of-header line on the second line of a Texinfo file.
Follow the start-of-header line with @setfilename
and
@settitle
lines and, optionally, with other command lines, such
as @smallbook
or @footnotestyle
; and then by an
end-of-header line (see section End of Header).
With these lines, you can format part of a Texinfo file for Info or typeset part for printing.
A start-of-header line looks like this:
@c %**start of header
The odd string of characters, `%**', is to ensure that no other comment is accidentally taken for a start-of-header line.
@setfilename
In order to serve as the primary input file for either makeinfo
or TeX, a Texinfo file must contain a line that looks like this:
@setfilename info-file-name
Write the @setfilename
command at the beginning of a line and
follow it on the same line by the Info file name. Do not write
anything else on the line; anything on the line after the command is
considered part of the file name, including a comment.
The @setfilename
line specifies the name of the Info file to be
generated. This name should be different from the name of the Texinfo
file. There are two conventions for choosing the name: you can either
remove the `.tex' extension from the input file name, or replace it
with the `.info' extension.
Some operating systems cannot handle long file names. You can run into a problem even when the file name you specify is itself short enough. This occurs because the Info formatters split a long Info file into short indirect subfiles, and name them by appending `-1', `-2', ..., `-10', `-11', and so on, to the original file name. (See section Tag Files and Split Files.) The subfile name `texinfo.info-10', for example, is too long for some systems; so the Info file name for this document is `texinfo' rather than `texinfo.info'.
The Info formatting commands ignore everything written before the
@setfilename
line, which is why the very first line of
the file (the \input
line) does not need to be commented out.
The @setfilename
line produces no output when you typeset a
printed manual, but is does an essential job: it opens the index,
cross-reference, and other auxiliary files used by Texinfo.
@settitle
In 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 a comment.
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.) Page footers are not
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.
The @settitle
command should precede everything that generates
actual output in TeX.
Although the title in the @settitle
command is usually the
same as the title on the title page, it does not affect the title as
it appears on the title page. Thus, the two do not need not match
exactly; and the title in the @settitle
command can be a
shortened or expanded version of the title as it appears on the title
page. (See section @titlepage
.)
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 section The @headings
Command, for more
information.)
You may, if you wish, create your own, customized headings and footings. See section Page Headings, for a detailed discussion of this process.
@setchapternewpage
In a book or a manual, text is usually printed on both sides of the paper, chapters start on right-hand pages, and right-hand pages have odd numbers. But in short reports, text often is printed only on one side of the paper. Also in short reports, chapters sometimes do not start on new pages, but are printed on the same page as the end of the preceding chapter, after a small amount of vertical whitespace.
You can use the @setchapternewpage
command with various
arguments to specify how TeX should start chapters and whether it
should typeset pages for printing on one or both sides of the paper
(single-sided or double-sided printing).
Write the @setchapternewpage
command at the beginning of a
line followed by its argument.
For example, you would write the following to cause each chapter to start on a fresh odd-numbered page:
@setchapternewpage odd
You can specify one of three alternatives with the
@setchapternewpage
command:
@setchapternewpage off
@headings double
command; see
section The @headings
Command.)
@setchapternewpage on
@setchapternewpage odd
Texinfo does not have an @setchapternewpage even
command.
(You can countermand or modify an @setchapternewpage
command
with an @headings
command. See section The @headings
Command.)
At the beginning of a manual or book, pages are not numbered--for example, the title and copyright pages of a book are not numbered. By convention, table of contents pages are numbered with roman numerals and not in sequence with the rest of the document.
Since an Info file does not have pages, the @setchapternewpage
command has no effect on it.
Usually, you do not write an @setchapternewpage
command for
single-sided printing, but accept the default which is to typeset for
single-sided printing and to start new chapters on new pages. Usually,
you write an @setchapternewpage odd
command for double-sided
printing.
The Info formatting commands may insert spaces at the beginning of the
first line of each paragraph, thereby indenting that paragraph. You
can use the @paragraphindent
command to specify the
indentation. Write an @paragraphindent
command at the
beginning of a line followed by either `asis' or a number. The
template is:
@paragraphindent indent
The Info formatting commands indent according to the value of indent:
The default value of indent is `asis'.
Write the @paragraphindent
command before or shortly after the
end-of-header line at the beginning of a Texinfo file. (If you write
the command between the start-of-header and end-of-header lines, the
region formatting commands indent paragraphs as specified.)
A peculiarity of the texinfo-format-buffer
and
texinfo-format-region
commands is that they do not indent (nor
fill) paragraphs that contain @w
or @*
commands.
See section Refilling Paragraphs, for a detailed description of what goes
on.
Follow the header lines with an end-of-header line. An end-of-header line looks like this:
@c %**end of header
If you include the @setchapternewpage
command between the
start-of-header and end-of-header lines, TeX will typeset a region as
that command specifies. Similarly, if you include an @smallbook
command between the start-of-header and end-of-header lines, TeX will
typeset a region in the "small" book format.
See section Start of Header.
The title page and the copyright page appear only in the printed copy of the manual; therefore, the same information must be inserted in a section that appears only in the Info file. This section usually contains a brief description of the contents of the Info file, a copyright notice, and copying permissions.
The copyright notice should read:
Copyright year copyright-owner
and be put on a line by itself.
Standard text for the copyright permissions is contained in an appendix to this manual; see section `ifinfo' Copying Permissions, for the complete text.
The permissions text appears in an Info file before the first node. This mean that a reader does not see this text when reading the file using Info, except when using the advanced Info command g *.
A manual's name and author are usually printed on a title page. Sometimes copyright information is printed on the title page as well; more often, copyright information is printed on the back of the title page.
The title and copyright pages appear in the printed manual, but not in the Info file. Because of this, it is possible to use several slightly obscure TeX typesetting commands that cannot be used in an Info file. In addition, this part of the beginning of a Texinfo file contains the text of the copying permissions that will appear in the printed manual.
See section Titlepage Copying Permissions, for the standard text for the copyright permissions.
@titlepage
Start the material for the title page and following copyright page
with @titlepage
on a line by itself and end it with
@end titlepage
on a line by itself.
The @end titlepage
command starts a new page and turns on page
numbering. (See section Page Headings, for details about how to
generate page headings.) All the material that you want to
appear on unnumbered pages should be put between the
@titlepage
and @end titlepage
commands. By using the
@page
command you can force a page break within the region
delineated by the @titlepage
and @end titlepage
commands and thereby create more than one unnumbered page. This is
how the copyright page is produced. (The @titlepage
command
might perhaps have been better named the
@titleandadditionalpages
command, but that would have been
rather long!)
When you write a manual about a computer program, you should write the
version of the program to which the manual applies on the title
page. If the manual changes more frequently than the program or is
independent of it, you should also include an edition
number(5) for the manual. This helps readers keep track of which manual
is for which version of the program. (The `Top' node
should also contain this information; see section @top
.)
Texinfo provides two main methods for creating a title page. One method
uses the @titlefont
, @sp
, and @center
commands
to generate a title page in which the words on the page are
centered.
The second method uses the @title
, @subtitle
, and
@author
commands to create a title page with black rules under
the title and author lines and the subtitle text set flush to the
right hand side of the page. With this method, you do not specify any
of the actual formatting of the title page. You specify the text
you want, and Texinfo does the formatting. You may use either
method.
For extremely simple applications, Texinfo also provides a command
@shorttitlepage
which takes a single argument as the title.
The argument is typeset on a page by itself and followed by a blank
page.
@titlefont
, @center
, and @sp
You can use the @titlefont
, @sp
, and @center
commands to create a title page for a printed document. (This is the
first of the two methods for creating a title page in Texinfo.)
Use the @titlefont
command to select a large font suitable for
the title itself.
For example:
@titlefont{Texinfo}
Use the @center
command at the beginning of a line to center
the remaining text on that line. Thus,
@center @titlefont{Texinfo}
centers the title, which in this example is "Texinfo" printed in the title font.
Use the @sp
command to insert vertical space. For example:
@sp 2
This inserts two blank lines on the printed page. (See section @sp
n: Insert Blank Lines, for more information about the @sp
command.)
A template for this method looks like this:
@titlepage @sp 10 @center @titlefont{name-of-manual-when-printed} @sp 2 @center subtitle-if-any @sp 2 @center author ... @end titlepage
The spacing of the example fits an 8 1/2 by 11 inch manual.
@title
, @subtitle
, and @author
You can use the @title
, @subtitle
, and @author
commands to create a title page in which the vertical and horizontal
spacing is done for you automatically. This contrasts with the method
described in
the previous section, in which the @sp
command is needed to
adjust vertical spacing.
Write the @title
, @subtitle
, or @author
commands at the beginning of a line followed by the title, subtitle,
or author.
The @title
command produces a line in which the title is set
flush to the left-hand side of the page in a larger than normal font.
The title is underlined with a black rule.
The @subtitle
command sets subtitles in a normal-sized font
flush to the right-hand side of the page.
The @author
command sets the names of the author or authors in
a middle-sized font flush to the left-hand side of the page on a line
near the bottom of the title page. The names are underlined with a
black rule that is thinner than the rule that underlines the title.
(The black rule only occurs if the @author
command line is
followed by an @page
command line.)
There are two ways to use the @author
command: you can write
the name or names on the remaining part of the line that starts with
an @author
command:
@author by Jane Smith and John Doe
or you can write the names one above each other by using two (or more)
@author
commands:
@author Jane Smith @author John Doe
(Only the bottom name is underlined with a black rule.)
A template for this method looks like this:
@titlepage @title name-of-manual-when-printed @subtitle subtitle-if-any @subtitle second-subtitle @author author @page ... @end titlepage
By international treaty, the copyright notice for a book should be either on the title page or on the back of the title page. The copyright notice should include the year followed by the name of the organization or person who owns the copyright.
When the copyright notice is on the back of the title page, that page
is customarily not numbered. Therefore, in Texinfo, the information
on the copyright page should be within @titlepage
and
@end titlepage
commands.
Use the @page
command to cause a page break. To push the
copyright notice and the other text on the copyright page towards the
bottom of the page, you can write a somewhat mysterious line after the
@page
command that reads like this:
@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
This is a TeX command that is not supported by the Info formatting
commands. The @vskip
command inserts whitespace. The
`0pt plus 1filll' means to put in zero points of mandatory whitespace,
and as much optional whitespace as needed to push the
following text to the bottom of the page. Note the use of three
`l's in the word `filll'; this is the correct usage in
TeX.
In a printed manual, the @copyright{}
command generates a
`c' inside a circle. (In Info, it generates `(C)'.) The
copyright notice itself has the following legally defined sequence:
Copyright (C) year copyright-owner
It is customary to put information on how to get a manual after the copyright notice, followed by the copying permissions for the manual.
Note that permissions must be given here as well as in the summary
segment within @ifinfo
and @end ifinfo
that
immediately follows the header since this text appears only in the
printed manual and the `ifinfo' text appears only in the Info
file.
See section Sample Permissions, for the standard text.
An @end titlepage
command on a line by itself not only marks
the end of the title and copyright pages, but also causes TeX to start
generating page headings and page numbers.
To repeat what is said elsewhere, Texinfo has two standard page heading
formats, one for documents which are printed on one side of each sheet of paper
(single-sided printing), and the other for documents which are printed on both
sides of each sheet (double-sided printing).
(See section @setchapternewpage
.)
You can specify these formats in different ways:
@setchapternewpage
command
before the title page commands, and then have the @end
titlepage
command start generating page headings in the manner desired.
(See section @setchapternewpage
.)
@headings
command to prevent page
headings from being generated or to start them for either single or
double-sided printing. (Write an @headings
command immediately
after the @end titlepage
command. See section The @headings
Command, for more information.)
Most documents are formatted with the standard single-sided or
double-sided format, using @setchapternewpage odd
for
double-sided printing and no @setchapternewpage
command for
single-sided printing.
@headings
Command
The @headings
command is rarely used. It specifies what kind of
page headings and footings to print on each page. Usually, this is
controlled by the @setchapternewpage
command. You need the
@headings
command only if the @setchapternewpage
command
does not do what you want, or if you want to turn off pre-defined page
headings prior to defining your own. Write an @headings
command
immediately after the @end titlepage
command.
You can use @headings
as follows:
@headings off
@headings single
@headings double
@headings on
and @headings double
, are
synonymous.
@headings singleafter
@headings doubleafter
single
or double
headings, respectively, after the
current page is output.
@headings on
single
if `@setchapternewpage
on', double
otherwise.
For example, suppose you write @setchapternewpage off
before the
@titlepage
command to tell TeX to start a new chapter on the
same page as the end of the last chapter. This command also causes
TeX to typeset page headers for single-sided printing. To cause
TeX to typeset for double sided printing, write @headings
double
after the @end titlepage
command.
You can stop TeX from generating any page headings at all by
writing @headings off
on a line of its own immediately after the
line containing the @end titlepage
command, like this:
@end titlepage @headings off
The @headings off
command overrides the @end titlepage
command, which would otherwise cause TeX to print page
headings.
You can also specify your own style of page heading and footing. See section Page Headings, for more information.
The `Top' node is the node from which you enter an Info file.
A `Top' node should contain a brief description of the Info file and an extensive, master menu for the whole Info file. This helps the reader understand what the Info file is about. Also, you should write the version number of the program to which the Info file applies; or, at least, the edition number.
The contents of the `Top' node should appear only in the Info file; none
of it should appear in printed output, so enclose it between
@ifinfo
and @end ifinfo
commands. (TeX does not
print either an @node
line or a menu; they appear only in Info;
strictly speaking, you are not required to enclose these parts between
@ifinfo
and @end ifinfo
, but it is simplest to do so.
See section Conditionally Visible Text.)
Sometimes, you will want to place an @top
sectioning command
line containing the title of the document immediately after the
@node Top
line (see section The @top
Sectioning Command, for more information).
For example, the beginning of the Top node of this manual contains an
@top
sectioning command, a short description, and edition and
version information. It looks like this:
... @end titlepage @ifinfo @node Top, Copying, (dir), (dir) @top Texinfo Texinfo is a documentation system... This is edition... ... @end ifinfo @menu * Copying:: Texinfo is freely redistributable. * Overview:: What is Texinfo? ... @end menu
In a `Top' node, the `Previous', and `Up' nodes usually refer to the top level directory of the whole Info system, which is called `(dir)'. The `Next' node refers to the first node that follows the main or master menu, which is usually the copying permissions, introduction, or first chapter.
A master menu is a detailed main menu listing all the nodes in a file.
A master menu is enclosed in @menu
and @end menu
commands and does not appear in the printed document.
Generally, a master menu is divided into parts.
@detailmenu
before the
first one, and @end detailmenu
after the last; otherwise,
makeinfo
will get confused.
Each section in the menu can be introduced by a descriptive line. So long as the line does not begin with an asterisk, it will not be treated as a menu entry. (See section Writing a Menu, for more information.)
For example, the master menu for this manual looks like the following (but has many more entries):
@menu * Copying:: Texinfo is freely redistributable. * Overview:: What is Texinfo? * Texinfo Mode:: Special features in GNU Emacs. ... ... * Command and Variable Index:: An entry for each @-command. * Concept Index:: An entry for each concept. @detailmenu --- The Detailed Node Listing --- Overview of Texinfo * Info Files:: What is an Info file? * Printed Manuals:: Characteristics of a printed manual. ... ... Using Texinfo Mode * Info on a Region:: Formatting part of a file for Info. ... ... @end detailmenu @end menu
If the Texinfo file has a section containing the "General Public License" and the distribution information and a warranty disclaimer for the software that is documented, this section usually follows the `Top' node. The General Public License is very important to Project GNU software. It ensures that you and others will continue to have a right to use and share the software.
The copying and distribution information and the disclaimer are followed by an introduction or else by the first chapter of the manual.
Although an introduction is not a required part of a Texinfo file, it
is very helpful. Ideally, it should state clearly and concisely what
the file is about and who would be interested in reading it. In
general, an introduction would follow the licensing and distribution
information, although sometimes people put it earlier in the document.
Usually, an introduction is put in an @unnumbered
section.
(See section @unnumbered
, @appendix
.)
Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.