@comment %**start of header
@setfilename info.info
@settitle Info
+@include docstyle.texi
@syncodeindex fn cp
@syncodeindex vr cp
@syncodeindex ky cp
-@documentencoding UTF-8
@comment %**end of header
@copying
This file describes how to use Info, the menu-driven GNU
documentation system.
-Copyright @copyright{} 1989, 1992, 1996--2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+Copyright @copyright{} 1989, 1992, 1996--2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@quotation
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
instruction sequence.
To read about advanced Info commands, type @kbd{n} twice. This
-brings you to @cite{Advanced Info Commands}, skipping over the `Getting
-Started' chapter.
+brings you to @cite{Advanced Info Commands}, skipping over the ``Getting
+Started'' chapter.
Type @kbd{H} to see a summary of all available commands.
@end ifinfo
that subtopic's node.
@cindex mouse support in Info mode
-@kindex Mouse-2 @r{(Info mode)}
+@kindex mouse-2 @r{(Info mode)}
If your terminal supports a mouse, you have yet another way of going
to a subtopic. Move your mouse pointer to the subtopic line,
somewhere between the beginning @samp{*} and the colon @samp{:} which
change its appearance (usually, its background color will change), and
the shape of the mouse pointer will change if your platform supports
that. After a while, if you leave the mouse on that spot, a small
-window will pop up, saying ``Mouse-2: go to that node,'' or the same
+window will pop up, saying ``mouse-2: go to that node,'' or the same
message may appear at the bottom of the screen.
- @kbd{Mouse-2} is the second button of your mouse counting from the
+ @kbd{mouse-2} is the second button of your mouse counting from the
left---the middle button on a 3-button mouse. (On a 2-button mouse,
you may have to press both buttons together to ``press the middle
-button''.) The message tells you pressing @kbd{Mouse-2} with the
+button''.) The message tells you pressing @kbd{mouse-2} with the
current position of the mouse pointer (on subtopic in the menu) will
go to that subtopic.
@findex Info-mouse-follow-nearest-node
- More generally, @kbd{Mouse-2} in an Info buffer finds the nearest
+ More generally, @kbd{mouse-2} in an Info buffer finds the nearest
link to another node and goes there. For example, near a cross
reference it acts like @kbd{f}, in a menu it acts like @kbd{m}, on the
node's header line it acts like @kbd{n}, @kbd{p}, or @kbd{u}, etc. At
-end of the node's text @kbd{Mouse-2} moves to the next node, or up if
+end of the node's text @kbd{mouse-2} moves to the next node, or up if
there's no next node.
@format
readers may put you at the @emph{front} of the node instead---to get
back to where you were reading, you have to type some @key{SPC}s.)
- Another way to go Up is to click @kbd{Mouse-2} on the @samp{Up}
+ Another way to go Up is to click @kbd{mouse-2} on the @samp{Up}
pointer shown in the header line (provided that you have a mouse).
@format
@findex Info-follow-reference
You can follow a cross reference by moving the cursor to it and
press @key{RET}, just as in a menu. In Emacs, you can also click
-@kbd{Mouse-1} on a cross reference to follow it; you can see that the
+@kbd{mouse-1} on a cross reference to follow it; you can see that the
cross reference is mouse-sensitive by moving the mouse pointer to the
reference and watching how the underlying text and the mouse pointer
change in response.