+@node Help-Inv, Help-M, Help-^L, Getting Started
+@comment node-name, next, previous, up
+@section Invisible text in Emacs Info
+
+ Before discussing menus, we need to make some remarks that are only
+relevant to users reading Info using Emacs. Users of the stand-alone
+version can skip this node by typing @kbd{]} now.
+
+@cindex invisible text in Emacs
+ In Emacs, certain text that appears in the stand-alone version is
+normally hidden, technically because it has the @samp{invisibility}
+property. Invisible text is really a part of the text. It becomes
+visible (by default) after killing and yanking, it appears in printed
+output, it gets saved to file just like any other text, and so on.
+Thus it is useful to know it is there.
+
+@findex visible-mode
+You can make invisible text visible by using the command @kbd{M-x
+visible-mode}. Visible mode is a minor mode, so using the command a
+second time will make the text invisible again. Watch the effects of
+the command on the ``menu'' below and the top line of this node.
+
+If you prefer to @emph{always} see the invisible text, you can set
+@code{Info-hide-note-references} to @code{nil}. Enabling Visible mode
+permanently is not a real alternative, because Emacs Info also uses
+(although less extensively) another text property that can change the
+text being displayed, the @samp{display} property. Only the
+invisibility property is affected by Visible mode. When, in this
+tutorial, we refer to the @samp{Emacs} behavior, we mean the
+@emph{default} Emacs behavior.
+
+Now type @kbd{]}, to learn about the @kbd{]} and @kbd{[} commands.
+
+@menu
+* ]: Help-]. Node telling about ].
+* stuff: Help-]. Same node.
+* Help-]:: Yet again, same node.
+@end menu
+
+@node Help-], , , Help-Inv
+@subsection The @kbd{]} and @kbd{[} commands
+
+If you type @kbd{n} now, you get an error message saying that this
+node has no next node. Similarly, if you type @kbd{p}, the error
+message tells you that there is no previous node. (The exact message
+depends on the Info reader you use.) This is because @kbd{n} and
+@kbd{p} carry you to the next and previous node @emph{at the same
+level}. The present node is contained in a menu (see next) of the
+node you came from, and hence is considered to be at a lower level.
+It is the only node in the previous node's menu (even though it was
+listed three times). Hence it has no next or previous node that
+@kbd{n} or @kbd{p} could move to.
+
+If you systematically move through a manual by typing @kbd{n}, you run
+the risk of skipping many nodes. You do not run this risk if you
+systematically use @kbd{@key{SPC}}, because, when you scroll to the
+bottom of a node and type another @kbd{@key{SPC}}, then this carries
+you to the following node in the manual @emph{regardless of level}.
+If you immediately want to go to that node, without having to scroll
+to the bottom of the screen first, you can type @kbd{]}.
+
+Similarly, @kbd{@key{BACKSPACE}} carries you to the preceding node
+regardless of level, after you scrolled to the beginning of the
+present node. If you want to go to the preceding node immediately,
+you can type @kbd{[}.
+
+For instance, typing this sequence will come back here in three steps:
+@kbd{[ n [}. To do the same backward, type @kbd{] p ]}.
+
+Now type @kbd{]} to go to the next node and learn about menus.
+
+@node Help-M, Help-Xref, Help-Inv, Getting Started