Next: A Menu Example, Up: Menus [Contents][Index]
A menu consists of a @menu
command on a line by itself,
followed by menu entry lines or menu comment lines, and then followed
by an @end menu
command on a line by itself.
A menu looks like this:
@menu Larger Units of Text * Files:: All about handling files. * Multiples: Buffers. Multiple buffers; editing several files at once. @end menu
In a menu, every line that begins with an ‘* ’ is a menu entry. (Note the space after the asterisk.)
A line that does not start with an ‘* ’ may also appear in a menu. Such a line is not a menu entry but rather a menu comment line that appears in the Info file. In the example above, the line ‘Larger Units of Text’ is such a menu comment line; the two lines starting with ‘* ’ are menu entries.
Technically, menus can carry you to any node, regardless of the
structure of the document; even to nodes in a different Info file.
However, we do not recommend making use of this, because it is hard
for readers to follow. Also, the makeinfo
implicit pointer
creation feature (see Writing a @node
Line) and GNU
Emacs Texinfo mode updating commands work only to create menus of
subordinate nodes in a hierarchically structured document. It is much
better to use cross-references to refer to arbitrary nodes.
In Info, a user selects a node with the m (Info-menu
)
command. The menu entry name is what the user types after the m
command.
In the HTML output from makeinfo
, the accesskey
attribute is used with the values ‘1’…‘9’ for the
first nine entries. This allows people using web browsers to follow
the first menu entries using (typically) M-digit, e.g.,
M-1 for the first entry.
Next: A Menu Example, Up: Menus [Contents][Index]