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A @definfoenclose
command may be used to define a highlighting
command for Info, but not for TeX. A command defined using
@definfoenclose
marks text by enclosing it in strings that
precede and follow the text. You can use this to get closer control of
your Info output.
Presumably, if you define a command with @definfoenclose
for Info,
you will create a corresponding command for TeX, either in
`texinfo.tex', `texinfo.cnf', or within an `@iftex' in
your document.
Write a @definfoenclose
command on a line and follow it with
three arguments separated by commas. The first argument to
@definfoenclose
is the @-command name (without the @
);
the second argument is the Info start delimiter string; and the third
argument is the Info end delimiter string. The latter two arguments
enclose the highlighted text in the Info file. A delimiter string may
contain spaces. Neither the start nor end delimiter is required. If
you do not want a start delimiter but do want an end delimiter, you must
follow the command name with two commas in a row; otherwise, the Info
formatting commands will naturally misinterpret the end delimiter string
you intended as the start delimiter string.
If you do a @definfoenclose
on the name of a pre-defined macro
(such as @emph
, @strong
, @t
, or @i
), the
enclosure definition will override the built-in definition.
An enclosure command defined this way takes one argument in braces; this
is intended for new markup commands (see section Marking Words and Phrases).
@definfoenclose phoo,//,\\
near the beginning of a Texinfo file to define @phoo
as an Info
formatting command that inserts `//' before and `\\' after the argument
to @phoo
. You can then write @phoo{bar}
wherever you
want `//bar\\' highlighted in Info.
Also, for TeX formatting, you could write
@iftex @global@let@phoo=@i @end iftex
to define @phoo
as a command that causes TeX to typeset the
argument to @phoo
in italics.
Note that each definition applies to its own formatter: one for TeX,
the other for texinfo-format-buffer
or
texinfo-format-region
. The @definfoenclose
command need
not be within `@ifinfo', but the raw TeX commands do need to be
in `@iftex'.
Here is another example: write
@definfoenclose headword, , :
near the beginning of the file, to define @headword
as an Info
formatting command that inserts nothing before and a colon after the
argument to @headword
.
`@definfoenclose' definitions must not be recursive, directly or indirectly.
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