Next: What a Texinfo File Must Have, Previous: General Syntactic Conventions, Up: Writing a Texinfo File [Contents][Index]
You can write comments in a Texinfo file by using the @comment
command, which may be abbreviated to @c
. Such comments are
for a person looking at the Texinfo source file. All the text on a
line that follows either @comment
or @c
is a comment;
the rest of the line does not appear in the visible output. (To be
precise, the character after the @c
or @comment
must
be something other than a dash or alphanumeric, or it will be taken as
part of the command.)
Often, you can write the @comment
or @c
in the middle
of a line, and only the text that follows after the @comment
or @c
command does not appear; but some commands, such as
@settitle
, work on a whole line. You cannot use @comment
or @c
within a line beginning with such a command.
In cases of nested command invocations, complicated macro definitions,
etc., @c
and @comment
may provoke an error when
processing with TeX. Therefore, you can also use the DEL
character (ASCII 127 decimal, 0x7f hex, 0177 octal) as a true TeX
comment character (catcode 14, in TeX internals). Everything on
the line after the DEL will be ignored.
You can also have long stretches of text ignored by the Texinfo
processors with the @ignore
and @end ignore
commands.
Write each of these commands on a line of its own, starting each
command at the beginning of the line. Text between these two commands
does not appear in the processed output. You can use @ignore
and @end ignore
for writing comments. (For some caveats
regarding nesting of such commands, see Conditional Nesting.)
Next: What a Texinfo File Must Have, Previous: General Syntactic Conventions, Up: Writing a Texinfo File [Contents][Index]