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You can show the sectioning structure of a Texinfo file by using the
C-c C-s command (texinfo-show-structure
). This command
lists the lines that begin with the @-commands for @chapter
,
@section
, and the like. It constructs what amounts to a table
of contents. These lines are displayed in another buffer called the
‘*Occur*’ buffer. In that buffer, 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.
Show the @chapter
, @section
, and such lines of a
Texinfo file.
Go to the line in the Texinfo file corresponding to the line under the cursor in the *Occur* buffer.
If you call texinfo-show-structure
with a prefix argument by
typing C-u C-c C-s, it will list not only those lines with the
@-commands for @chapter
, @section
, and the like, but
also the @node
lines. You can use texinfo-show-structure
with a prefix argument to check whether the ‘Next’, ‘Previous’, and ‘Up’
pointers of an @node
line are correct.
Often, when you are working on a manual, you will be interested only
in the structure of the current chapter. In this case, you can mark
off the region of the buffer that you are interested in by using the
C-x n n (narrow-to-region
) command and
texinfo-show-structure
will work on only that region. To see
the whole buffer again, use C-x n w (widen
).
(See Narrowing in The GNU Emacs Manual, for more
information about the narrowing commands.)
In addition to providing the texinfo-show-structure
command,
Texinfo mode sets the value of the page delimiter variable to match
the chapter-level @-commands. This enables you to use the C-x
] (forward-page
) and C-x [ (backward-page
)
commands to move forward and backward by chapter, and to use the
C-x n p (narrow-to-page
) command to narrow to a chapter.
See Pages in The GNU Emacs Manual, for more information
about the page commands.
Next: Updating Nodes and Menus, Previous: Inserting Frequently Used Commands, Up: Using Texinfo Mode [Contents][Index]