Info has two footnote styles, which determine where the text of the footnote is located:
Footnotes
within it. Each footnote begins with an
(
n)
reference mark.
Here is an example of a single footnote in the end of node style:
--------- Footnotes --------- (1) Here is a sample footnote.
(
n)
reference mark in the body of the
node. The footnote reference is actually a cross reference
which you use to reach the footnote node.
The name of the node with the footnotes is constructed
by appending -Footnotes
to the name of the node
that contains the footnotes. (Consequently, the footnotes'
node for the Footnotes
node is
Footnotes-Footnotes
!) The footnotes' node has an
`Up' node pointer that leads back to its parent node.
Here is how the first footnote in this manual looks after being formatted for Info in the separate node style:
File: texinfo.info Node: Overview-Footnotes, Up: Overview (1) 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.