> > If a texinfo document appears as a labyrinth, it is badly written,
> > or rather, it has a bad structure.
>
> This is a reasonable, even definitive, statement. But I have the
> feeling that texinfo encourages such bad structure.
How do you get this impression? Of course, texinfo offers @section,
@subsection, @subsubsection, etc., but even -man has similar things...
> At any rate, there are a surprising number of texinfo documents that
> I find completely useless, although they seem to contain the
> information I'm looking for. You shouldn't need grep(1) to read
> documentation.
Well, the same is true for basically all other documentation. Finding
something quickly in bash(1), for example, without using search
patterns is, well, difficult.
Werner
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