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A footnote is for a reference that documents or elucidates the primary text.(9)
In Texinfo, footnotes are created with the @footnote
command.
This command is followed immediately by a left brace, then by the text
of the footnote, and then by a terminating right brace. Footnotes may
be of any length (they will be broken across pages if necessary), but
are usually short. The template is:
ordinary text@footnote{text of footnote}
As shown here, the @footnote
command should come right after the
text being footnoted, with no intervening space; otherwise, the
formatters the footnote mark might end up starting up a line.
For example, this clause is followed by a sample footnote(10); in the Texinfo source, it looks like this:
...a sample footnote@footnote{Here is the sample footnote.}; in the Texinfo source...
Warning: Don't use footnotes in the argument of the
@item
command for a @table
table. This doesn't work, and
because of limitations of TeX, there is no way to fix it. You must
put the footnote into the body text of the table.
In a printed manual or book, the reference mark for a footnote is a small, superscripted number; the text of the footnote appears at the bottom of the page, below a horizontal line.
In Info, the reference mark for a footnote is a pair of parentheses with the footnote number between them, like this: `(1)'.
Info has two footnote styles, which determine where the text of the footnote is located:
--------- Footnotes --------- (1) Here is a sample footnote.
File: texinfo.info Node: Overview-Footnotes, Up: Overview (1) Note that the first syllable of "Texinfo" is pronounced like "speck", not "hex". ...
A Texinfo file may be formatted into an Info file with either footnote style.
Use the @footnotestyle
command to specify an Info file's
footnote style. Write this command at the beginning of a line followed
by an argument, either `end' for the end node style or
`separate' for the separate node style.
For example,
@footnotestyle end
or
@footnotestyle separate
Write an @footnotestyle
command before or shortly after the
end-of-header line at the beginning of a Texinfo file. (If you
include the @footnotestyle
command between the start-of-header
and end-of-header lines, the region formatting commands will format
footnotes as specified.)
If you do not specify a footnote style, the formatting commands use
their default style. Currently, texinfo-format-buffer
and
texinfo-format-region
use the `separate' style and
makeinfo
uses the `end' style.
This chapter contains two footnotes.
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