Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cs.utexas.edu!rice!brazos!rich From: rich@Rice.edu (Richard Murphey) Newsgroups: gnu.emacs Subject: Re: Help with TeXinfo Message-ID: Date: 6 Feb 90 14:05:17 GMT References: <1990Feb5.215942.2152@hellgate.utah.edu> Sender: root@rice.edu Distribution: usa Organization: Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rice University Lines: 24 In-reply-to: thomson@cs.utah.edu's message of 6 Feb 90 04:59:42 GMT In article <1990Feb5.215942.2152@hellgate.utah.edu> thomson@cs.utah.edu (Rich Thomson) writes: Isn't there any way to have a document tree rooted in a directory of my own choosing? If your info file is named `~/foo/bar.info' then after entering info mode (using `C-h i') use `g(~/foo/bar.info)top'. This will take you to the top node of your documentation. You can use `M-x texinfo-format-buffer' to convert a texinfo file to an info file and `M-x Info-validate' to check the labeling of the nodes. Dewhurst, Stephen C. and Kathy T. Stark. @emph{Programming in C++}. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1989. ISBN 0-13-723156-3. You also mention bibliographic references... Does anyone have a GNU style for references? For example: Perhaps volume numbers for journals should be in @strong. -- Rich@rice.edu