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Using texinfo-show-structure

It is not always easy to keep track of the nodes, chapters, sections, and subsections of a Texinfo file. This is especially true if you are revising or adding to a Texinfo file that someone else has written.

In GNU Emacs, in Texinfo mode, the texinfo-show-structure command lists all the lines that begin with the @-commands that specify the structure: @chapter, @section, @appendix, and so on. With an argument (C-u as prefix argument, if interactive), the command also shows the @node lines. The texinfo-show-structure command is bound to C-c C-s in Texinfo mode, by default.

The lines are displayed in a buffer called the *Occur* buffer, indented by hierarchical level. For example, here is a part of what was produced by running texinfo-show-structure on this manual:

 Lines matching "^@\\(chapter \\|sect\\|subs\\|subh\\|
 unnum\\|major\\|chapheading \\|heading \\|appendix\\)"
 in buffer texinfo.texi.
 ...
 4177:@chapter Nodes
 4198:    @heading Two Paths
 4231:    @section Node and Menu Illustration
 4337:    @section The @code{@@node} Command
 4393:        @subheading Choosing Node and Pointer Names
 4417:        @subsection How to Write an @code{@@node} Line
 4469:        @subsection @code{@@node} Line Tips
 ...

This says that lines 4337, 4393, and 4417 of texinfo.texi begin with the @section, @subheading, and @subsection commands respectively. If you move your cursor into the *Occur* window, you can position the cursor over one of the lines and use the C-c C-c command (occur-mode-goto-occurrence), to jump to the corresponding spot in the Texinfo file. See Using Occur, for more information about occur-mode-goto-occurrence.

The first line in the *Occur* window describes the regular expression specified by texinfo-heading-pattern. This regular expression is the pattern that texinfo-show-structure looks for. See Using Regular Expressions, for more information.

When you invoke the texinfo-show-structure command, Emacs will display the structure of the whole buffer. If you want to see the structure of just a part of the buffer, of one chapter, for example, use the C-x n n (narrow-to-region) command to mark the region. (See Narrowing.) This is how the example used above was generated. (To see the whole buffer again, use C-x n w (widen).)

If you call texinfo-show-structure with a prefix argument by typing C-u C-c C-s, it will list lines beginning with @node as well as the lines beginning with the @-sign commands for @chapter, @section, and the like.

You can remind yourself of the structure of a Texinfo file by looking at the list in the *Occur* window; and if you have mis-named a node or left out a section, you can correct the mistake.