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Re: [Info] Get more from the command line
From: |
Eli Zaretskii |
Subject: |
Re: [Info] Get more from the command line |
Date: |
Wed, 10 Apr 2002 15:15:41 +0300 (IDT) |
On Wed, 10 Apr 2002, David Forrest wrote:
> I think what Harry Putnam address@hidden was wanting was for
>
> info --output=- --usage Standalone
> # to give the output of:
> info --output=- Standalone Invoking
This should work in the latest release 4.2 of Texinfo. Please try it.
> info info
>
> It might be nice for the tutorial to tell people that
>
> info Standalone
>
> might be more what they want.
"info info" is the tutorial introduction to the Info system as a whole,
not just to the standalone reader. As such, it is IMHO more appropriate
for first-time Info users. The manual for the standalone reader is only
relevant for users of that reader; some of them might turn to other
readers, like Emacs.
> There are a number of mystifying things about info (the combination of
> dir files for example) that I still find hard to figure out, but
> 'info Standalone' gets me a lot closer.
If there's something unclear or undocumented that you think should be
told, please say what that is.
> Is there a command in /usr/bin/info that tells you what file you are
> looking at, similar to the '=' command in lynx? /usr/bin/info shows the
> filename and node you are looking at, but it would be nice if it told you
> exactly what you are looking at. The INFOPATH can be quite long, and the
> location of what you are reading can be difficult to discover.
I don't think there is such a command. Can you explain why is it
important to know the full file name of the Info manual?
> $ info --version
> info (GNU texinfo) 4.0b
I suggest to upgrade to v4.2. Not only is 4.0b an old version, it also
has a few known bugs, which are fixed in v4.2, an official release.