Next: The Top Node, Previous: Titlepage & Copyright Page, Up: Beginning a File
The @chapter
, @section
, and other structuring commands
(see Structuring) supply the information to make up a
table of contents, but they do not cause an actual table to appear in
the manual. To do this, you must use the @contents
and/or
@summarycontents
command(s).
@contents
@majorheading
,
@chapheading
, and the other @...heading
commands
do not appear in the table of contents (see Structuring Command Types).
@shortcontents
@summarycontents
@summarycontents
is a synonym for @shortcontents
.)
Generates a short or summary table of contents that lists only the chapters, appendices, and unnumbered chapters. Sections, subsections and subsubsections are omitted. Only a long manual needs a short table of contents in addition to the full table of contents.
Both contents commands should be written on a line by themselves, and
are best placed near the beginning of the file, after the @end
titlepage
(see titlepage). The contents commands automatically
generate a chapter-like heading at the top of the first table of
contents page, so don't include any sectioning command such as
@unnumbered
before them.
Since an Info file uses menus instead of tables of contents, the Info
formatting commands ignore the contents commands. But the contents are
included in plain text output (generated by makeinfo
--no-headers
), unless makeinfo
is writing its output to standard
output.
When makeinfo
writes a short table of contents while producing
html output, the links in the short table of contents point to
corresponding entries in the full table of contents rather than the text
of the document. The links in the full table of contents point to the
main text of the document.
In the past, the contents commands were sometimes placed at the end of
the file, after any indices and just before the @bye
, but we
no longer recommend this.
However, since many existing Texinfo documents still do have the
@contents
at the end of the manual, if you are a user printing
a manual, you may wish to force the contents to be printed after the
title page. You can do this by specifying
@setcontentsaftertitlepage
and/or
@setshortcontentsaftertitlepage
. The first prints only the
main contents after the @end titlepage
; the second prints both
the short contents and the main contents. In either case, any
subsequent @contents
or @shortcontents
is ignored
(unless, erroneously, no @end titlepage
is ever encountered).
You need to include the @set...contentsaftertitlepage
commands early in the document (just after @setfilename
, for
example). We recommend using texi2dvi (see Format with texi2dvi) to specify this without altering the source file at all. For
example:
texi2dvi --texinfo=@setcontentsaftertitlepage foo.texi