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@node
Command
A node is a segment of text that begins at an @node
command and continues until the next @node
command. The
definition of node is different from that for chapter or section. A
chapter may contain sections and a section may contain subsections;
but a node cannot contain subnodes; the text of a node continues only
until the next @node
command in the file. A node usually
contains only one chapter structuring command, the one that follows
the @node
line. On the other hand, in printed output nodes
are used only for cross references, so a chapter or section may
contain any number of nodes. Indeed, a chapter usually contains
several nodes, one for each section, subsection, and
subsubsection.
To create a node, write an @node
command at the beginning of a
line, and follow it with up to four arguments, separated by commas, on
the rest of the same line. The first argument is required; it is the
name of this node. The subsequent arguments are the names of the
`Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers, in that order, and may be omitted
if your Texinfo document is hierarchically organized (see section Creating Pointers with makeinfo
).
You may insert spaces before each name if you wish; the spaces are ignored. You must write the name of the node and the names of the `Next', `Previous', and `Up' pointers all on the same line. Otherwise, the formatters fail. (See Info file `info', node `Top', for more information about nodes in Info.)
Usually, you write one of the chapter-structuring command lines
immediately after an @node
line--for example, an
@section
or @subsection
line. (See section Structuring Command Types.)
Please note: The GNU Emacs Texinfo mode updating commands work only with Texinfo files in which
@node
lines are followed by chapter structuring lines. See section Updating Requirements.
TeX uses @node
lines to identify the names to use for cross
references. For this reason, you must write @node
lines in a
Texinfo file that you intend to format for printing, even if you do not
intend to format it for Info. (Cross references, such as the one at the
end of this sentence, are made with @xref
and related commands;
see section Cross References.)
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