On Fri, Jun 7, 2013 at 2:09 PM, K?i?tof ?elechovski <giecrilj at stegny.2a.pl> wrote: > #. Tag: para > > #: index.docbook:22 > #, fuzzy, no-c-format > msgid "" > "Info is a type of documentation. The documents are in a file format called > " > "texinfo, and can be read on the command line with the <ulink > url=\"info:/info" > "\"><command>info</command></ulink> program."
What docbook is this in? > No they are not, texinfo is a different format. Yeah, texinfo is the source format, isn't it? Looks like this (wherever it is ;-) isn't the only place we confuse this, khelpcenter's docbook uses this term too. > Info documents are text files logically divided into pages with a > hierarchical structure and cross-references. They are typically produced by > a processor named makeinfo. They can be viewed in the teletype <ulink > url=\"info:/info" > "\"><command>info</command></ulink> program. Depending on where this is this might be a bit too technical. Users just want to RTFM, not learn the various intricacies of the nine million different documentation formats used on UNIX-like systems. ;-) More useful information would be what *sort* of information lives in info documentation. The answer is pretty much anything made by GNU, right? Anything else? -T.C.
