info-stnd: Miscellaneous Commands

 
 11 Miscellaneous Commands
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 GNU Info contains several commands which self-document GNU Info:
 
 ‘M-x describe-command’
      Read the name of an Info command in the echo area and then display
      a brief description of what that command does.
 
 ‘M-x describe-key’
      Read a key sequence in the echo area, and then display the name and
      documentation of the Info command that the key sequence invokes.
 
 ‘M-x describe-variable’
      Read the name of a variable in the echo area and then display a
      brief description of what the variable affects.
 
 ‘M-x where-is’
      Read the name of an Info command in the echo area, and then display
      a key sequence which can be typed in order to invoke that command.
 
 ‘H’ (‘get-help-window’)
      Create (or Move into) the window displaying ‘*Help*’, and place a
      node containing a quick reference card into it.  This window
      displays the most concise information about GNU Info available.
 
 ‘h’ (‘get-info-help-node’)
      Try hard to visit the node ‘(info)Help’.  The Info file ‘info.texi’
      distributed with GNU Emacs contains this node.  Of course, the file
      must first be processed with ‘texi2any’, and then placed into the
      location of your Info directory.
 
 ‘=’ (‘display-file-info’)
      Show information about what's currently being viewed in the echo
      area: the Info file name, and current line number and percentage
      within the current node.
 
 ‘M-x info-version’
      Display the name and version of the currently running Info program.
 
    Here are the commands for creating a numeric argument:
 
 ‘C-u’ (‘universal-argument’)
      Start (or multiply by 4) the current numeric argument.  ‘C-u’ is a
      good way to give a small numeric argument to cursor movement or
      scrolling commands; ‘C-u C-v’ scrolls the screen 4 lines, while
      ‘C-u C-u C-n’ moves the cursor down 16 lines.  ‘C-u’ followed by
      digit keys sets the numeric argument to the number thus typed: ‘C-u
      1 2 0’ sets the argument to 120.
 
 ‘M-1’ (‘add-digit-to-numeric-arg’)
 ‘1’, vi-like operation
 ‘M-2’ ... ‘M-9’
 ‘2’ ... ‘9’, vi-like operation
 ‘M-0’
 ‘0’, vi-like operation
      Add the digit value of the invoking key to the current numeric
      argument.  Once Info is reading a numeric argument, you may just
      type the digits of the argument, without the Meta prefix.  For
      example, you might give ‘C-l’ a numeric argument of 32 by typing:
 
           C-u 3 2 C-l
 
      or
 
           M-3 2 C-l
 
 ‘M--’ (‘add-digit-to-numeric-arg’)
 ‘-’
      To make a negative argument, type ‘-’.  Typing ‘-’ alone makes a
      negative argument with a value of −1.  If you continue to type
      digit or Meta-digit keys after ‘-’, the result is a negative number
      produced by those digits.
 
      ‘-’ doesn't work when you type in the echo area, because you need
      to be able to insert the ‘-’ character itself; use ‘M--’ instead,
      if you need to specify negative arguments in the echo area.
 
    <C-g> is used to abort the reading of a multi-character key sequence,
 to cancel lengthy operations (such as multi-file searches) and to cancel
 reading input in the echo area.
 
 ‘C-g’ (‘abort-key’)
      Cancel current operation.
 
    The ‘q’ command of Info simply quits running Info.
 
 ‘q’ (‘quit’)
 ‘C-x C-c’
      Exit GNU Info.
 
    Here are commands affecting the display of nodes:
 
 ‘C-l’ (‘redraw-display’)
      Redraw the display from scratch, or shift the line containing the
      cursor to a specified location.  With no numeric argument, ‘C-l’
      clears the screen, and then redraws its entire contents.  Given a
      numeric argument of N, the line containing the cursor is shifted so
      that it is on the Nth line of the window.
 
 ‘M-x set-screen-height’
      Read a height value in the echo area and set the height of the
      displayed screen to that value.  For example, if the operating
      system tells GNU Info that the screen is 60 lines tall, and it is
      actually only 40 lines tall, you could use this command to tell
      Info that the operating system is incorrect.
 
 ‘C-x w’ (‘toggle-wrap’)
      Toggles the state of line wrapping in the current window.
      Normally, lines which are longer than the screen width “wrap”,
      i.e., they are continued on the next line.  Lines which wrap have a
      ‘\’ appearing in the rightmost column of the screen.  You can cause
      such lines to be terminated at the rightmost column by changing the
      state of line wrapping in the window with ‘C-x w’.  When a line
      which needs more space than one screen width to display is
      displayed, a ‘$’ appears in the rightmost column of the screen, and
      the remainder of the line is invisible.  When long lines are
      truncated, the mode line displays the ‘$’ character near its left
      edge.
 
    On MS-DOS/MS-Windows, this command actually tries to change the
 dimensions of the visible screen to the value you type in the echo area.
 
    Finally, Info provides a way to display footnotes which might be
 associated with the current node that you are viewing:
 
 ‘<ESC> C-f’ (‘show-footnotes’)
      Show the footnotes (if any) associated with the current node in
      another window.  You can have Info automatically display the
      footnotes associated with a node when the node is selected by
      setting the variable ‘automatic-footnotes’.  ⇒
      ‘automatic-footnotes’ Variables.