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@display
and @smalldisplay
The @display
command begins a kind of example, where each line
of input produces a line of output, and the output is indented. It is
thus like the @example
command except that, in a printed
manual, @display
does not select the fixed-width font. In
fact, it does not specify the font at all, so that the text appears in
the same font it would have appeared in without the @display
command.
This is an example of text written between an@display
command and an@end display
command. The@display
command indents the text, but does not fill it.
Texinfo also provides a command @smalldisplay
, which is like
@display
but uses a smaller font in @smallbook
format.
See small.
The @table
command (see table) does not work inside
@display
. Since @display
is line-oriented, it doesn't
make sense to use them together. If you want to indent a table, try
@quotation
(see quotation).