Next: Selecting Cross-references, Previous: Searching an Info File, Up: Stand-alone GNU Info [Contents][Index]
GNU Info has commands to search through the indices of an Info file, which helps you find areas within an Info file which discuss a particular topic.
index-search
) ¶Look up a string in the indices for this Info file, and select a node to which the found index entry points.
virtual-index
) ¶Look up a string in the indices for this Info file, and show all the matches in a new virtual node, synthesized on the fly.
next-index-match
) ¶Move to the node containing the next matching index item from the last ‘i’ command.
Grovel the indices of all the known Info files on your system for a string, and build a menu of the possible matches.
The most efficient means of finding something quickly in a manual is
the ‘i’ command (index-search
). This command prompts for
a string, and then looks for that string in all the indices of the
current Info manual. If it finds a matching index entry, it displays
the node to which that entry refers and prints the full text of the
entry in the echo area. You can press ‘,’
(next-index-match
) to find more matches. A good Info manual
has all of its important concepts indexed, so the ‘i’ command
lets you use a manual as a reference.
If you don’t know what manual documents something, try the M-x index-apropos command. It prompts for a string and then looks up that string in all the indices of all the Info documents installed on your system. It can also be invoked from the command line; see --apropos.
Next: Selecting Cross-references, Previous: Searching an Info File, Up: Stand-alone GNU Info [Contents][Index]