You use the Texinfo @macro
command to define a macro, like this:
@macro macroname{param1, param2, ...} text ... \param1\ ... @end macro
The parameters param1, param2, ... correspond to arguments supplied when the macro is subsequently used in the document (described in the next section).
For a macro to work with TeX, macroname must consist entirely of letters: no digits, hyphens, underscores, or other special characters.
If a macro needs no parameters, you can define it either with an empty
list (@macro foo {}
) or with no braces at all (@macro
foo
).
The definition or body of the macro can contain most Texinfo
commands, including previously-defined macros. Not-yet-defined macro
invocations are not allowed; thus, it is not possible to have mutually
recursive Texinfo macros. Also, a macro definition that defines another
macro does not work in TeX due to limitations in the design of
@macro
.
In the macro body, instances of a parameter name surrounded by
backslashes, as in \
param1\
in the example above, are
replaced by the corresponding argument from the macro invocation. You
can use parameter names any number of times in the body, including zero.
To get a single \
in the macro expansion, use \\
. Any
other use of \
in the body yields a warning.
The newlines after the @macro
line and before the @end
macro
line are ignored, that is, not included in the macro body. All
other whitespace is treated according to the usual Texinfo rules.
To allow a macro to be used recursively, that is, in an argument to a
call to itself, you must define it with @rmacro
, like this:
@rmacro rmac {arg} a\arg\b @end rmacro ... @rmac{1@rmac{text}2}
This produces the output `a1atextb2b'. With @macro
instead of
@rmacro
, an error message is given.
You can undefine a macro foo with @unmacro
foo.
It is not an error to undefine a macro that is already undefined.
For example:
@unmacro foo